Don't Miss the Opportunity of becoming IAS, IPS, DC , SSP , DSP...   +918288021344   Don't Miss the Opportunity of becoming IAS, IPS, DC , SSP , DSP...   +918288021344   Don't Miss the Opportunity of becoming IAS, IPS, DC , SSP , DSP...   +918288021344  

13 May 2026

Food, Dining Costs Push Retail Inflation To 3.5% | Rebuild Culture Of Collective Child Safety | IMD Unveils Block-Level Monsoon Forecast Model | Tamil Nadu Transition Exposes Growth Faultlines | Managing Coexistence In Human-Wildlife Conflict Zones | Data And Justice | Five Principles for India’s Diplomacy In Shifting World Order | Time Ripe For Long-Term Russia-Ukraine Ceasefire | Neet Leak Unacceptable | West Asia Crisis Nudges Fertiliser Reform

FOOD, DINING COSTS PUSH RETAIL INFLATION TO 3.5%

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context

  • India’s retail inflation, measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI), increased to 3.5% in April 2026 from 3.4% in March 2026.
  • Inflation was mainly driven by:
    • Rise in food prices
    • Increase in restaurant and accommodation costs
    • Impact of higher global fuel prices due to
      West Asia tensions.
  • Economists have also highlighted risks from:
    • Supply-chain disruptions
    • Crude oil volatility
    • Possible El Niño impact on monsoon and
      agriculture.
  • Despite this rise, inflation remains within the RBI’s target range of 4% ± 2%.

Key Points

  • Retail Inflation (CPI): 3.5% in April 2026.
  • Food & beverages inflation: Increased to 4%.
  • Restaurant & accommodation inflation:
  • Increased to 4.2%.
  • Transport inflation: Marginally negative at 0.01%.
  • Increase in logistics cost:
    • Transport of goods inflation rose by 7.6%.
  • Inflationary pressures linked to:
    • Imported fuel costs
    • Geopolitical tensions
    • Climate-related risks (El Niño).

Important Static Concepts

  • CPI is released by:
    • National Statistical Office (NSO).
  • RBI follows:
    • Flexible Inflation Targeting (FIT) framework.
  • Inflation target:
    • 4% with tolerance band of ±2%.
  • Monetary Policy Committee (MPC):
    • Sets repo rate to control inflation.
  • Food inflation has highest weight in CPI basket.
  • Types of inflation:
    • Demand-pull inflation
    • Cost-push inflation
    • Imported inflation.
  • El Niño:
    • Warming of Pacific Ocean waters affecting
      Indian monsoon.

Analytical Dimensions for Mains

  • Why is inflation rising?
    • Increase in food prices.
    • Global crude oil uncertainty.
    • Pass-through of fuel costs to services sector.
    • Climate risks affecting agriculture.
  • Why is inflation still manageable?
    • Inflation remains within RBI tolerance band.
    • Transport service prices eased.
    • Domestic demand conditions remain stable.
  • Major Concerns
    • Food inflation affects poor households disproportionately.
    • Imported inflation can widen current account deficit.
    • Persistent inflation may delay RBI rate cuts.
    • El Niño may worsen rural distress and food insecurity.

Way Forward

  • Improve agricultural supply chains and storage.
  • Strengthen food buffer stock management.
  • Promote climate-resilient agriculture.
  • Reduce dependence on imported crude oil.
  • Maintain calibrated monetary policy.
  • Expand renewable energy capacity.
  • Improve logistics efficiency under PM Gati Shakti

REBUILD CULTURE OF COLLECTIVE CHILD SAFETY

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context

  • A minor girl in Nasrapur village, Pune district of
    Maharashtra was allegedly sexually assaulted
    and murdered.
  • The accused reportedly had a criminal
    background, raising concerns regarding
    monitoring of repeat offenders and
    effectiveness of preventive policing.
  • The incident has revived debate on:
    • Child protection mechanisms
    • Criminal justice reforms
    • Role of society and institutions in child
      safety
    • Implementation of the Protection of
      Children from Sexual Offences Act

Key Points

  • POCSO Act, 2012:
    • Comprehensive law for protection of children from sexual offences.
    • Covers sexual assault, harassment, and pornography.
    • Provides child-friendly investigation and trial procedures.
    • Defines child as a person below 18 years.
  • NCRB data shows continued rise in crimes against children due to:
    • Better reporting
    • Increasing vulnerability
    • Digital exposure
  • Concerns highlighted:
    • Weak monitoring of habitual offenders
    • Delays in forensic investigation and trials
    • Inadequate community vigilance
    • Need for preventive policing
  • Child safety linked with:
    • Governance efficiency
    • Ethical values in society
    • Institutional accountability

Static Linkages

  • Article 14 – Equality before law
  • Article 15(3) – Special provisions for women and children
  • Article 21 – Right to life and dignity
  • Article 39(e) & 39(f) – Protection of children from abuse and exploitation
  • Article 45 – Early childhood care
  • Fundamental Duty under Article 51A(e)
  • Juvenile Justice Act, 2015
  • Fast-track courts for sexual offences
  • Community policing recommended by ARC reports

Critical Analysis

  • Issues
    • Weak post-release monitoring of sexual offenders
    • Delay in justice delivery weakens deterrence
    • Poor coordination among police, prisons, and judiciary
    • Social apathy and erosion of community vigilance
    • Underreporting in many child abuse cases
  • Significance
    • Crimes against children affect social trust and public security.
    • Reflects governance and policing challenges.
    • Raises questions on balance between reformative justice and public safety.
  • Ethical Dimensions
    • Protection of children is a constitutional and moral responsibility.
    • Need for compassion, vigilance, and collective responsibility in society.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen implementation of POCSO provisions.
  • Create database and monitoring system for repeat offenders.
  • Improve forensic and investigative capacity. 
  • Ensure time-bound trials through fast-track courts.
  • Promote child safety awareness in schools and communities.
  • Enhance community policing and local vigilance. 
  • Strengthen victim support and counselling systems.
  • Improve coordination between police, prisons, and judiciary

IMD UNVEILS BLOCK- LEVEL MONSOON FORECAST MODEL

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context

  • The India Meteorological Department (IMD) launched an AI-enabled block-level monsoon forecast system before the 2026 southwest monsoon season.
  • The system covers 3,196 blocks across 15 States and 1 Union Territory in the monsoon core zone.
  • Developed by the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology under the Ministry of Earth Sciences.
  • Aim:
    • Hyper-local monsoon onset forecasts,
    • Better agricultural planning,
    • Improved agrometeorological advisories.
  • IMD also launched a 1-km resolution forecast
    model for Uttar Pradesh.

Key Points

  • Forecast generated using:
    • AI-based analysis,
    • Historical weather data,
    • Global weather models,
    • Blended forecasting techniques.
  • Forecast validity:
    • Up to 4 weeks.
  • Importance:
    • Helps farmers decide sowing time,
    • Supports rainfed agriculture,
    • Reduces crop-loss risks.
  • Focus area:
    • Monsoon Core Zone (MCZ) → highly dependent on southwest monsoon rainfall.
  • Uttar Pradesh model:
    • Based on “Mithuna” weather model,
    • Downscaled from 12.5 km to 1 km resolution.
  • IMD warned of possible:
    • El Niño conditions,
    • Below-normal rainfall from July onward.

Static Points

  • Southwest Monsoon contributes nearly 75% of India’s annual rainfall.
  • Normal monsoon onset over Kerala:
    • Around June 1.
  • Monsoon influenced by:
    • Differential heating,
    • ITCZ shift,
    • Jet streams,
    • ENSO,
    • Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD).
  • El Niño:
    • Periodic warming of central/eastern Pacific Ocean,
    • Usually linked with weak Indian monsoon.
  • Weather forecasting methods:
    • Statistical models,
    • Dynamical/Numerical Weather Prediction models,
    • Ensemble forecasting.
  • Key weather infrastructure:
    • Doppler Weather Radar,
    • Automatic Weather Stations (AWS),
    • Satellites.

Critical Analysis

  • Significance
    • Promotes precision agriculture.
    • Improves climate resilience.
    • Supports disaster preparedness.
    • Enhances localized weather forecasting.
  • Challenges
    • Need for dense observational infrastructure.
    • Forecast uncertainty due to chaotic monsoon behavior.
    • Limited awareness among farmers.
    • Data-sharing issues between States and Centre.

Way Forward

  • Expand block-level forecasting nationwide.
  • Increase Automatic Weather Stations.
  • Integrate forecasts with:
    • PM Fasal Bima Yojana,
    • Kisan advisory systems.
  • Improve regional-language dissemination.
  • Strengthen AI and climate-data integration
TAMIL NADU TRANSITION EXPOSES GROWTH FAULTLINES
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context
  • Debate on the future of Tamil Nadu’s “Dravidian Model” after the rise of TVK under C. Joseph Vijay.
  • Concerns regarding:
    • Jobless growth
    • Weakening MSMEs
    • Rising contractualisation
    • Declining returns from higher education.
  • Tamil Nadu historically combined:
    • Industrial growth
    • Welfare policies
    • Social justice measures.

Key Points

  • Tamil Nadu attracted major global
    investments:
    • Hyundai
    • Ford
    • Nokia
    • Foxconn.
  • CMIE Data (2021–25):
    • Announced investments: ₹6.80 lakh crore
    • Completed investments: ₹1.57 lakh crore
    • Completion ratio: 23.09%.
  • Declining employment elasticity due to capital intensive growth.
  • MSMEs affected by:
    • Demonetisation
    • GST
    • COVID-19
    • Global tariff disruptions.
  • Higher Education GER:
    • Tamil Nadu: 51%
    • National Average: 27.1%.
  • Growth of gig economy and informal jobs among educated youth.

Static Linkages

  • Inclusive growth requires both economic growth and equitable distribution.
  • Employment elasticity indicates job creation capacity of growth.
  • MSMEs are major contributors to employment and exports.
  • Human capital formation depends on quality education and employability.
  • Welfare measures without productive employment may create fiscal stress.
  • Informalisation of labour weakens social security and bargaining power.
  • Directive Principles aim to reduce inequalities and ensure social justice.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Better human development indicators.
    • High educational access and social inclusion.
    • Stable industrial policy attracted investments.
    • Strong welfare architecture.
  • Challenges
    • Jobless and capital-intensive growth.
    • Weak employment generation despite investments.
    • Rising informalisation and gig work. 
    • Skill gap and employability crisis.
    • MSME sector distress.
    • Fiscal burden of expanding welfare schemes.

Way Forward

  • Promote labour-intensive manufacturing.
  • Strengthen MSME competitiveness and credit support.
  • Improve quality of higher education.
  • Expand skill development linked with industry demand.
  • Increase social security for gig workers.
  • Balance welfare spending with fiscal prudence.
  • Improve investment implementation and employment outcomes

MANAGING COEXISTENCE IN HUMAN – WILDLLIFE CONFLICT ZONES

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Rising incidents of human deaths, crop damage and livestock loss due to increasing interaction between humans and wildlife in India and globally.
  • Habitat fragmentation, deforestation, infrastructure expansion and climate change are increasing the frequency of conflicts.
  • Recent policy discussions emphasise coexistence models, wildlife corridors and community participation instead of purely reactive measures.
  • India is focusing on compensation schemes, early warning systems, solar fencing and habitat restoration to reduce conflicts.

Key Points

  • Human-Wildlife Conflict (HWC) refers to interaction between humans and wild animals
  • resulting in negative impacts on people, wildlife or ecosystems.
  • Major conflict species in India:
    • Elephants
    • Tigers
    • Leopards
    • Wild boars
    • Monkeys
  • Key causes:
    • Habitat loss
    • Fragmentation of wildlife corridors
    • Agricultural expansion
    • Decline in prey base
    • Urbanisation
    • Climate change
  • Elephants require large migratory corridors; blockage increases encounters with humans.
  • Predators attack livestock when natural prey declines.
  • India has implemented:
    • Compensation mechanisms
    • Early warning systems
    • Solar fencing
    • GPS tracking
  • Successful global examples:
    • Community-based conservation in Botswana and Namibia
    • Ecological corridors in Costa Rica
    • Real-time monitoring in Finland
  • Nepal and Bhutan have reduced conflict through:
    • Community-managed forests
    • Predator-proof livestock enclosures

Static Linkages

  • Article 48A – Protection of environment and wildlife.
  • Article 51A(g) – Fundamental duty to protect natural environment.
  • Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972 provides legal framework for wildlife conservation.
  • Project Elephant launched in 1992. 
  • India hosts nearly 60% of global Asian elephant population.
  • Wildlife corridors maintain genetic diversity and species movement.
  • Eco-sensitive zones reduce pressure on protected areas.
  • Habitat fragmentation decreases ecosystem carrying capacity.
  • Community participation is essential for sustainable conservation.

Critical Analysis

  • Significance
    • Protects biodiversity and ecological balance.
    • Reduces economic losses to farmers.
    • Promotes sustainable coexistence.
    • Supports long-term conservation goals.
  • Challenges
    • Delay in compensation payments.
    • Encroachment into forest areas.
    • Linear infrastructure projects disrupting corridors.
    • Poor coordination among States.
    • Lack of scientific land-use planning.
    • Climate change increasing resource stress.
  • Concerns
    • Rising human casualties reduce support for conservation.
    • Marginal farmers bear disproportionate losses.
    • Development-conservation conflict persists.

Way Forward

  • Secure wildlife corridors through legal and ecological
    measures.
  • Improve compensation delivery mechanisms.
  • Expand community-based conservation models.
  • Integrate ecology into infrastructure planning.
  • Strengthen real-time monitoring and early warning systems.
  • Promote habitat restoration and afforestation.
  • Increase awareness among local communities.
  • Enhance inter-state coordination for migratory species

DATA AND JUSTICE

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Chief Justice of India Surya Kant launched:
    • One Case, One Data (OCOD) platform.
    • ‘Su-Sahayak’ AI-based chatbot on Supreme
      Court website.
  • Aim:
    • Improve judicial efficiency,
    • strengthen digital access,
    • create integrated judicial databases.
  • Part of broader judicial digitisation under:
    • e-Courts Mission Mode Project,
    • Digital India initiative.
  • Comes amid rising pendency and need for faster case management.

Key Points

One Case, One Data (OCOD)

  • Creates a single digital identity for each case.
  • Tracks cases across:
    • District Courts,
    • High Courts,
    • Supreme Court.
  • Enables:
    • easier document access,
    • reduced duplication,
    • better judicial statistics,
    • faster verification.

‘Su-Sahayak’

  • AI-powered chatbot for Supreme Court services.
  • Assists users regarding:
    • case status,
    • orders,
    • judgments,
    • cause lists,
    • e-services.
  • Follows earlier AI tools:
    • SUVAS – translation tool,
    • SUPACE – legal research assistance.

Concerns

  • Digital divide affecting rural litigants and small lawyers.
  • Privacy and cybersecurity risks.
  • Bias in AI systems.
  • Need for multilingual and voice-based accessibility.
  • Risk of excessive dependence on technology.

Static Linkages

  • Article 14 – Equality before law.
  • Article 21 – Right to fair procedure and access to justice.
  • Article 39A – Equal justice and free legal aid.
  • Right to Privacy judgment (Puttaswamy Case, 2017). e-Courts Mission Mode Project.
  • National Judicial Data Grid (NJDG).
  • Digital India Programme.
  • Principles of:
    • Rule of Law,
    • Judicial Accountability,
    • Good Governance,
    • E-Governance.

Critical Analysis

  • Advantages
    • Faster disposal and tracking of cases.
    • Better coordination among courts.
    • Reduces paperwork and delays.
    • Promotes transparency.
    • Supports data-driven judicial reforms.
  • Challenges
    • Unequal digital infrastructure.
    • Low digital literacy among litigants.
    • Data protection concerns.
    • AI bias against vulnerable groups.
    • Increased dependence on private tech systems.
  • Ethical Concerns
    • AI should assist, not replace judges.
    • Need for human oversight.
    • Ensuring fairness and non-discrimination.

Way Forward

  • Develop multilingual and voice-enabled systems.
  • Strengthen cybersecurity safeguards.
  • Provide digital training for court staff and lawyers.
  • Ensure affordable digital infrastructure at district level.
  • Establish AI ethics and accountability framework.
  • Maintain hybrid online-offline judicial access.
  • Periodic audit of AI systems for bias and transparency.

FIVE PRINCIPLE FOR INDIA’S DIPLOMACY IN SHIFTING WORLD ORDER

KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the UAE amid rising tensions in West Asia and uncertainty over the U.S.-Iran ceasefire.
  • India is simultaneously expanding engagement with Europe, BRICS, Quad, and African nations.
  • The developments reflect India’s evolving strategy of multi-alignment and strategic autonomy.
  • The article highlights five guiding principles of
  • India’s diplomacy:
    • Reciprocity
    • Diversification
    • Strategic Flexibility
    • Strategic Expansion
    • Domestic Renewal

Key Points

  • UAE is a major partner for India in:
    • Energy security
    • Investments
    • Diaspora engagement
    • Counter-terror cooperation
  • Europe is important for:
    • Trade diversification
    • Green technology
    • Advanced manufacturing
    • FTA negotiations
  • India engages with both BRICS and Quad, reflecting issue-based partnerships.
  • Africa is strategically significant because of:
    • Critical minerals
    • Young population
    • Expanding markets
    • Maritime importance
  • India’s foreign policy increasingly focuses on:
    • Supply-chain resilience
    • Economic security
    • Technological partnerships
    • Indo-Pacific stability

Static Linkages

  • Strategic Autonomy
  • Panchsheel Principles
  • Non-Alignment Movement
  • Multi-Alignment
  • Balance of Power
  • South-South Cooperation
  • Energy Security
  • Maritime Security
  • Indo-Pacific Strategy
  • Diaspora Diplomacy
  • Blue Economy
  • Critical Minerals
  • Globalisation and
  • Trade Blocs
  • Supply Chain Resilience

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Enhances India’s strategic flexibility.
    • Reduces dependence on any single power bloc.
    • Strengthens energy and trade security.
    • Expands India’s influence in Global South.
    • Improves technology and investment access.
    • Balances China’s growing geopolitical influence.
  • Challenges
  • Simultaneously balancing U.S., Russia, Europe, and West Asia is difficult.
  • West Asian instability threatens:
    • Oil supplies
    • Shipping routes
    • Indian diaspora
  • BRICS lacks internal cohesion.
  • Quad may increase strategic tensions with China.
  • India faces implementation deficits in overseas projects.
  • Domestic economic bottlenecks reduce external leverage.
  • Stakeholder Perspective
    • Gulf countries seek stable strategic partners.
    • Europe views India as a trusted democratic and economic partner.
    • African nations expect faster investment and connectivity projects.
    • Indian industry seeks market access and technology transfer.

Way Forward

  • Accelerate domestic economic reforms.
  • Strengthen manufacturing and export competitiveness.
  • Expand trade agreements with Europe and Africa.
  • Diversify energy imports and strategic reserves.
  • Improve implementation of overseas infrastructure projects.
  • Enhance maritime security in the Indian Ocean Region.
  • Build resilient supply chains for critical minerals and semiconductors.
  • Continue strategic autonomy with issue-based cooperation.

TIME RIPE FOR LONG- TERM RUSSIA- UKRAIN CEASEFIRE

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Russia and Ukraine observed a temporary 72 hour ceasefire around Russia’s Victory Day celebrations.
  • The ceasefire was linked to commemoration of Allied victory in World War II. Hostilities resumed after the ceasefire period ended.
  • Discussions on long-term ceasefire and peace negotiations have again gained momentum.
  • The conflict continues amid economic stress in Europe, reduced Western enthusiasm for prolonged war, and evolving geopolitical alignments.

Key Points

  • Russia considers the “Great Patriotic War” central to its national identity.
  • Soviet Union suffered around 26 million deaths during World War II.
  • Russia currently controls:
    • Crimea
    • Parts of Donetsk
    • Luhansk
    • Zaporizhzhia
    • Kherson
  • Ukraine seeks:
    • Restoration of territorial integritySecurity guarantees
    • Continued  Western support
  • Russia demands:
    • No NATO membership for Ukraine
    • Recognition of occupied territories
    • Revised European security framework
  • US and European support to Ukraine is showing
    signs of strategic fatigue.
  • European economies are facing:
    • Energy insecurity
    • Inflationary pressures
    • Rising defence expenditure
  • The war has affected:
    • Global food supply chains
    • Fertilizer exports
    • Crude oil and gas markets

Static Linkages

  • Sovereignty and territorial integrity are core principles of international law. 
  • Article 2(4) of the UN Charter prohibits aggression against sovereign states.
  • Article 51 of the UN Charter recognises the right to self-defence.
  • NATO was formed in 1949 as a collective defence alliance.
  • Balance of Power is a major concept in realist theory of international relations.
  • Economic sanctions are instruments of coercive diplomacy.
  • Strategic autonomy is an important pillar of India’s foreign policy.
  • Wars significantly influence global energy and food security.

Critical Analysis

  • Opportunities
    • Ceasefire may reduce humanitarian crisis.
    • Possibility of diplomatic negotiations increases.
    • Reduction in volatility of global food and energy prices.
    • Europe may stabilise economically.
    • Scope for rebuilding global supply chains.
  • Challenges
    • Territorial disputes remain unresolved.
    • Mutual distrust between Russia and Ukraine.
    • NATO expansion remains a major security concern for Russia.
    • Ukraine fears loss of sovereignty and territory.
    • Risk of prolonged proxy conflict persists.
    • Continued sanctions may deepen global economic fragmentation.

Implications for India

  • Positive
    • Stable crude oil prices may help India control inflation
    • Peace may improve global trade conditions.
    • India’s balanced diplomacy strengthens strategic credibility.
  • Concerns
    • Continued instability affects fertilizer and energy imports.
    • Geopolitical polarisation may pressure India diplomatically.
    • Prolonged conflict impacts global economic growth.

Way Forward

  • Immediate humanitarian ceasefire mechanism.
  • Direct negotiations between Russia and Ukraine.
  • Greater role for multilateral diplomacy through UN mechanisms.
  • Balanced European security architecture.
  • Respect for sovereignty alongside security guarantees.
  • Long-term reconstruction and economic stabilisation framework.
  • Diversification of global energy and food supply chains.

NEET LEAK UNACCEPTABLE

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context

  • NEET-UG examination faced allegations of paper leak and irregularities.
  • Examination was conducted for more than 22 lakh students seeking admission to medical colleges.
  • Investigation revealed similarities between actual paper and pre-circulated “guess papers”.
  • Case handed over to CBI for investigation.
  • Issue raised concerns over credibility of
  • National Testing Agency (NTA).
  • Second major controversy related to NEET in recent years.

Key Exam Points

  • NTA established: 2017 under Ministry of Education.
  • Purpose: Conduct transparent, efficient, and standardised national-level entrance examinations.
    • Major exams conducted by NTA:NEET
    • JEE Main
    • CUET
    • UGC-NET
    • NEET scale:Around 22 lakh candidates
    • ~1.3 lakh MBBS seats
    • Conducted across thousands of centres.
    • Committee formed after earlier controversy:Headed by former ISRO Chairman K. Radhakrishnan.
    • Key recommendations:Digital-first examination system
    • Strong accountability mechanisms
    • Better cybersecurity safeguards
    • Monitoring of private vendors

Static Linkages

  • Equality before law and equal opportunity.
  • Transparency and accountability in governance.
  • Rule of Law.
  • Good governance principles.
  • Probity in public administration.
  • Role of technology in governance.
  • Human capital and demographic dividend.
  • Ethical conduct in public institutions.
  • Delegated administration and accountability.
  • E-governance reforms.

Critical Analysis

  • Concerns
    • Repeated paper leaks undermine meritocracy.
    • Loss of trust in public institutions.
    • Psychological stress on students.
    • Coaching-centre and paper-leak nexus.
    • Weak monitoring of outsourced vendors.
    • Lack of institutional accountability.
    • Centralised exams create large-scale vulnerability.
  • Governance Issues
    • Failure of examination security systems.
    • Weak coordination between agencies.
    • Poor accountability framework.
      Delayed reforms despite previous controversies.
  • Ethical Dimensions
    • Violation of fairness and equal opportunity.
    • Injustice to honest students.
    • Commercialisation of education system.

Way Forward

  • End-to-end encrypted digital systems.
  • Strong chain-of-custody mechanism for papers.
  • Independent examination regulatory authority.
  • Strict accountability for officials and vendors.
  • AI-based surveillance and anomaly detection.
  • Regular third-party security audits.
  • Strong anti-paper leak legislation.
  • Reduce excessive coaching dependence.
  • Transparent grievance redressal mechanism

WEST ASIA CRISIS NUDGE FERTILISER REFORM

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context

  • PM Narendra Modi advocated “natural farming” and reduced dependence on chemical fertilisers.
  • West Asia conflict and Strait of Hormuz disruptions exposed India’s vulnerability due to heavy fertiliser import dependence.
  • Debate revived on:
    • Fertiliser subsidy rationalisation
    • Balanced nutrient usage
    • Sustainable agriculture

Key Exam Points

  • India imports:
    • Almost entire potash requirement
    • Major phosphatic raw materials
    • LNG for urea production
  • Excessive use of:
    • Urea (46% Nitrogen)
    • DAP (46% Phosphorus)
  • Causes:
    • Soil nutrient imbalance
    • Decline in micronutrients
    • Soil degradation
    • Groundwater pollution
  • Nitrogen Use Efficiency (NUE) of urea:
    • Only ~30–35% absorbed by crops
    • Remaining lost through:
      • Volatilisation
      • Leaching
      • Runoff
  • Current subsidy structure:
    • Urea → price controlled
    • Non-urea fertilisers → Nutrient Based
    • Subsidy (NBS)
  • Major concern:
    • High fiscal burden of fertiliser subsidy
    • Import vulnerability during geopolitical crises

Important Static Points

  • Fertilisers provide:
    • Nitrogen (vegetative growth)
    • Phosphorus (root development)
    • Potassium (disease resistance)
    • Sulphur (protein synthesis)
  • Nutrient Based Subsidy (2010):
    • Subsidy based on nutrient content
    • Objective: balanced fertilisation
  • Soil Health Card Scheme:
    • Scientific nutrient management
    • Soil testing-based fertiliser recommendation
  • Excess nitrogen use leads to:
    • Eutrophication
    • Nitrous oxide emission (greenhouse gas)
  • Green Revolution increased dependence on:
    • HYV seeds
    • Irrigation
    • Chemical fertilisers

Critical Analysis

  • Advantages of Reform
    • Reduces subsidy burden
    • Promotes balanced fertilisation
    • Improves soil health
    • Reduces import dependence
    • Encourages sustainable farming
  • Challenges
    • Higher fertiliser prices may hurt small farmers
    • Natural farming may reduce yields initially
    • Political sensitivity of fertiliser pricing
    • Low farmer awareness regarding balanced nutrient use

Way Forward

  • Gradual subsidy rationalisation
  • Shift towards direct income support
  • Promote nano urea and precision farming
  • Strengthen Soil Health Card implementation
  • Encourage organic carbon restoration
  • Diversify fertiliser import sources
  • Increase domestic fertiliser production