IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs Analysis
Archives
(PRELIMS Focus)
Subject: Polity – Civil Services; Modern History – Sardar Patel; Governance – Viksit Bharat.
Why in News?
- April 21, 2026 – Civil Services Day celebrated across India
- Theme 2026: “Viksit Bharat: Citizen-Centric Governance and Development at the Last Mile”
Why April 21?
- Commemorates the day when Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel (first Home Minister of independent India) addressed probationers of Administrative Services Officers in 1947 in Delhi
- Patel referred to civil servants as the “steel frame of India”
Significance of Civil Services Day
- Annual occasion for civil servants to rededicate themselves to the cause of citizens
- Renew commitments to public service and excellence in work
- Celebrated by central government on April 21 every year
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Polity/Modern History Syllabus)
- Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel: First Home Minister; integrated 562 princely states; “Iron Man of India”
- Civil services in India: Part of Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) – Article 315-323 (Part XIV)
- Constitutional provisions: All-India Services (Article 312)
Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026)
- Theme 2026: Viksit Bharat – citizen-centric governance
- Focus: Last-mile delivery and inclusive development
- Viksit Bharat 2047 – overarching national vision
Source/Reference:
Subject: Economy – Core Sector; IIP; West Asia Crisis Impact; Industrial Production.
Why in News?
- India’s eight core industrial sectors contracted by 0.4% in March 2026 – first full month after the West Asia war broke out
- Worst performance in 19 months
- Growth for full year 2025-26: 2.6% – lowest since COVID-19 pandemic (2020-21)
Source: Index of Eight Core Industries, Ministry of Commerce and Industry (April 20, 2026)
What are the Eight Core Sectors?
- Weight in IIP: 40.27% of Index of Industrial Production (IIP)
- Sectors (with weights):
- Coal (10.33%)
- Crude Oil (8.98%)
- Natural Gas (6.88%)
- Refinery Products (28.04%) – highest weight
- Fertilizers (2.63%)
- Steel (17.92%)
- Cement (5.37%)
- Electricity (19.85%)
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Economy Syllabus)
- Eight Core Sectors: Constitute 40.27% of IIP
- IIP base year: 2011-12
- Ministry of Commerce and Industry: Releases IIP and core sector data (through CSO)
Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026)
- First full month after West Asia war – March 2026
- Fertilizer sector worst hit – 24.6% contraction (input shortages)
- Crude oil 7th consecutive month of contraction
- Natural gas only bright spot – 6.4% growth (government push)
Source/Reference:
Subject: Art & Culture – Bhakti Movement; Kannada Literature; Basavanna; Anubhava Mantapa; Social Reform.
Why in News?
- Basava Jayanti celebrated with fervour in several districts of Karnataka on April 20, 2026 (Monday)
- Events included: singing of Vachanas (rhymed prose), colourful processions, motorcycle rallies, religious and cultural programmes
Who was Basaveshwara (Basavanna)?
Time Period
- 12th century (born: 1131 CE – died: 1167 CE, traditionally)
- Social reformer, philosopher, poet, and statesman
Key Contributions
Anubhava Mantapa (The “Hall of Spiritual Experience”)
- Established in Basavakalyan, Karnataka
- Considered the first parliament in the world – where men and women from all backgrounds discussed social, religious, and economic issues freely
- Forerunner to modern democratic institutions
Social Reforms
- Opposed caste system and social discrimination
- Advocated for equality of all human beings
- Fought against gender discrimination – promoted women’s empowerment
Religious Reforms
- Rejected ritualistic practices and blind faith
- Promoted Kannada language over Sanskrit for spiritual discourse
- Advocated Ishtalinga (personal linga) for direct devotion
Literary Contribution
- Composed Vachanas (rhymed prose in Kannada) – simple, direct, and powerful critique of social evils
- His Vachanas remain popular and are sung in chorus during celebrations
Basavanna’s Legacy
Lingayat/Veerashaiva Tradition
- Considered the founding saint of the Lingayat (Veerashaiva) tradition
Sharanas (Companions)
- Worked with other social reformers: Allama Prabhu, Akka Mahadevi, Channabasavanna, Siddharama
Modern Recognition
- Statue of Basaveshwara installed at the Indian Parliament (dedicated by Prime Minister Modi in 2024) – first time a statue of a social reformer was installed in Parliament complex by the government
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Art & Culture / History Syllabus)
- Bhakti movement in South India: Basavanna’s Veerashaiva/Lingayat movement (12th century)
- Anubhava Mantapa: First democratic institution – allowed participation of women and lower castes
- Vachana literature: Kannada prose poetry; alternative to Sanskrit-dominated religious discourse
- Comparison with other Bhakti saints: Basavanna (South) vs. Kabir (North) – both opposed caste and ritualism
Dynamic (Current Affairs – April 2026)
- Basava Jayanti celebrations (April 20, 2026) – state-wide events in Karnataka
- Union Minister Pralhad Joshi – attended Hubballi celebrations
- Vachana singing in chorus – revival of oral tradition
- Parliament statue (2024) – Basavanna’s national recognition
Source/Reference:
Subject: Economy – Biofuels; Energy Security; Ethanol Blending; E85; E20; ICAO.
Why in News?
- Government will “very soon” issue draft rules for roll-out of Ethanol 85 (E85) fuel
- Move accelerated by vulnerabilities in oil exports exposed during the West Asia crisis
What is E85 Fuel?
Definition
- Fuel blend made of up to 85% ethanol and 15% petrol (gasoline)
- Distinct from E20 (20% ethanol blend)
Key Features
- Dedicated engine compatibility required (not for all vehicles)
- Separate dispensing infrastructure needed at fuel pumps
- Engines designed for E85 can also operate on lower blends (E60, E50)
Benefits
Greater Energy Security
- Reduces dependence on imported crude oil
- India imports over 85% of its crude oil requirements
Reduction in Vehicular Pollution
- Ethanol burns cleaner than pure petrol
Domestically Produced
- Made from sugarcane, maize, or grain
- Renewable fuel source
Current Ethanol Blending Status
E20 Mandate
- Government mandated sale of petrol with up to 20% ethanol across all States and UTs from April 1, 2026
E20 Flexibility
- Under 2023 notification, ethanol blending can go up to 27% (not fixed at 20%)
Challenges and Considerations
Competing Demands
- Aviation sector: India has 1% blending target for international flights under ICAO’s net-zero by 2050 plan
- Government official stated there is “surplus” ethanol available to meet both demands
Infrastructure Requirements
- Separate dispensing pumps needed
- Dedicated engine compatibility for E85 vehicles
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Economy / Science & Technology Syllabus)
- National Policy on Biofuels (2018, amended 2022): Targets 20% ethanol blending by 2025 (achieved 2026)
- Ethanol production sources: Sugarcane (C-heavy molasses, B-heavy molasses), maize, damaged food grains
- Ethanol blending benefits: Reduces oil import bill, supports farmers, lower emissions
- E20 vehicles: Automakers required to produce E20-compliant engines
Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026)
- E20 mandate effective from April 1, 2026 – all States and UTs
- E85 draft rules to be notified soon – next step in ethanol blending roadmap
- West Asia crisis trigger – sharpened focus on alternative fuels after oil supply disruptions
- Surplus ethanol availability – government confident of meeting both road and aviation demand
Source/Reference:
Subject: Environment – Wildlife Conservation; Black Panther; Central Zoo Authority; Zoo Exchange Programme.
Why in News?
- A female black panther was released into an enclosure at Indira Gandhi Zoological Park (IGZP), Visakhapatnam on April 21, 2026
- Ends a 40-year gap since the species was last on display at the zoo (mid-1980s)
About the Black Panther
What is a Black Panther?
- A melanistic variant of the leopard (not a separate species)
- Dark coat caused by an excess of the pigment melanin
- Found predominantly in dense forests of South and Southeast Asia
Characteristics
- Solitary and nocturnal habits
- Plays a key role in maintaining ecological balance (apex predator)
Source and Exchange Programme
Origin
- Brought from Assam State Zoo-cum-Botanical Garden, Guwahati
- Assam Zoo is the only breeding centre for black panthers in India
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Environment & Ecology Syllabus)
- Central Zoo Authority (CZA): Established under Wildlife Protection Act, 1972; oversees zoo standards and animal exchange programmes
- Wildlife Protection Act, 1972: Schedule I – highest protection for leopards (including melanistic variants)
- Melanism: Genetic mutation causing excess melanin; common in leopards of dense forest habitats
- Zoo exchange programmes: Regulated by CZA to maintain genetic diversity in captive populations
Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026)
- First black panther in Vizag zoo after 40 years – last displayed in mid-1980s
- Assam Zoo as only breeding centre – national importance for black panther conservation
- Inter-zoo exchange – part of CZA-approved programme for species management
Source/Reference:
Subject: Geography – Coastal Management; Economy – Blue Economy; International Relations – India-Norway Collaboration
Why in News?
- Odisha has become the first state in India to launch a Marine Spatial Plan (MSP) under the second phase of the India-Norway sustainable ocean management initiative
- The state government signed an MoU with the National Centre for Coastal Research (NCCR) under the Ministry of Earth Sciences for implementation
- First phase (2021-2022) was implemented in Puducherry and Lakshadweep
What is Marine Spatial Planning (MSP)?
Definition (UNESCO-IOC)
- A public process of analyzing and allocating the spatial and temporal distribution of human activities in marine areas to achieve ecological, economic, and social objectives specified through a political process
Key Features
- Data-driven planning tool that maps marine areas and allocates zones for activities such as fishing, tourism, shipping, conservation, and energy projects
- Balances economic growth with environmental protection
- Promotes sustainable use of marine resources
- Supports development of Blue Economy
Why Odisha Needs MSP
- Rich but sensitive coast: ~574 km coastline with lagoons, mangroves, and estuaries supporting high biodiversity.
- Rising development pressure: Industry, tourism, and ports increasing resource conflicts—needs balanced growth.
- High climate risk: Frequent cyclones and sea-level rise demand adaptive coastal planning.
Implementation Details
- Scientific mapping (NCCR): Study coastal waters off Odisha—benthic mapping, salinity, temperature—and identify zones for tourism, fisheries, and seaweed/seagrass cultivation.
- Policy & governance: Data-driven policymaking to support multi-sector coastal development and stakeholders.
India-Norway Collaboration
- India–Norway Integrated Ocean Initiative (2019): pilot phase (2021–22) in Puducherry & Lakshadweep with ~₹8–10 crore/year funding.
- Expansion phase (2026): Odisha as first full-scale state; backed by MoES with support interest from World Bank & UNEP.
Strategic Significance
Blue Economy Alignment
- Aligns with Centre’s emphasis on Blue Economy as one of ten core dimensions of growth (New India by 2030 vision)
- Supports sustainable ocean resources utilisation for economic and social development
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Geography / Economy Syllabus)
- Blue Economy: One of ten core dimensions of India’s growth (New India 2030 vision)
- Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ): Regulated under Environment Protection Act, 1986
- India’s coastline: 7,516 km (mainland: 5,422 km; island territories: 2,094 km)
- Odisha coastline: ~550 km (3rd longest among Indian states after Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh)
Dynamic (Current Affairs – April 2026)
- First state to implement MSP – Odisha leads in integrated ocean planning
- Phase I (2021-22): Puducherry, Lakshadweep (UTs)
- Phase II (2026): Odisha (first state)
- International collaboration: India-Norway (2019 MoU)
- Climate resilience: MSP as tool for adaptation in cyclone-prone region
Source/Reference:
https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/marine-spatial-planning-odisha-10643575/
Subject: Environment – Conservation Movements; Polity – Tribal Rights (PESA, FRA, Fifth Schedule).
Why in News?
- Earth Day 2026 (April 22) theme: “Our Power, Our Planet” – emphasizing individual and community action over policy alone
- Down To Earth magazine pays tribute to people-led environmental movements from the iconic Chipko Movement to ongoing protests in Odisha and the Ken-Betwa region
Chipko Movement (1970s): The Original “Tree Huggers”
- Origin & method: 1970s Himalayas (Uttarakhand); “Chipko” = hugging trees to stop felling; 1974 Reni action led by Gaura Devi led to a 20-year ban above 1,000 m.
- Key leaders: Sunderlal Bahuguna, Chandi Prasad Bhatt, and Gaura Devi.
- Spread: Reached Gujarat (Chhota Udaipur) where tribal women protected Mahua trees under Harivallabh Parikh and Sanat Mehta.
- Impact & message: Influenced forest conservation laws (1980), curbed deforestation, protected livelihoods; highlighted links between deforestation, floods, and landslides.
Ongoing People-Led Movements (2026)
- Ken-Betwa River Linking Project Protests (Madhya Pradesh)
- Context: Protests (April 2026) at Dhodan Dam, part of the Ken–Betwa link in MP; ~1,000 people from 40 villages mobilised.
- Key demands: Higher compensation, halt to alleged unauthorised demolitions, and withdrawal of “false cases.”
- Govt stance: Says 90% compensation done under rules; prohibitory orders imposed; some protesters booked for trespass/damage.
- Outcome: Protest called off after review assurance; joint teams to re-survey 14 villages using official records.
- Sijimali Bauxite Mine Protests (Odisha)
- Project & protests: Since 2023, tribals in Sijimali hills (Rayagada, Odisha) oppose a 50-year bauxite lease to Vedanta Limited; includes a forest road (≈5 ha felling) and a 311 MT mine (9 MT/yr).
- Police clash (Apr 7, 2026): Violence at Kantamal village—~70 injured; allegations of night raids, power cuts, lathi-charge/tear gas, detentions, and “false cases.”
- Rights concerns: Alleged violations of PESA Act, 1996 and Forest Rights Act, 2006—no valid Gram Sabha consent; disputed 2023 meetings; pending forest rights claims.
- Political response: Opposition parties and leaders seek probe, halt to project, and fresh Gram Sabhas under judicial oversight (Niyamgiri-like process).
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Environment / Polity Syllabus)
- Chipko Movement (1970s): First major people-led forest conservation movement in India
- Forest Conservation Act, 1980: Enacted after Chipko; restricted diversion of forest land
- PESA Act, 1996: Extended Panchayati Raj to Scheduled Areas; empowered Gram Sabhas
- Forest Rights Act, 2006: Recognised individual and community forest rights
- Fifth Schedule (Article 244): Administration of Scheduled Areas (tribal regions)
- Niyamgiri case (2013): SC upheld Gram Sabha consent for mining; set precedent for Sijimali
Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026)
- Earth Day theme “Our Power, Our Planet” – people-led environmental action
- Ken-Betwa protests (April 2026) – compensation and displacement issues
- Sijimali protests (April 2026) – police clash; 70 injured; rights violations alleged
- Demand for Niyamgiri-style Gram Sabha in Sijimali
- Green India Challenge: 196 million trees planted, 22,000 rainwater harvesting systems installed over 15 years; presented to Commonwealth Secretariat
Source/Reference:
(MAINS Focus)
GS Paper II – International Relations (Bilateral Relations)
India’s Act East Policy; Economic Diplomacy; Defence Cooperation; Indo-Pacific Strategy
Introduction
The April 2026 state visit of South Korean President to India marked a major boost in ties after eight years. Both countries adopted a Joint Strategic Vision (2026–30) aiming to double trade to $50 billion by 2030.
The partnership now focuses on technology, supply chains, and Indo-Pacific stability amid global disruptions.
Main Body
Strategic & Political Foundations
- Shared democratic vision & strategic alignment: India and South Korea see each other as key partners—aligned through Act East Policy and New Southern Policy, with convergence in the Indo-Pacific via Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative.
- Stronger institutional engagement: Annual leader meetings, a new 2+2 dialogue, and expanded parliamentary exchanges deepen structured cooperation.
Economic & Trade Cooperation: The $50 Billion Target
- CEPA 2.0 for balanced trade: Upgrade of Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement to reduce trade imbalance and expand into digital trade, green economy, and supply chains.
- New economic & security frameworks: Industrial Cooperation Committee and Economic Security Dialogue to boost sectors like semiconductors, EV batteries, and ensure resilience in critical minerals and green hydrogen.
- Digital & financial integration: Linkage of Unified Payments Interface with Korea’s system, plus fintech cooperation for cross-border financial services.
Defence & Technology: Co-Development and Innovation
- Defence manufacturing boost: Expansion of K9 Vajra collaboration (L&T–Hanwha) with more tech transfer, and exploration of new air defence and missile systems.
- Innovation in defence: Launch of Korea-India Defence Accelerator (KIND-X) to link startups, incubators, and investors.
- Digital & semiconductor cooperation: India-Korea Digital Bridge on AI and data, with investment push in semiconductors.
Shipbuilding & Maritime Partnership
Comprehensive Framework:
- A dedicated framework for partnership in shipbuilding, shipping, and maritime logistics was adopted.
- Greenfield Shipyard: HD Korea Shipbuilding (HD KSOE) signed a non-binding MoU for joint development of a large greenfield shipyard in Southern India.
- Ports & Logistics: MoU on Cooperation in the Ports sector, with ROK aiding in port infrastructure development.
Energy & Resource Security
Joint Statements:
- Separate Joint Statements on Cooperation in Sustainability and Energy Resource Security were issued.
- Steel Dialogue: Annual India-ROK Steel Dialogue launched, focusing on green steel-making. POSCO and JSW signed an MoU for a 6 MMT Integrated Steel Plant in Odisha.
- Critical Minerals: Cooperation to strengthen supply chains for strategic resources, critical minerals, and rare earths.
Cultural & People-to-People Ties
Ancient Connect:
- PM Modi invoked the legend of Queen Heo Hwang-ok (Princess Suriratna of Ayodhya) who married Korean King Kim Suro in 48 AD, highlighting two millennia of shared heritage.
Modern Cultural Wave:
- President Lee noted that “Bollywood movies and Indian cuisine have become part of everyday culture” in Korea, while K-pop and K-dramas are hugely popular in India.
- Cultural Exchange Programme (2026-2030): Signed to promote cooperation in film, animation, and gaming.
- Friendship Year: 2028-29 will be commemorated as the “Year of India-ROK Friendship”.
Conclusion
The April 2026 summit between India and South Korea reset ties from a buyer-seller model to co-development and strategic trust. With goals like $50B trade, Unified Payments Interface integration, and defence collaboration, the real test lies in effective implementation to deliver economic and Indo-Pacific security gains.
UPSC Mains Practice Question
- Critically assess the outcomes of the recent India–South Korea Summit 2026. How can India and South Korea address trade imbalance and realise their full strategic potential to co-develop critical technologies and defence platforms in the Indo-Pacific? (250 words, 15 marks)
GS Paper III – Economy (Energy Security) | GS Paper III – Security (Strategic Vulnerabilities)
LPG Import Dependence; Household Fuel Security; Strategic Storage; Energy Transition
Introduction
India faces a structural LPG mismatch: domestic output meets only ~40% of demand (~33 MT), forcing ~60% imports. Since LPG is primarily a household fuel, unlike flexible industrial use, this dependence creates persistent supply vulnerability.
Main Body
India’s Exposure: A Household Vulnerability Matrix
The Key Data:
- LPG import share of total demand: 60%
- LPG imports as % of domestic production: 150%
- Household kitchen criticality of LPG: Very high
- LPG cover/storage position: 15 days operational tankage cover; ~1.5 days in cavern-based deep storage (140,000 tonnes at Visakhapatnam and Mangaluru)
Comparative Vulnerability:
- Japan: Imports 70% of LPG, but only 40% of households use LPG (electricity 55%, city gas large base). Storage: 108.3 days.
- China: Imports 40.4% of LPG, but large share driven by petrochemical sector. Household vulnerability low to moderate.
- South Korea: Imports ~74.5% of LPG, but household energy supported by natural gas and electricity. Storage: 15-30 day framework.
The Indian Exception:
- India’s problem is not that it imports LPG—many countries do.
- India’s problem is that it imports LPG for the one use that is hardest to defer and hardest to replace quickly: household cooking.
The Strait of Hormuz: No Longer a Dependable Corridor
The Vulnerability:
- About 90% of India’s LPG imports normally transit the Strait of Hormuz.
- The West Asia war has exposed this sharply.
- Even if present tensions ease, the old assumption of uninterrupted normality will not return easily.
- The risk attached to this route has now entered the strategic calculation in a lasting way.
What This Means:
- India cannot treat the Strait of Hormuz as a routinely dependable corridor for household fuel security.
- A corridor that was once a logistics route is now a strategic vulnerability.
Storage: Thin Reserve-Style Protection
Operational Tankage Cover:
- About 15 days across import locations, bottling plants, refineries, and fractionators (PPAC data).
- Shows the system is not empty—but operational cover is not strategic reserve.
Cavern-Based Deep Storage:
- Visakhapatnam: 60,000 tonnes
- Mangaluru: 80,000 tonnes
- Total: 140,000 tonnes
- Equals only about 1.5 days of national demand
The Gap:
- For a country of India’s size and import dependence, reserve-style protection is still very thin.
- Japan has 108.3 days of storage. India has 1.5 days of deep storage.
What India Must Do: Four Policy Priorities
First: Reserve Domestic Molecules for Kitchens
- Stop treating all LPG molecules as one pool.
- Direct refiners to prioritise propane and butane for cooking LPG rather than petrochemical or gasoline-blending use.
- Domestically produced LPG should be reserved first for household fuel security.
- Petrochemical users should increasingly arrange their own feedstock imports.
- The government should not have to defend domestic kitchens and industrial feedstock demand from the same protected pool.
Second: Build a Deeper LPG Buffer
- Initial goal: 2 to 3 weeks of protected cover for the household pool.
- At current demand levels: 1.3 million tonnes for 14 days; 1.9 million tonnes for 21 days.
- This is a large jump from current cavern capacity (0.14 million tonnes).
- But this is the minimum scale at which India can begin to claim meaningful resilience.
Third: Sustained Campaign for Electric Cooking
- Target urban and semi-urban India.
- Households with reliable power, adequate wiring, and access to induction cooking should be encouraged to shift primary cooking load away from LPG.
- A ‘Give it up 2.0’ plan should be launched.
- The aim: reduce the number of homes for which the LPG cylinder remains the first and only kitchen fuel.
- Piped Natural Gas (PNG) should expand where density supports it, but electricity is the broader lever.
Fourth: Diversify Import Sources and Corridors
- Reduce concentration on the Strait of Hormuz (currently 90%).
- Explore alternative supply routes and long-term contracts with non-Gulf suppliers.
- Build strategic partnerships for LPG supply resilience.
Conclusion
India faces a structural LPG vulnerability: ~60% imports (mostly via Strait of Hormuz) and over 90% used in households, leaving little flexibility. With minimal storage (~1.5 days) and tight global supply, the solution lies in reserving domestic LPG for kitchens, separating petrochemical use, building a 2–3 week buffer, and promoting electric cooking.
UPSC Mains Practice Question
- Critically analyse India’s LPG vulnerability in terms of import dependence, limited storage, and high household reliance. What policy measures can reduce this strategic risk? (250 words, 15 marks)








