IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs Analysis
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(PRELIMS Focus)
Subject: Geography – Strategic Chokepoints; International Relations – Maritime Security; Economy – Energy Security.
Why in News?
- The ongoing West Asia crisis (2026) has seen simultaneous disruptions at Strait of Hormuz (Iran-Israel conflict) and Bab el-Mandeb (Houthi attacks)
- This has exposed India’s vulnerability to chokepoint blockades, with crude oil hitting $115/barrel and the rupee weakening to 94/$
What are Maritime Chokepoints?
- Narrow sea passages critical for global energy and trade
- Control over them offers significant strategic leverage
- Closure can disrupt supply chains, spike oil prices, and trigger global inflation
Major Global Chokepoints
Strait of Hormuz
- Located between Iran and Oman; connects Persian Gulf to Gulf of Oman
- 25-30% of global oil passes through it
- India imports 55% of its crude oil via this route
- Currently effectively closed due to Iran-Israel-US war
Bab el-Mandeb (Gate of Tears)
- Located between Yemen and Djibouti; connects Red Sea to Gulf of Aden
- 12% of global oil passes through it
- 80% of India’s Europe-bound exports transit this route (via Suez Canal)
- Houthi attacks have made it dangerous for shipping
Strait of Malacca
- Located between Malaysia, Indonesia, and Singapore; connects Indian Ocean to South China Sea
- 30% of global trade passes through it
- 80% of China’s oil imports pass through this strait (the “Malacca Dilemma”)
- India’s Andaman and Nicobar Islands dominate its western entrance
Suez Canal (Egypt)
- Connects Mediterranean Sea to Red Sea
- 12-15% of world trade passes through it
- Fastest maritime route between Asia and Europe
Panama Canal
- Connects Pacific and Atlantic Oceans
- Crucial for trade involving the Americas
- Currently facing climate change-induced water shortages restricting traffic
Turkish Straits (Bosporus and Dardanelles)
- Connect Black Sea to Mediterranean Sea
- Gateway for Russian and Kazakh oil (3 million barrels per day)
- Also critical for grain exports from Russia and Ukraine
- Governed by Montreux Convention (1936)
Cape of Good Hope
- Southern tip of South Africa
- Not a chokepoint but the alternative route when Suez/Hormuz closed
- Adds two weeks to transit time
India’s Vulnerability
Key Numbers
- 88% of crude oil imports
- 55% of crude passes through Hormuz
- 38% of remittances from West Asia
- 15% of goods exports to West Asia
Recent Impacts (2026 Crisis)
- Crude oil: $70 → $115/barrel
- Rupee: 90 → 94 per dollar
- Imported inflation reached 5.4% (SBI estimate)
- Current Account Deficit widened from 1% to 2.1% of GDP
- $14 billion FPI outflows in March 2026 alone
India’s Countermeasures
Chabahar Port (Iran)
- Bypasses Pakistan; provides access to Afghanistan and Central Asia
- Not a full substitute for Hormuz but part of diversification strategy
Sittwe Port (Myanmar)
- Reduces reliance on Malacca Strait for India’s North Eastern region
- Part of Kaladan Multi-Modal Transit Transport Project
International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC)
- India-Iran-Russia route via Caspian Sea
- Alternative to Suez Canal for trade with Russia and Europe
India-Middle East-Europe Corridor (IMEC)
- Announced at G20 Summit (2023) under India’s presidency
- Rail and shipping link bypassing chokepoints
Andaman and Nicobar Command (ANC)
- India’s only tri-service command
- Strategically positioned at the entrance of Malacca Strait
- Great Nicobar Island development includes transshipment port
Overseas Access Points
- INS Baaz – naval air base at the mouth of Malacca Strait
- Agaléga Islands (Mauritius) – strategic facilities for surveillance
- Duqm Port (Oman) – Indian naval access midway between Hormuz and Bab el-Mandeb
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Geography/International Relations)
- UNCLOS (1982): Maritime zones – territorial sea (12 nm), EEZ (200 nm)
- Suez Canal – opened 1869, nationalized by Egypt in 1956
- India’s EEZ – 2.2 million sq km
Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026)
- West Asia crisis – simultaneous threats to Hormuz and Bab el-Mandeb
- India’s countermeasures – Chabahar, IMEC, INSTC, Andaman bases
- Global South vulnerability – imported instability from conflicts not of its making
Source/Reference:
Subject: Geography – Avalanche; Disaster Management; Strategic Highways; Ladakh; Zoji La; BRO.
Why in News?
- Another avalanche struck the Drass area of Kargil district along the Srinagar–Ladakh Highway on April 25, 2026, impacting around nine vehicles, including two tankers that skidded off the road
- This follows a major avalanche at Zoji La Pass on March 26, 2026, which claimed 7 lives and left 9 others injured
Why Avalanches are Common in Ladakh
Geographical Factors
- Zoji La is a high-altitude mountain pass connecting Kashmir to Ladakh
- Known for unpredictable weather and frequent avalanches, especially during late winter and early spring
- Heavy snowfall combined with unstable snow layers increases risk of sudden slides
- Even small changes in temperature or wind conditions can trigger avalanches
High-Risk Areas
- Zoji La Pass (11,575 ft altitude)
- Drass sector (known as second coldest inhabited place on Earth)
- Fariabad Glacier near Mount Kun
Strategic Importance of Srinagar-Leh Highway
- One of the most important routes in the region, serving as vital link between Kashmir and Ladakh
- Frequently affected during winter months, requiring constant monitoring and snow clearance
- Blockage affects movement of essential supplies, personnel, and vehicles
- Authorities have advised travellers to avoid route until conditions stabilise
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Geography / Disaster Management Syllabus)
- Avalanches: Types (slab, wet snow, icefall); causes (terrain, slope angle, snowpack stability, weather)
- Western Disturbances: Major cause of winter precipitation in Himalayas; laden with moisture from Mediterranean Sea
- Zoji La: One of India’s most strategic passes; part of NH1 connecting Srinagar to Leh
- High Altitude Warfare School (HAWS): Established 1948; trains Army personnel in mountain warfare and survival
Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026)
- March 26, 2026 Zoji La avalanche: 7 dead, 15 vehicles buried
- April 25, 2026 Drass avalanche: 9 vehicles impacted; second incident in weeks
- Vulnerability of critical infrastructure: High-altitude highways prone to such disasters
- Disaster response preparedness: Multi-agency rescue operations (Army, BRO, Police, SDRF)
- Role of technology: Satellite weather monitoring and avalanche prediction systems (SASE)
Source/Reference:
https://www.newsonair.gov.in/five-people-lost-their-lives-in-snow-avalanche-in-ladakh/
Economy (Banking & Monetary Policy) / Polity & Governance –Banking Regulation Act, 1949, payments bank regulations, license cancellation, and depositor protection.
Why in News?
- The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) cancelled the banking licence of Paytm Payments Bank Limited (PPBL) on April 24, 2026, effective from close of business that day
- This marks one of the most severe enforcement actions ever taken against a major Indian fintech entity
Reasons for Licence Cancellation
The RBI invoked its powers under Section 22(4) of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949, citing four critical failures:
- Detrimental Conduct (Section 22(3)(b))
- Affairs of the bank were conducted in a manner detrimental to the interest of the bank and its depositors
- Management Integrity (Section 22(3)(c))
- “General character of the management” was found to be prejudicial to the interest of depositors and public interest
- No Useful Purpose (Section 22(3)(e))
- No useful purpose or public interest would be served by allowing the bank to continue
- Licence Condition Violation (Section 22(3)(g))
- Bank failed to comply with conditions stipulated in its Payments Bank licence
Depositor Protection
Key Assurance from RBI
- Paytm Payments Bank has enough liquidity to repay its entire deposit liability upon winding up
- As of March 31, 2025: Customer deposits of Rs 1,395.22 crore across wallets, current and savings accounts; total gift instruments of Rs 33.13 crore
- During winding up, a liquidator will ensure every depositor is repaid in full
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Polity / Economy Syllabus)
- Banking Regulation Act, 1949: Section 22 governs licensing of banks; Section 5(b) defines “banking”
- Payments Banks: Introduced by RBI in 2015 based on Nachiket Mor Committee recommendations
- RBI’s supervisory powers: Under BR Act and RBI Act, 1934
- Deposit Insurance: DICGC covers deposits up to Rs 5 lakh per depositor per bank
Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026)
- Paytm Payments Bank licence cancelled – first major payments bank to be shut down
- Section 22(4) invoked – rare use of banking licence cancellation power
- Voluntary winding up – board approved on April 25, 2026 after licence cancellation
- Multi-bank model – Paytm’s UPI services now routed through Axis, HDFC, SBI, YES Bank
- Depositor protection – RBI assures full repayment from existing liquidity
Source/Reference:
Subject: International Relations & Economy – US immigration policy, H-1B visa reforms, skilled labour mobility, India-US bilateral ties.
Why in News?
- FY 2027 H-1B cap reached; new weighted selection (wage-based) effective February 27, 2026
- “End H-1B Visa Abuse Bill” proposes 3-year pause on new H-1B visas
What is H-1B?
- US non-immigrant visa for specialty occupations (requires bachelor’s degree)
- Annual cap: 65,000 regular + 20,000 master’s exemption
- 71% of H-1B approvals go to Indian nationals (FY2024)
Recent Policy Changes (2025-2026)
- Weighted Selection (Feb 27, 2026)
- Replaces random lottery with wage-level weighting
- Higher wage = more entries (Wage IV: 4 entries; Wage I: 1 entry)
- $100,000 Supplemental Fee (Sept 2025)
- Applies to new petitions; exemptions for renewals, F-1 transitions, current holders
- Social Media Vetting (Dec 2025)
- Mandatory for all applicants; causing months-long delays; thousands stranded
- Proposed 3-Year Pause Bill
- Cuts annual cap to 25,000; minimum wage $200,000; bans H-4 dependents
Impact on India
- 283,397 H-1B visas held by Indians (2024)
- 70% drop in applications from India-based companies since 2015
- Consular delays: families separated, jobs at risk
- India engaging US while safeguarding interests
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Polity / International Relations / Economy Syllabus)
- Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), 1952: US law governing H-1B and other visas
- USCIS: US Citizenship and Immigration Services – administers H-1B program
- DOL (Department of Labor): Certifies Labor Condition Applications (LCA)
- India-US skilled mobility: Strategic dimension of bilateral relationship
- Brain drain vs. brain circulation: Returning professionals can contribute to India’s tech ecosystem
Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026)
- Weighted selection effective February 27, 2026 – replacing lottery system
- $100,000 fee imposed September 19, 2025 – with exemptions clarified
- Social media vetting – causing consular delays; thousands stranded
- Three-year pause bill – introduced but not passed (pending)
- Indian professionals – 71% of H-1B approvals; 283,397 Indian holders as of 2024
- Declining India-based company demand – 70% drop since 2015
- Global alternatives – Canada, Europe, Middle East actively recruiting
Source/Reference:
Subject: Geography / Environment & Ecology / Economy (Renewable Energy, Hydropower, Government Schemes)
News Context:
The Union Cabinet approved the Small Hydro Power Development Scheme (2026–31) with an outlay of ₹2,584.60 crore to boost decentralised renewable energy, especially in hilly and North-Eastern regions
Key Features & Facts
- Definition: SHP = Hydropower projects up to 25 MW (under MNRE).
- Target: Addition of ~1,500 MW capacity.
- Current Status: Installed ~5,171 MW vs potential 21,133.61 MW (~24.5% utilised).
- Financial Support:
- NE & border areas: ₹3.6 crore/MW (max ₹30 crore/project)
- Others: ₹2.4 crore/MW (max ₹20 crore/project)
- Investment Potential: ₹15,000 crore; 51 lakh person-days employment
- DPR Support: ₹30 crore for ~200 projects
Significance of SHP
- Decentralised Power: Reduces transmission losses, ideal for remote areas
- Reliable Energy: Provides Round-The-Clock (RTC) power (unlike solar/wind)
- Eco-friendly: Minimal displacement, low ecological footprint
- Rural Development: Boosts livelihoods and local economies
Important Concepts
- Run-of-the-river projects
- Canal-based / dam-toe SHP
- Grid stability & energy security
- Atmanirbhar Bharat (indigenous manufacturing)
Static-Dynamic Linkage
- Static-Dynamic Link: Hydropower geography + renewable policy push
- Possible Prelims Angles:
- SHP definition (25 MW threshold)
- Ministry jurisdiction (MNRE vs Ministry of Power)
- Regional potential distribution (North & NE dominance)
- Features of run-of-the-river projects
https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2255609®=3&lang=1
(MAINS Focus)
GS Paper III – Disaster Management | GS Paper II – Governance (Social Justice) | GS Paper IV – Ethics
Industrial Safety; Regulatory Enforcement; Religious Festivals; Disaster Preparedness
Introduction
The Mundathikode explosion, following incidents like the Puttingal temple fireworks disaster, exposes persistent lapses in enforcing safety norms in India’s pyrotechnic sector. Despite past judicial warnings, regulatory complacency—often driven by festival pressures and vote-bank politics—continues to put lives at risk.
Main Body
Background: Legal Framework and Institutional Failures
Key Regulatory Framework:
- Explosives Act, 1884 and Explosives Rules, 2008: Govern manufacture, storage, and transport of explosives
- Petroleum and Explosives Safety Organization (PESO) : Licensing authority for fireworks units
- Judicial Commission after Puttingal Temple Fire (2016) : Recommended strict norms on licensing, materials, layout, and conduct of displays
The Gap:
- Despite stringent recommendations, compliance has been woefully inadequate
- Eyewitness accounts at Mundathikode suggest:
- No safe distance between sheds storing gunpowder and abrasion-sensitive chemicals
- Stockpiling of excess quantities of flash powder
- Lack of safety gear and firefighting equipment
- Employment of untrained workers
- Likely use of banned chemicals
- Lax enforcement by local authorities
The Puttingal Precedent (2016):
- Over 100 deaths; triggered judicial commission
- Established template for safety: licensing, storage limits, distance norms, worker training
- Yet, within a decade, the same lessons have been forgotten
Multidimensional Challenges
Political Dimension:
- Religious festivals such as Thrissur Pooram entangled in vote-bank politics
- Authorities hesitant to enforce safety measures around fireworks displays and elephant parades
- ‘Loudness’ often defines success of competitive fireworks displays
- Attempts to do away with high-decibel fireworks (citing safety of patients, pregnant women, infants) find no popular support
Social Dimension:
- Faith-based resistance to safety interventions
- Public perception that safety measures dampen “spirit” of festivals
- Lack of awareness about risks among workers and general public
- Informal workforce in pyrotechnic industry (no training, no safety gear, no insurance)
Economic Dimension:
- Pyrotechnic industry employs thousands, mostly in unorganised sector
- Small-scale units operate on thin margins; safety investment is low priority
- Cost of compliance (safe storage, firefighting equipment, worker training) seen as avoidable expense
Administrative Dimension:
- Weak enforcement by local authorities (police, revenue, PESO)
- Coordination gaps between multiple regulators (PESO, State Pollution Control Board, labour department, local self-government)
- Absence of regular inspections; inspections often pre-announced
- No penal action against violators; fines too low to deter
Ethical Dimension:
- Sacrificing safety at the altar of faith raises fundamental ethical questions
- Right to life (Article 21) vs. right to religious freedom (Article 25)
- State’s duty to protect citizens from foreseeable harm
- Exploitation of untrained workers without safety gear
Way Forward: Practical Solutions
Regulatory Reforms:
- Single-window clearance for temporary fireworks display units during festival season
- Mandatory pre-festival safety audit by independent agency (not PESO alone)
- Strict licensing for temporary storage with time-bound validity (no indefinite storage)
- Penalties for violations: suspension of licence, prosecution of organisers, recovery of compensation costs
Technological Integration:
- Cold spark technology (low-temperature, low-risk) as alternative to traditional pyrotechnics
- GPS tracking of explosive transport to prevent diversion and illegal stockpiling
- Real-time monitoring of storage sheds using IoT sensors (temperature, humidity, abrasion)
Capacity Building:
- Mandatory training and certification for all pyrotechnic workers (including temporary)
- First-aid and firefighting drills before every festival season
- Public awareness campaigns on risks of fireworks, especially for patients, pregnant women, and infants
Institutional Reforms:
- Empower local bodies (panchayats, municipalities) to deny permits if safety norms not met
- District-level disaster management authorities to coordinate with PESO, police, and fire services
- Judicial monitoring committee in each district for high-risk festivals (model: Pune’s Ganesh festival safety committee)
Role of Civil Society:
- Community-based monitoring of fireworks storage and display
- Whistleblower mechanisms for reporting unsafe practices (with protection)
- Faith-based safety campaigns (temple committees, mosque committees, church councils) to self-regulate
Lessons from Global Models:
- Japan: Fireworks displays regulated by strict licensing, mandatory insurance, and independent safety auditors
- United States (NFPA 1123): Code for fireworks displays; requires distance calculations, fall-out zones, and qualified operators
- European Union (Pyrotechnic Articles Directive, 2013): Mandates CE marking, conformity assessment, and traceability
Conclusion
The Mundathikode tragedy, like the Puttingal temple fireworks disaster and the Virudhunagar blast, reflects a cycle of neglect without reform. The right to life under Article 21 of the Indian Constitution must prevail over religious freedom under Article 25 of the Indian Constitution. India needs a national safety code, strict certification, real-time monitoring, and firm enforcement—because faith cannot come at the cost of human lives.
UPSC Mains Practice Question
- Mundathikode highlights how safety is often compromised for faith and politics. Critically examine regulatory gaps in India’s fireworks sector, draw lessons from the Puttingal temple fireworks disaster Commission, and suggest a framework to ensure festival safety without undermining religious practices. (250 words, 15 marks)
GS Paper III – Economy (Energy Security) | GS Paper III – Environment
Natural Gas; Biofuels; Electrification; LNG Diversification; Strategic Autonomy
Introduction
A Strait of Hormuz closure risks 90% of India’s LPG supply. The long-term fix lies in cutting external dependence through electrification, biofuels, and diversified natural gas—building a resilient, climate-aligned energy system within 5–10 years.
Main Body
Pathway One: Widening Electricity Applications
India’s Ambitious Targets:
- 500 GW non-fossil capacity (2030 target already achieved: 52% installed)
- 1,800 GW non-fossil by 2047
- 100 GW nuclear power by 2047
What Needs to Be Done:
- Scale up energy storage using IoT and AI to minimise capital investment
- Enable increased use of electric vehicles (EVs) and electric cooking
- Seriously invest in domestic rare earths extraction (India has significant deposits)
The Challenge:
- Current non-fossil generation is only 25% despite 52% installed capacity (storage gap)
- Rare earth extraction requires capital and time
The Opportunity:
- Electrification reduces direct fossil fuel dependence
- Storage technologies (batteries, pumped hydro, green hydrogen) are rapidly evolving
Pathway Two: Biofuels from Biomass and Manure
India’s Biomass Resources:
- Crop residues: ~950 million metric tonnes per annum (mmta) from grain crops, oilseeds, sugarcane, cotton, horticulture
- Net available after cattle-feed and fertility management: ~400 mmta (currently used in inefficient, polluting ways)
- Forest biomass: 260 mmta (mostly low-value use)
- Cattle and poultry manure: ~300 mmta dry manure from ~300 million cattle and ~1 billion poultry
Biofuel Potential:
- Biomass can produce pellets, briquettes, biochar, pyrolytic oil
- Syngas from biomass → Fischer-Tropsch process → hydrocarbons
- Manure can generate ~100 billion cubic metres (bcm) of biogas/year
- Or over 55 bcm of biomethane (well-established technology)
Current Natural Gas Consumption:
- Total consumption: ~70 bcm
- Imports: ~35 bcm
The Key Insight:
- Biomethane can, in principle, fully replace current LNG imports
- Can be distributed through existing natural gas pipelines and SSLNG infrastructure
- Can produce higher-value biofuels and industrial feedstock
The Logistical Challenge:
- Biomass and manure are low-value, low-bulk-density commodities
- Significant difficulties in procuring and transporting to processing centres
- Requires entrepreneurial skill and imagination to overcome
Financing Biofuels:
- Payments for environmental services (not subsidies)
- Carbon credits
- Premiums for mitigating risk of petroleum import disruption
- Financial institutions to treat as “priority sector” for lending
Pathway Three: Increasing Natural Gas Share with SSLNG
The Opportunity:
- Natural gas is immune to cartelisation (unlike oil) due to wide global distribution of sources
- Key is to widen sourcing and distribution
Sourcing Diversification:
- Negotiate long-term contracts with new sources less susceptible to disruption
- Reduce dependence on single corridor (Strait of Hormuz currently 90% for LPG)
Distribution Infrastructure:
- India has ~25,000 km of natural gas pipelines
- But pipeline extension is uneconomic for smaller-scale demands
- Needs supplementation with dedicated infrastructure for Small-Scale LNG (SSLNG)
SSLNG Applications:
- City gas distribution (CGD)
- Dispersed industrial use
- Trucking
Integrating the Three Pathways
Synergies:
- Electrification reduces fossil fuel demand in transport and cooking
- Biofuels (biomethane) can replace LNG imports in industrial and city gas use
- SSLNG diversifies import sources while domestic biomethane scales up
The “Drill, Baby, Drill” Option (Off Andaman & Nicobar):
- Capital-intensive with uncertain outcomes
- If successful, will take decades to exploit
- Not a near-term solution; cannot be primary pathway
The Realignment:
- From external dependence (Hormuz, OPEC cartel) to internal sources (biomass, manure, renewables)
- From single-corridor imports to diversified global LNG contracts
- From centralised pipelines to SSLNG for dispersed demand
Way Forward: Policy Recommendations
For Electrification:
- Accelerate battery storage deployment (national storage target)
- Rare earth extraction mission (domestic deposits)
- EV charging infrastructure and electric cooking awareness
For Biofuels:
- Create biomass aggregation supply chains (farmer cooperatives, collection centres)
- Provide environmental service payments (not distortionary subsidies)
- Carbon credit framework for biomethane
- Priority sector lending for biofuel entrepreneurs
For SSLNG:
- Diversify LNG import sources (long-term contracts with non-Gulf suppliers)
- Develop SSLNG infrastructure for city gas and dispersed industrial use
- Integrate biomethane into pipeline and SSLNG network
Institutional:
- Single nodal agency for energy resilience (cross-ministerial: Petroleum, Power, New & Renewable Energy, Fertiliser)
- Financial institutions to treat energy resilience business models as priority sector
Conclusion
A Strait of Hormuz shutdown is both risk and opportunity. India’s resilience lies in electrification, biofuels, and diversified gas (SSLNG), while offshore drilling is slow and uncertain. The real hurdle is biomass logistics—best addressed via carbon markets, environmental payments, and priority lending, not subsidies.
UPSC Mains Practice Question
- A Strait of Hormuz closure exposes energy risks. Critically assess electrification, biofuels, and diversified gas (SSLNG) as resilience pathways, highlighting key logistical and financial challenges. (250 words, 15 marks)








