IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs Analysis
Archives
(PRELIMS Focus)
Subject: Economy, Environment & Ecology, Science & Technology
Micro-Topics: Government Schemes (PM-KUSUM), Renewable Energy, Land Use, Agriculture, Climate Change Mitigation
News Context / Background:
The article discusses Agri-Photovoltaics (AgriPV) as a solution to India’s competing land demands for solar energy and agriculture.
With the 2026-27 Budget nearly doubling the outlay for PM-KUSUM to ₹5,000 crore, the government is emphasizing solar expansion centred on farmers. AgriPV is emerging as a scalable model to integrate solar power generation with farming on the same land.
Core Theme:
AgriPV offers a dual-use land model that addresses India’s energy transition goals without compromising food security. It enables farmers to generate solar power while continuing agriculture, enhancing income, water efficiency, and rural livelihoods. The technology is being piloted across India, with policy momentum building under PM-KUSUM.
Key Details and Facts:
- Definition: AgriPV integrates solar panels with crop cultivation on the same land. Panels are elevated or spaced to allow farming operations below.
- Design Types: Elevated systems, row-based systems, vertical systems (bifacial panels), and greenhouse-integrated systems.
- Crop Selection: Shade-tolerant crops (tomato, onion, turmeric, ginger, leafy vegetables) perform well under panels; sun-loving crops (ragi, jowar, grapes) grow in between rows.
- Benefits: Reduces evapotranspiration (water conservation), protects crops from extreme weather, lowers diesel dependence, powers cold storage, and provides additional income via electricity sale.
Relevant Keywords for Prelims:
- Scheme: PM-KUSUM (Pradhan Mantri Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthaan Mahabhiyan)
- Concepts: Agri-Photovoltaics (AgriPV), Net-Zero Emissions (2070), Solar Capacity Target (300 GW by 2030), Viability Gap Funding (VGF)
UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage):
- Static Linkage: Basics of solar energy types (grid-connected, off-grid), agro-climatic zones of India, and crop physiology (C3/C4 plants, shade tolerance).
- Dynamic Linkage: PM-KUSUM scheme objectives and recent budgetary allocation; India’s renewable energy targets under Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs); land-use conflict between renewable energy and agriculture; potential inclusion under a proposed National Agri-photovoltaics Mission.
- Prelims Angle: Questions may test scheme-specific facts (PM-KUSUM components), correct pairing of crops with agriPV suitability, understanding of technical designs, and environmental co-benefits like reduced evapotranspiration.
Source / Reference Link: The Hindu
Subject: Science & Technology, Geography
Micro-Topics: Space Technology, Solar System, International Institutions, Near-Earth Objects (NEOs), Planetary Defense
News Context / Background:
The Minor Planet Centre (MPC) recently announced the discovery of 15 new moons—four around Jupiter and eleven around Saturn. This news highlights the MPC’s crucial role as the world’s central repository for data on small bodies in the solar system, including asteroids, comets, and outer planet moons.
Core Theme:
The MPC serves as the global clearinghouse for data on minor planets and small solar system bodies. Its verification and tracking functions are essential for maintaining accurate celestial catalogs, enabling planetary defense against NEOs, and facilitating international scientific collaboration on discoveries like new moons around Jupiter and Saturn.
Key Details and Important Facts:
- New Discoveries: Four new Jovian moons (discovered by Scott Sheppard & David Tholen, US); eleven new Saturnian moons (team led by Edward Ashton, Taiwan).
- MPC Location & Parent Body: Located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA; operates at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory under the International Astronomical Union (IAU).
- Primary Functions:
- Receives and verifies discovery data; calculates orbits; assigns official designations.
- Monitors Near-Earth Objects (NEOs) for potential planetary threats.
- Publishes electronic circulars to coordinate global astronomical observations.
- Support: Works with NASA’s Planetary Defense Coordination Office to maintain NEO databases.
Relevant Keywords for Prelims:
- Institution: Minor Planet Centre (MPC), International Astronomical Union (IAU), Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, NASA Planetary Defense Coordination Office
- Concepts: Near-Earth Objects (NEOs), Small Bodies (asteroids, comets), Outer Planets (Jupiter, Saturn), Moons (natural satellites)
UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage):
- Static Linkage: Basics of the solar system—gas giants (Jupiter, Saturn) and their satellite systems; classification of celestial bodies (planet, dwarf planet, asteroid, comet); difference between NEOs and Potentially Hazardous Objects (PHOs).
- Dynamic Linkage: India’s participation in global astronomical collaborations; relevance of NEO monitoring for space security; India’s own planetary defense capabilities and missions like Aditya-L1 (solar observation) and future asteroid missions.
- Prelims Angle: Questions may test the parent organization of MPC (IAU), its location, its specific functions (orbit calculation vs. naming), or factual recall of new moon discoveries. Understanding the role of NASA’s Planetary Defense Coordination Office in conjunction with MPC is also relevant.
Source / Reference Link: The Hindu
Subject: International Relations, Economy
Micro-Topics: WTO Dispute Settlement Mechanism, International Trade Agreements, US-India Trade Relations, Unilateral Trade Measures
News Context / Background:
Following a US Supreme Court ruling against President Trump’s reciprocal tariffs, the US administration invoked Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 to impose a 10% temporary surcharge on imports (Feb 24–July 24, 2026), citing a balance of payment (BOP) crisis—a claim challenged by 24 US states.
Additionally, Section 301 proceedings were initiated against multiple countries, including India, alleging structural excess capacity and forced labor issues.
Core Theme:
The article highlights the erosion of multilateral trade rules as the US employs unilateral trade measures under its domestic laws (Sections 122 and 301) despite WTO obligations. It underscores the systemic challenge posed to the WTO’s dispute resolution mechanism, the vulnerability of developing countries like India, and the need for coalition-building to uphold rules-based international trade.
Key Details and Facts:
- Section 122: Allows temporary import surcharges (up to 15% for 150 days) during a BOP crisis; currently challenged for lack of legal basis.
- Section 301: Authorizes US Trade Representative to investigate and impose unilateral tariffs on countries with practices deemed unjustifiable or discriminatory against US commerce.
- WTO Context: A 1999 WTO panel ruled that Section 301’s unilateral nature was problematic but deferred based on US assurance of WTO conformity. The US later blocked the WTO Appellate Body, rendering dispute settlement non-functional.
- 2020 WTO Ruling: A panel held that 2017 US Section 301 tariffs on China violated WTO commitments; US appealed to a non-existent Appellate Body.
Relevant Keywords for Prelims:
- Acts/Laws: US Trade Act of 1974 (Section 122, Section 301)
- Institutions: WTO, WTO Appellate Body, US Court of International Trade, Congressional Research Service (CRS)
- Concepts: Balance of Payment (BOP) crisis, Unilateral tariffs, Dispute Settlement Mechanism (DSM), Reciprocal trade agreements
UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage):
- Static Linkage: WTO structure—Dispute Settlement Body (DSB), Appellate Body; principles of non-discrimination (MFN, National Treatment); GATT Article XII (BOP exceptions); distinction between tariffs and non-tariff barriers.
- Dynamic Linkage: India’s current trade negotiations with the US; implications for Indian exports (steel, pharmaceuticals, textiles) under Section 301 proceedings; relevance for India’s stance on WTO reform; the Appellate Body crisis as a recurring Prelims theme.
- Prelims Angle: Questions may test understanding of Section 301 vs. Section 122, the role of WTO panels, the significance of the Appellate Body deadlock, and India’s participation in trade disputes. Factual recall of key WTO rulings involving the US is also relevant.
Source / Reference Link: The Hindu
Subject: Economy
Micro-Topics: Capital Markets, IFSC (GIFT City), Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS)
News Context:
NSEIX Global Access platform enables Indian residents to directly buy US stocks (NYSE, Nasdaq) with digital onboarding, operating from GIFT City under IFSCA regulation.
Core Theme:
NSEIX-GA represents a major financial innovation enabling seamless retail participation in global equities. By leveraging GIFT City’s IFSC framework, it offers regulatory clarity, digital onboarding, fractional investing, and simplified tax treatment. The platform aligns with India’s vision of positioning GIFT City as a global financial hub while democratizing access to international investment opportunities.
Key Facts:
- Regulator: International Financial Services Centres Authority (IFSCA) – unified regulator for GIFT City.
- Features: Fractional investing; T+1 settlement; no separate demand account; Digilocker-based KYC.
- Taxation: Capital gains taxable in India (India-US treaty); 25% US withholding tax on dividends (claimable as credit).
- LRS Limit: $2.50 lakh/financial year; TCS exemption up to ₹10 lakh.
Relevant Keywords:
NSEIX, IFSCA, GIFT City, Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS), Fractional investing, T+1 settlement, India-US Tax Treaty.
Static-Dynamic Linkage:
- Static: GIFT City as India’s first IFSC; IFSCA (2019); LRS limits; TCS provisions.
- Dynamic: India’s push for GIFT City as global financial hub; retail investor access to international markets.
Prelims Angles:
Facts about IFSCA (parent act, year), GIFT City location (Gandhinagar), LRS limit, TCS threshold, and regulatory distinction between IFSCA and SEBI.
Source: The Hindu
Subject: Modern Indian History, Indian National Movement
Micro-Topic: The Revolutionary Movement; Key Personalities and their Ideologies; Important Dates and Events.
Background:
On March 23, 2026, the Prime Minister of India paid tributes to freedom fighters Bhagat Singh, Shivaram Rajguru, and Sukhdev Thapar on the occasion of Shaheed Diwas (Martyr’s Day). This day commemorates their execution by the British colonial government in 1931.
Key Details and Facts:
- Bhagat Singh, Rajguru, and Sukhdev were hanged on March 23, 1931, in Lahore Central Jail for their involvement in the Lahore Conspiracy Case, specifically for the assassination of British police officer J.P. Saunders to avenge the death of Lala Lajpat Rai.
- The Objective: Their actions were aimed at galvanizing the revolutionary movement against colonial rule, seeking complete independence.
- Ideological Stance: They were associated with the Hindustan Socialist Republican Association (HSRA) and were influenced by socialist and anarchist ideas, contrasting with the Gandhian philosophy of non-violence.
Relevant for Prelims:
- Organizations: Hindustan Socialist Republican Association (HSRA), Naujawan Bharat Sabha
- Concepts: Revolutionary Nationalism, Lahore Conspiracy Case, Central Assembly Hall Bombing (1929)
- Key Figures: Lala Lajpat Rai, Chandrashekhar Azad, Jatin Das (who died during a hunger strike)
- Locations: Lahore, Ferozepur (Bhagat Singh’s birthplace)
UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage):
- Static: Lahore Conspiracy Case (1931) – J.P. Saunders assassination. HSRA, Naujawan Bharat Sabha. Revolutionary ideology vs. Gandhian non-violence.
Dynamic: HSRA’s shift to socialism.
Possible Prelims Angles for MCQs:
- With reference to the revolutionary activities in the 1920s-30s, consider the following pairs (freedom fighter – associated organization). Which is correctly matched?
- The Lahore Conspiracy Case is directly associated with the assassination of which British police officer, which was in retaliation for the death of Lala Lajpat Rai?
- On which date is Shaheed Diwas observed to commemorate the martyrdom of Bhagat Singh, Rajguru, and Sukhdev?
Source / Reference Link: PIB
(MAINS Focus)
Subject: GS Paper II – Polity & Governance
Sub-topic: Fundamental Rights (Article 19); Government Policies & Interventions
Introduction
The recent blocking of activist and journalist accounts marks a peak in India’s digital censorship trend (URL blocks rose from 470 in 2014 to 9,800 in 2021). While Shreya Singhal (2015) upheld Section 69A of the IT Act due to its procedural safeguards, the government’s expansive use of confidentiality clauses and mass account suspensions—termed “digital exile”—raises concerns about the erosion of free speech under Article 19(1)(a).
Background & Constitutional Framework
- Article 19(1)(a): Guarantees free speech, subject to reasonable restrictions under Article 19(2) (sovereignty, security, public order).
- IT Act, 2000 (Section 69A): Allows blocking of information for public interest, requiring reasoned orders and judicial review.
- IT (Blocking) Rules, 2009:
- Rule 16: Mandates confidentiality of proceedings.
- Review Committee: Composed entirely of executive members, it has never overturned a blocking order.
Key Issues & Challenges
- Dilution of Safeguards: The government uses Rule 16 to withhold blocking orders from affected parties, denying the right to be heard (audi alteram partem) and undermining judicial review.
- Disproportionate Action: Blocking entire accounts (digital exile) rather than specific URLs violates the doctrine of proportionality, effectively removing citizens from the digital public square.
- Expansive Interpretation: The 2023 blocking of the BBC documentary expanded “public order” beyond the narrow definition set in Ram Manohar Lohia (1966).
- Judicial Setback: The Karnataka High Court’s dismissal of Twitter’s plea and imposition of a fine emboldened unilateral state action.
- Proposed Decentralization: Plans to empower multiple ministries for blocking could create arbitrary censorship without specialized oversight.
Critical Analysis
- Weaknesses: The executive-dominated review committee lacks independence; confidentiality clauses are misused as a shield against accountability; mass censorship during the 2020-21 farmers’ protest revealed a pattern of reactive governance.
- Strengths (Counter-view): The government cites sovereign authority and the need for swift action against hate speech or threats to territorial integrity.
Way Forward
- Independent Review: Reform the review committee to include judicial or civil society members, ensuring genuine checks.
- Proportionality Guidelines: Codify a graded response—URL takedown, temporary suspension, then account blocking—ensuring the least restrictive measure.
- Judicial Oversight: Limit Rule 16’s confidentiality to exceptional cases of immediate sovereignty threats, not routine use.
- Legislative Clarity: Align the definition of “public order” with judicial precedents to curb executive discretion.
Conclusion
Balancing national security with constitutional freedoms requires more than procedural formalities. Without independent oversight and strict adherence to proportionality, digital governance risks sliding into arbitrary censorship. Restoring safeguards is essential to uphold the liberal democratic ethos of free speech.
UPSC Mains Practice Question
- Examine the tension between the procedural safeguards under Section 69A of the IT Act, 2000, and the recent practice of digital censorship in India. Suggest reforms to ensure that restrictions on free speech remain reasonable and proportionate. (150 words, 10 marks)
Source: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/digital-exile-on-digital-censorship/article70772588.ece
Subject: GS Paper II – Polity & Governance
Sub-topic: Federal Structure; Centre-State Relations; Role of Governors and Finance Commission
Introduction
The “double-engine sarkar” slogan, while seemingly a harmless metaphor for Centre-State coordination, carries a deeper constitutional implication: that development flows preferentially to States aligned with the ruling party at the Centre.
This notion challenges India’s federal compact, which envisions States as equal partners, not beneficiaries of political goodwill.
Constitutional Foundation of Fiscal Federalism
- Article 280 (Finance Commission): Provides for rule-based fiscal transfers based on objective criteria (income gap, population, fiscal capacity), insulating States from political discrimination.
- Divisible Pool: Union taxes are shared with all States; however, the increasing reliance on cesses and surcharges (outside the divisible pool) has reduced States’ share, weakening their fiscal autonomy.
- Southern States’ Grievance: Use of recent population data in allocation formulas penalizes States that successfully controlled population growth, raising concerns about horizontal equity.
Federal Friction Beyond Finance
- Gubernatorial Delays: Prolonged withholding of assent to Bills in opposition-ruled States (Tamil Nadu, Kerala) undermines legislative sovereignty.
- SC Rulings: In State of Punjab vs Principal Secretary (2023) and State of Tamil Nadu vs Governor (2025), the Court held that gubernatorial inaction is constitutionally impermissible.
- Delhi Impasse: Persistent disputes between the elected government and the Lieutenant-Governor illustrated how federal machinery can be weaponized against political opponents.
Critical Analysis: Erosion of Federal Spirit
- Pattern: Fiscal centralization, selective gubernatorial delays, and legislative obstructions collectively form a pattern where governance becomes contingent on political alignment—a subtle erosion of federalism, distinct from the overt misuse of Article 356 curbed in S.R. Bommai (1994).
- Structural Weakness: The Finance Commission’s recommendations are advisory; the Union’s discretion over cesses and the absence of binding timelines for Governors create avenues for executive overreach.
Way Forward: Institutional Reforms
- Fiscal: Make Finance Commission recommendations binding; bring cesses and surcharges into the divisible pool to restore States’ fiscal autonomy.
- Gubernatorial: Prescribe a fixed statutory timeline (e.g., 3 months) for assent to Bills, failing which assent would be deemed granted.
- Cooperative Forums: Revitalize the Inter-State Council (Article 263) as a genuine deliberative body, not a ceremonial one.
- Judicial Vigilance: Continue the trend set in S.R. Bommai and recent gubernatorial cases to protect States from political retaliation.
Conclusion
The “double-engine” metaphor, when operationalized as political conditionality, corrodes the constitutional promise of equal citizenship. India’s federal democracy must be powered by rules and institutions that ensure fairness, not by political alignment. Upholding this balance is essential for the spirit of cooperative federalism.
UPSC Mains Practice Question
- “The ‘double-engine sarkar’ slogan, while politically appealing, masks a deeper constitutional dilemma.” Critically examine this statement in the context of recent trends in fiscal federalism and gubernatorial conduct in India. Suggest institutional reforms to strengthen cooperative federalism. (150 words, 10 marks)








