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25 February 2026

Free HPV Vaccine Plan at 14 | ISRO Panel Probes PSLV Failures | Israel Visit: Strategic Impact | India Trade in Multipolar Era | Bnad Aid | Ingloroius Retreat | India’s Realist Mideast Policy | Russia-Ukraine: No Victors Yet | Inside the Tent: Pax Silica | India Oil Import High in FY26

FREE HPV VACCINE PLAN AT 14

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • The Union Health Ministry will launch a nationwide Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination programme for 14-year-old girls.
  • Vaccination will be voluntary and free of cost across all States and UTs.
  • India will use Gardasil (quadrivalent vaccine).
  • Procurement secured through partnership with Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.
  • Programme based on recommendations of the National Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation (NTAGI).
  • Vaccination to be administered at government facilities including Ayushman Arogya Mandirs, CHCs, District Hospitals, and Government Medical Colleges.

Key Points

  • HPV (Human Papillomavirus):
    • Sexually transmitted virus.
    • High-risk types 16 & 18 cause over 80% of cervical cancer cases in India.
    • Types 6 & 11 cause genital warts.
  • Cervical Cancer (India):
    • Second most common cancer among women.
    • ~80,000 new cases annually.  ~42,000 deaths annually.
  • Vaccine Features:
    • Non-live recombinant vaccine.
    • Single-dose schedule supported by global evidence.
    • 93–100% effectiveness against vaccine- covered HPV types.
    • Over 500 million doses administered globally since 2006.
    • Target Age: 14 years (before potential exposure).

Static Linkages

  •  Article 21 – Right to Life includes right to health (judicial interpretation).
  • Article 47 – Duty of the State to improve public health.
  • Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP).
  • National Health Policy 2017 – Focus on preventive healthcare.
  • SDG 3 – Good Health and Well-being.
  • WHO’s Cervical Cancer Elimination Strategy (90–70–90 targets).

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Preventive public health approach.  
    • Reduces long-term cancer burden.  
    • Promotes gender equity.
    • Cost-effective compared to cancer treatment.  
    • Strengthens primary healthcare infrastructure.
  • Challenges
    • Vaccine hesitancy and misinformation.
    • Cultural stigma around sexually transmitted infections.
    • Ensuring cold-chain logistics in remote areas.
    • Need for parallel screening (Pap smear/HPV DNA testing).

Way Forward

  • Integrate HPV vaccination with school health programmes.
  • Strengthen awareness campaigns to reduce stigma.
  • Ensure strong AEFI (Adverse Events Following Immunisation) surveillance.
  • Expand cervical cancer screening coverage.  
  • Encourage domestic vaccine manufacturing

ISRO PANEL PROBES PSLV FAILURES

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Successive failures of Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) missions:
  • PSLV-C61 (May 2025) – Third stage ignition failure; EOS-09 satellite lost.
  • PSLV-C62 (January 2026) – Third stage failed to ignite; 16 satellites lost.
  • A high-level external committee constituted including:
    • K. Vijay Raghavan, former Principal Scientific Adviser.
    • S. Somanath, former ISRO Chairman
  • Committee to examine systemic/organisational issues beyond technical faults.
  • “Third-party appraisal” mentioned by Union Minister.
  • Implications for broader space ecosystem including private sector participation under Indian Space Policy 2023.

Key Points

  • PSLV:
    • Four-stage launch vehicle (solid–liquid– solid–liquid configuration).
    • Known as ISRO’s “workhorse”.
    • Used for Sun-synchronous and polar orbit missions.
  • Third stage (solid propellant) critical for achieving required velocity.
  • Failure Analysis Committee (FAC):
    • Traditionally constituted internally by ISRO.
    • Recommends corrective measures before next launch.
  • Indian Space Policy 2023:
    • Encourages private participation.
    • IN-SPACe as regulatory and facilitation body.
  • Space is under Union List → Executive authority of Union government.

Static Linkages

  • Union List – Space and scientific institutions.
  • Executive power of Union (Article 73).
  • Public procurement and accountability mechanisms.
  • Strategic sector governance.  Role of Space Commission & Department of Space.
  • National security dimension of satellite infrastructure.

Critical Dimensions

  • Transition from state-led to public– private space ecosystem increases:
    • Supply-chain complexity.
    • Need for quality control.  
    • Clear liability framework.
  • Transparency concerns:
    • Non-public release of Failure Analysis reports.
  • National security implications of repeated launch failures.
  • Organisational vs technical failure – governance reforms needed.
  • Impact on India’s commercial launch credibility globally.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen third-party technical audits.
  • Institutionalised transparency in failure reports.
  • Robust quality assurance across private supply chain.
  • Clear liability and accountability norms under space reforms.
  • Capacity-building in mission-critical systems.
  • Strengthen Space Commission oversight mechanisms.

ISRAEL VISIT: STRATEGIC IMPACT

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Heightened instability in West Asia due to:
    • U.S.–Iran tensions and military buildup in the Persian Gulf.
  • Fragile Gaza ceasefire (since October 2025).
  • PM Narendra Modi’s two-day standalone visit to Israel (Feb 25–26, 2026).
  • Continuation of India’s “de-hyphenation policy” — separate engagement with Israel and Palestine.
  • Visit occurs amid revival of IMEC and evolving regional alignments.

Key Points

  1. Defence & Security Cooperation
  • As per SIPRI:
    • India accounted for ~34% of Israel’s arms exports (2020–2024).
  • Major joint projects:
    • Barak-8 surface-to-air missile system.
  • Focus areas:
    • Air and missile defence systems.  
    • Anti-drone technologies.
    • Laser-based systems (Iron Beam).
  • Shift from import-based model to joint development and co-production.
  • Alignment with:
    • Atmanirbhar Bharat in defence.
    • Defence Technology and Trade Initiative (DTTI-like model cooperation).
  1. Economic & Trade Relations
  • Bilateral trade: ~$3.75 billion (FY 2024–25).  
  • Dominant sectors:
    • Diamonds, petroleum products, chemicals.
  • Emerging sectors:
    • Electronics, medical devices, communication technology.
  • September 2025:
    • Bilateral Investment Agreement signed.
  • November 2025:
    • Terms of Reference signed for Free Trade Agreement (FTA).
    • Infrastructure collaboration and skilled mobility discussions underway.
  1. Science, Agriculture & Water Cooperation 35+ Centres of Excellence (CoEs) in India:
    • High-density horticulture.  
    • Precision agriculture.
  • Cooperation in:
    • Drip irrigation.
    • Water management technologies.
  • Agreements with:
    • Haryana (2022) and Rajasthan (2024) for Integrated Water Resource Management.
  • Future focus:
    • Artificial Intelligence and high-tech innovation ecosystems.
  1. Geopolitical Dimensions
  • India balancing ties with:
    • Israel
    • Gulf countries (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Oman)  Iran
  • IMEC (India–Middle East–Europe Economic Corridor):
    • Announced at G20 Delhi Summit 2023.  
    • Alternative to Suez Canal route.
    • Dependent on regional stability.
  • India attended Gaza Peace Summit (2026) as observer.

Static Linkages

  • Strategic Autonomy as core of India’s foreign policy.
  • West Asia supplies over 50% of India’s crude oil imports.
  • Defence indigenisation under Atmanirbhar Bharat.
  • Multi-alignment diplomacy in a multipolar world.
  • Connectivity corridors as geoeconomic tools.

Critical Dimensions

  • Opportunities
    • Strengthening air and missile defence architecture.
    • Advancing defence indigenisation and technology transfer.
    • Enhancing food and water security through Israeli technology.
    • Expanding India’s geoeconomic footprint via IMEC.
    • Positioning India as a stabilising middle power.
  • Challenges
    • Risk of alienating Iran amid U.S.–Iran tensions.  
    • Managing Arab sensitivities over Gaza.
    • IMEC viability linked to sustained regional peace.
    • Avoiding bloc politics (e.g., proposed “hexagon” alliance).

Way Forward

  • Maintain strategic autonomy and balanced diplomacy.
  • Accelerate joint R&D in defence and AI.  
  • Fast-track FTA negotiations.
  • Leverage agricultural and water cooperation for climate resilience.
  • Support inclusive regional peace initiatives without military entanglement.

INDIA TRADE IN MULTIPOLAR ERA

KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • India updated Foreign Trade Policy (FTP) 2023 with a target of $2 trillion exports by 2030.
  • As per Department of Commerce (2025 Year- End Review), total exports reached $825.25 billion (6.05% annual growth).
  • India signed a landmark FTA with the European Union in January 2026 after nearly two decades of negotiations.
  • India and the United States signed an interim reciprocal trade framework, advancing negotiations on a Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA).
  • India’s FTA coverage projected to increase from 22% (2019) to nearly 71% of export basket by 2026.
  • India earlier opted out of Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) citing concerns over trade imbalance and domestic industry protection.

Key Points for Prelims

  • EU FTA reduces/eliminates tariffs on over 90% of traded goods.
  • Boost to sectors: textiles, leather, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, marine products.
  • Enhances services trade (IT, fintech, digital trade).
  • Promotes integration into Global Value Chains (GVCs).
  • U.S.-India cooperation includes rare earths and semiconductors.
  • Complements Production Linked Incentive (PLI) schemes.
  • Supports MSME integration into global supply chains.
  • Emphasis on diversification to reduce dependence on single markets.

Key Points for Mains

  • Shift from cautious FTA approach to engagement with advanced economies.
  • Trade agreements used as instruments of economic diplomacy.
  • Alignment of trade strategy with “Viksit Bharat” vision.
  • Balancing strategic autonomy with deeper global integration.
  • Trade diversification reduces geopolitical vulnerability.

Static Linkages

  • Foreign Trade (Development and Regulation) Act, 1992.
  • Article 246 & Union List – Trade and Commerce with foreign countries.
  • WTO principles: MFN & National Treatment.  
  • Comparative Advantage theory (David Ricardo).
  • Balance of Payments – Current Account components.
  • PLI Scheme and Atmanirbhar Bharat strategy.  
  • MSMED Act, 2006 – MSME framework.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Greater market access in high-income economies.
    • Boost to labour-intensive sectors and MSMEs.
    • Strengthens supply chains and GVC integration.
    • Enhances diplomatic leverage.
    • Promotes technology transfer and high-value manufacturing.
  • Challenges
    • Risk of widening trade deficit.
    • Pressure on sensitive domestic sectors (dairy, agriculture, SMEs).
    • Compliance costs due to stringent EU regulatory standards.
    • Need for strong domestic reforms (logistics, ease of doing business).
    • Overdependence on external demand amid global slowdown.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen domestic competitiveness (infrastructure, logistics, skilling).
  • Enhance export credit and MSME support mechanisms.
  • Strategic tariff calibration in sensitive sectors.
  • Improve trade facilitation and customs digitisation.
  • Deepen value addition rather than raw- material exports.
  • Strengthen standards certification ecosystem to meet EU norms.
BAND AID
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • The Election Commission of India (ECI) completed the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in several States.
  • High deletions recorded:
    • Tamil Nadu – ~11.5%
    •  Gujarat – ~13.4%
    • Chhattisgarh – ~11.8%  
    • Bihar – ~6%
  • Final rolls indicate registered adult population lower than projected estimates.
  • Female electors reportedly faced higher deletions than male electors.
  • Updated Census data unavailable (last Census: 2011).
  • The Supreme Court of India permitted continuation of the process despite concerns.

Key Issues

  • High Deletions in Net In-migrant States – Questions methodology and enumeration standards.
  • Gendered Impact – Married women shifting residence more vulnerable.
  • Migrant Exclusion – Temporary and seasonal migrants disproportionately affected.
  • Burden of Proof Model – Electors required to prove eligibility instead of proactive enumeration.
  • Absence of Updated Census – Weakens demographic benchmarking.
  • Institutional Accountability – Judicial restraint vs constitutional oversight.

Constitutional & Legal Framework

  • Article 324 – ECI’s authority over elections.  
  • Article 326 – Universal Adult Suffrage (18+ years).
  • Representation of the People Act, 1950 – Preparation and revision of electoral rolls.
  • Electoral roll integrity is foundational to democratic legitimacy.

Static Concepts to Revise

  • Universal Adult Franchise.
  • Delimitation and Census linkage.
  • Constitutional bodies – independence and accountability.
  • Principles of Natural Justice.
  • Migrant labour and urbanisation trends (Census 2011 data).

Critical Examination

  • Concerns
    • Risk of exclusion of eligible voters → democratic deficit.
    • Gender disparity in deletions undermines inclusive representation.
    • Census delay affects electoral planning and population projections.
    • Institutional credibility of ECI at stake.
    • Judicial non-intervention limits procedural correction.
  • Counter-Arguments
    • Periodic revision necessary to remove duplicates and deceased voters.
    • Complaint levels reportedly low.
    • ECI constitutionally empowered to conduct revisions.

Way Forward

  •  Synchronise intensive revision with updated Census data.
  • Household-based enumeration rather than self- certification.
  • Gender-sensitive revision protocols.
  • Use of technology with safeguards (Aadhaar linking subject to privacy norms).
  • Transparent public audit of deletions and additions.
  • Strengthened grievance redressal mechanisms.
INGLORIOUS RETREAT

 

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • In February 2026, the Supreme Court observed that its 2018 guidelines against mob lynching and cow vigilantism were “unmanageable”.
  • Petitioners had sought contempt action against States for non-implementation of the 2018 directions.
  • The Court indicated preference for case- specific adjudication rather than continuous monitoring.
  • The 2018 judgment had termed lynching as an attack on rule of law and constitutional values and directed preventive, remedial, and punitive measures.

Key Points

  • Preventive Measures
    • Appointment of a Nodal Officer (SP rank) in each district.
    • Identification of vulnerable districts.
    • Preventive policing and intelligence gathering.
  • Remedial Measures
    • Compensation scheme for victims.  
    • Fast-track trials.
    • Witness protection.
  • Punitive Measures
    • FIR registration under IPC provisions.
    • Departmental action against negligent officials.
    • Suggested enactment of a separate anti- lynching law by Parliament.

Constitutional & Legal Dimensions

  • Article 14 – Equality before law.
  • Article 21 – Right to life and personal liberty.
  • Article 256 – Obligation of States to comply with Union laws and constitutional directions.
  • Articles 129 & 142 – SC’s contempt powers and power to do complete justice.
  • Criminal law & police – Concurrent List (List III).

Static Linkages

  • Rule of Law – Supremacy of law and equality before law.
  • Separation of Powers – Judicial monitoring vs executive domain.
  • 2nd ARC Report on Public Order – Police accountability & reforms.
  • Prakash Singh (2006) case – Police reforms and autonomy.
  • Fundamental Duty under Article 51A(e) – Promote harmony.

Critical Analysis

  • Concerns
    • Weak enforcement may dilute judicial authority.
    • Signals retreat from proactive protection of fundamental rights.
    • Encourages federal non-compliance with court directives.
    • Undermines deterrence against mob violence. Counter-Arguments
    • Policing is primarily an executive function.
    • Continuous judicial monitoring may breach separation of powers.
    • Case-specific approach ensures procedural fairness.

Way Forward

  • Enact a comprehensive anti-lynching legislation.
  • Strengthen police reforms (Prakash Singh compliance).
  • Mandatory district-level accountability audits.  
  • Clear SOPs for mob violence prevention.
  • Use of technology & social media monitoring to curb incitement.

INDIA’S REALIST MIDEAST POLICY

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s 2026 visit to Israel marks a major expansion of India–Israel strategic cooperation.
  • The visit comes amid major geopolitical shifts in West Asia after the October 7, 2023 conflict and subsequent regional military developments.
  • Israel’s growing regional acceptance (post- Abraham Accords) has altered power equations in the Middle East.
  • India is simultaneously strengthening ties with Israel, UAE, Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries.
  • The visit reflects India’s shift from cautious engagement to confident strategic partnership.

Key Points

  • Evolution of India–Israel Relations
    • 1950: India recognized Israel but did not establish full diplomatic ties.
    • 1992: Full diplomatic relations established under PM Narasimha Rao.
    • 2017: First standalone visit by an Indian PM (Modi) to Israel.
    • 2026: Strategic expansion in defence, technology and regional coordination.
  • Areas of Cooperation
    • Defence (missile systems, UAVs, radar technology)
    • Counter-terrorism cooperation
    • Agriculture (Centres of Excellence)
    • Water management and desalination  Cybersecurity, AI and innovation
    • Space and high-tech collaboration
  • Regional Geopolitical Context
    • Abraham Accords led to normalization between Israel and UAE, Bahrain, Morocco.
    • Iran’s regional influence has relatively weakened after recent conflicts.
    • US remains the primary external power in West Asia.
    • Emerging regional blocs and security alignments.
    • India deepening parallel ties with Israel and Arab states.
  • Importance of West Asia for India
    • Major source of crude oil and LNG imports.  
    • Home to over 8 million Indian diaspora.
    • Significant remittance inflows.
    • Strategic maritime routes (Hormuz, Bab-el- Mandeb).
    • Connectivity initiatives like IMEC (India- Middle East-Europe Corridor).

Static Linkages

  • Non-Alignment Movement (NAM) evolution.  
  • Strategic autonomy in foreign policy.
  • Balance of Power theory.
  • Two-State Solution (Israel–Palestine).
  • Energy security and import dependence.  
  • Diaspora diplomacy.
  • Multi-alignment doctrine.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Strengthens India’s defence preparedness.  
    • Expands access to advanced technology.
    • Enhances counter-terror cooperation.
    • Boosts India’s regional strategic profile.  
    • Reflects pragmatic multi-alignment.
  • Challenges
    • Balancing ties with Iran and Israel.
    • Domestic political sensitivity over Palestine issue.  
    • Volatility in West Asia.
    • Risk of over-securitisation of engagement.
    • Humanitarian concerns in Gaza affecting India’s global image.
  • Strategic Dilemma
    • Supporting Palestinian statehood while expanding ties with Israel.
    • Maintaining neutrality amid regional rivalries.

Way Forward

  • Continue policy of strategic autonomy.
  • Maintain support for peaceful two-state solution.
  • Diversify energy sources to reduce vulnerability.  
  • Deepen economic engagement with Gulf Cooperation Council.
  • Expand cooperation in climate tech, food security and digital innovation.
  • Strengthen crisis evacuation and diaspora protection mechanisms.
RUSSIA – UKRAINE: NO VICTORS YET

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • February 24, 2026 marked four years of the Russia–Ukraine conflict (began in 2022).
  • The war has evolved into a prolonged war of attrition with limited territorial shifts.
  • Russia controls nearly 20% of Ukrainian territory.
  • Peace negotiations reportedly favour Russian conditions (territorial retention, no NATO membership for Ukraine, phased sanctions relief).
  • Sweden and Finland joined NATO, altering European security dynamics.

Key Points for Prelims

  • NATO founded in 1949; based on collective defence (Article 5).
  • Finland shares ~1,300 km land border with Russia.
  • UN Charter Article 2(4): Prohibits use of force against territorial integrity.
  • Russia is a permanent member of UNSC.
  • Sanctions imposed by US, EU and allies target banking, energy, and technology sectors.

Key Points for Mains

  • Russia’s objectives: Prevent NATO expansion, secure Donbas, strategic buffer zone.
  • Ukraine’s resistance supported by US and Europe.
  • Expansion of NATO despite Russia’s concerns indicates security dilemma.
  • Global South (India, Brazil, South Africa) maintained strategic neutrality.
  • Energy geopolitics reshaped — Europe diversifying energy sources; India importing discounted Russian oil.

Static Linkages

  • Principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity.
  • Balance of Power theory in International Relations.
  • Concept of Strategic Autonomy (India’s foreign policy).
  • Economic sanctions as non-military coercive diplomacy.
  • Energy security and supply chain resilience.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Reinforced NATO unity.
    • Strengthened Ukrainian national identity.  
    • Boost to European defence spending.
  • Concerns
    • Prolonged humanitarian crisis.
    • Economic instability and food/energy inflation globally.
    • Increased militarisation and bloc politics.
    • Limited effectiveness of sanctions in altering Russia’s strategic posture.

Way Forward

  • Structured multilateral peace framework.
  • Security guarantees short of NATO membership.
  • Gradual, compliance-based sanctions easing.
  • Strengthening multipolar dialogue platforms (G20, BRICS).
  • India to continue balanced diplomacy: respect sovereignty + national interest.

INSIDE THE TENT: PAX SILICA

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • India signed the Pax Silica Declaration on the sidelines of the AI Impact Summit (February 2026).
  • Pax Silica is a U.S.-led initiative to reduce “coercive dependencies” in supply chains of critical minerals, especially rare earth elements (REEs).
  • India was initially excluded (Dec 2025) but has now formally joined.
  • India and the U.S. also signed the AI Opportunity Partnership to deepen AI infrastructure investment and R&D collaboration.
  • Move comes amid concerns over China’s dominance in global critical mineral refining and rare-earth magnet production.

Key Facts for Prelims

  • As per International Energy Agency (IEA):
    • China holds ~70% refining share in 19 of the 20 most strategic critical minerals.
    • ~94% of global rare-earth permanent magnet production is concentrated in China.
  • Critical minerals are essential for:
    • Semiconductors
    • EV batteries and motors  
    • Wind turbines
    • Defence technologies
    • AI hardware infrastructure
  • India’s related initiatives:
    • National Critical Mineral Mission
    • IndiaAI Mission
    • India Semiconductor Mission
  • Objective of Pax Silica:
    • Diversification of supply chains
    • Reducing strategic vulnerabilities
    • Enhancing technological cooperation

Static Connections

  • Strategic autonomy in foreign policy.
  • Economic statecraft and weaponisation of supply chains.
  • Industrial policy for advanced manufacturing.
  • Energy security and green transition.
  • WTO principles vs strategic trade alliances.
  • Environmental concerns in mining and mineral processing.
  1. Critical Analysis
  • Positives
    • Reduces overdependence on China.
    • Strengthens India–US strategic convergence.
    • Boost to semiconductor and AI ecosystems.  
    • Supports green energy and EV transition.
  • Concerns
    • Risk of U.S. influence over India’s AI regulations.
    • Environmental and social costs of mineral extraction.
    • India’s limited domestic refining capacity.  
    • Need to balance relations with China.

Way Forward

  • Expand domestic mineral exploration and processing.
  • Secure overseas mining assets through strategic partnerships.
  • Develop rare-earth recycling ecosystem.
  • Frame balanced AI governance protecting innovation and sovereignty.
  • Maintain multi-alignment strategy.

INDIA OIL IMPORTS HIGH IN FY26

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • India’s crude oil import dependence increased to 88.6% (April–January FY26), up from 88.2% in the same period of FY25 (PPAC, Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas).
  • Full-year FY25 import dependence: 88.3%.
  • Domestic crude production: 23.5 mt (decline from 24 mt).
  • Crude imports: 206.3 mt (increase YoY).
  • Petroleum product consumption: 202.2 mt; self-sufficiency ~11.4%.
  • IEA (World Energy Outlook 2025): India to be the largest contributor to global oil demand growth till 2035.

Key Data & Facts

  • Refining capacity: 258 MTPA (India among top global refiners).
  • Target (2015): Reduce import dependence to 67% by 2022 (not achieved).
  • Petroleum demand projected to reach 250.8 mt by FY27 (PPAC).
  • Oil import dependence calculated based on domestic consumption, excluding exports.
  • India imports ~85–90% of crude oil needs but exports refined petroleum products.

Static Linkages

  • Crude oil is part of the Eight Core Industries (Index of Industrial Production).
  • Oil imports impact Current Account Deficit (CAD) under Balance of Payments.
  • High crude prices cause cost-push inflation (fuel → transport → food prices).
  • Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPRs) managed by ISPRL for energy security.
  • Policies promoting diversification:
    • Hydrocarbon Exploration and Licensing Policy (HELP)
    • Open Acreage Licensing Policy (OALP)
    • Ethanol Blending Programme (20% target by 2025-26)
    • FAME Scheme for EVs
  • Linked to India’s Energy Security and NDC climate commitments.

Issues & Implications

  • Vulnerability to:
    • Global oil price shocks
    • Geopolitical instability (West Asia, Russia- Ukraine)
  • Worsens:
    • Trade deficit
    • Exchange rate stability
    • Inflationary pressures
    • Domestic production stagnant despite policy reforms.
  • Rising demand due to:  
    • Urbanization
    • Transport growth
    • Aviation expansion
    • Petrochemicals demand

Way Forward

  • Accelerate domestic E&P reforms and private investment.
  • Expand renewable energy capacity (500 GW non-fossil target by 2030).
  • Faster EV adoption and public transport electrification.
  • Strengthen Strategic Petroleum Reserves.  
  • Diversify crude import sources.
  • Promote green hydrogen and biofuels.