GS Paper III (Conservation, Environmental Pollution and Degradation, Environmental Impact Assessment)

Elastic rules: India needs proper reckoning of plastic collection and reuse targets

Analysis: Evolution and Challenges of Plastic Waste Management in India

Context

The March 2026 amendments to the Plastic Waste Management (PWM) Rules signal a shift in India’s strategy to tackle plastic pollution. While intended to strengthen the circular economy, the new provisions reflect a potential dilution of immediate accountability for producers.

Key Highlights of the 2026 Amendments

·       Mandatory Recycled Content: For the first time, the government has mandated that plastic packaging must contain a minimum percentage of recycled material.

o   Example: Category I (Rigid Plastic) must contain 30% recycled material, increasing to 60% by 2028-29.

·       Deferred Compliance (Shortfall Carry-forward): Companies failing to meet targets in 2025-26 can carry forward their deficit for up to three years, provided they fulfill one-third of the shortfall annually.

·       Market-Based Mechanisms: Increased emphasis on ‘trading certificates,’ allowing market dynamics to influence environmental compliance.

The Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) Paradox

The EPR regime, introduced in 2022, aimed for 100% collection and processing by 2024-25. However, the current status reveals a gap between policy and implementation:

·       Implementation Gap: Current collection rates hover around 50%–60%, far below the 100% target.

·       Policy Stagnation: There are no clear collection targets set for the period beyond 2025.

·       The “Plastic Paradox”: The very traits that make plastic indispensable (low cost, flexibility, and durability) make it economically difficult to incentivize its collection and reuse compared to materials like metal.

Critical Concerns for UPSC Mains

1.     Dilution of Urgency: By allowing companies to defer shortfalls until 2028-29, the rules may inadvertently reduce the immediate pressure on brands to invest in robust collection infrastructure.

2.     Focus Shift: The government appears to be pivoting from “collection-based” targets to “source-based” targets (use of recycled plastic), without ensuring that the recycled plastic is being sourced through a verified, domestic circular loop.

3.     Risk to EPR Integrity: Without strict reckoning of collection targets, “reuse” obligations risk becoming “elastic” and ignored, potentially undermining the entire objective of the EPR framework.

Conclusion

While the move toward mandatory recycled content is a progressive step for a circular economy, the flexibility in compliance timelines and the stagnation of collection targets suggest a compromise between environmental goals and industrial feasibility. For a “Plastic Mukt Bharat,” the policy must balance market-driven incentives with stringent enforcement of collection mandates.

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GS Paper II (Governance, Constitution, Polity, Social Justice) and GS Paper III (Economic Development, Infrastructure, Land Reforms).

Balance is key: Equitable development is crucial as Amaravati becomes A.P. capital

Context

The recent legislative recognition of Amaravati as the capital of Andhra Pradesh marks a significant shift in the state’s urban development trajectory, ending years of policy paralysis caused by political transitions.

Key Issues & Challenges

·       Land Consolidation & Ethics: * The project used the Land Pooling Scheme (LPS) instead of the Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act, 2013.

o   Criticism: Critics viewed LPS as a tool to bypass stringent central laws, potentially favoring landholding communities while offering inadequate long-term security to the landless.

·       Socio-Economic Disparity: * While landowners received annuities and developed plots, agricultural labourers received only modest monthly assistance ($2,500$ initially) and limited skill-development support.

·       Political Brinkmanship & Policy Uncertainty: * The shift from a “Single Megacity” (Naidu) to a “Three-Capital Model” (Reddy) and back again has resulted in a waste of public resources and a decade of developmental uncertainty.

·       Federal Financing:

o   The project relies heavily on multilateral loans rather than direct Central grants. The failure to secure “Special Category Status” remains a significant fiscal hurdle for the revenue-deficit state.

Critical Concerns for UPSC Mains

1.     Regional Imbalance: Concentrating development in the Amaravati region (coastal Andhra) risks alienating historically underdeveloped regions like Rayalaseema and North Coastal Andhra, potentially fueling future sub-regionalism.

2.     Environmental Sustainability: The conversion of 217 sq. km of fertile farmland along the Krishna River raises concerns regarding food security and ecological degradation in a flood-prone zone.

3.     The “Hyderabad Model” Obsession: Attempting to recreate a massive urban hub to rival Hyderabad may ignore modern decentralized development needs and the fiscal realities of a bifurcated state.

Way Forward

·       Inclusive Development: The state must bridge the gap between landowners and agricultural laborers to prevent “jobless growth” in the new capital.

·       Decentralized Governance: Even with Amaravati as the administrative head, development must be distributed to ensure Rayalaseema and other regions do not feel sidelined.

·       Policy Continuity: To attract investment, the capital project requires a “Statutory Guarantee” or political consensus to ensure that future changes in government do not lead to further “administrative restarts.”

Conclusion: Amaravati’s revival is a political victory for the current leadership, but its long-term success depends on transitioning from a real-estate project to an inclusive, sustainable, and fiscally prudent administrative hub.

 

GS Paper III (Infrastructure: Energy; Science & Technology; Environment: Net Zero & Climate Change).

Transforming India’s nuclear power landscape

Analysis: India’s Nuclear Energy Transition & The SHANTI Act (2025)

Context

In a landmark policy shift, the Union Budget 2025-26 and the subsequent SHANTI (Sustainable Harnessing and Advancement of Nuclear Energy for Transforming India) Act, 2025, have set an ambitious target to scale India’s nuclear capacity from ~8 GW to 100 GW by 2047.

Key Features of the SHANTI Act (2025)

The Act marks the end of the state monopoly held by the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) since 1962:

·       Private Sector Participation: Allows private and foreign companies to build, own, and operate nuclear plants.

·       Regulatory Reform: Grants statutory status to the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB), ensuring independence.

·       Legislative Consolidation: Repeals and replaces the Atomic Energy Act, 1962 and the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act (CLNDA), 2010, to create a more investment-friendly liability framework.

·       Strategic Decoupling: Clearly separates civilian power generation from strategic/defense nuclear activities.

Strategic Rationale: The Quest for Net-Zero 2070

·       The Baseload Challenge: While renewables (Solar/Wind) make up nearly 50% of installed capacity, they only contribute ~22% of actual generation due to intermittency. Nuclear, providing steady baseload power, is essential for a carbon-free grid.

·       Viksit Bharat Goals: To reach the development levels of OECD nations, India must bridge a massive gap in per capita electricity consumption (currently ~1,418 kWh vs. OECD’s 8,000+ kWh).

·       Land Efficiency: Nuclear plants are roughly 10 times less land-intensive than solar or wind farms, making them ideal for a land-stressed nation like India.

Implementation Roadmap: The Three-Front Strategy

To achieve the 100 GW target, the analysis suggests a multi-pronged approach:

1.     Large-Scale Indigenization: Lowering the cost of foreign designs (like EdF and Westinghouse) to match India’s PHWR cost of $2 million per MW (compared to $5 million/MW for unproven foreign designs).

2.     SMR Revolution: Developing indigenous Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) (5 MW to 200 MW) to replace fossil-fuel-based captive power plants in heavy industries (Steel, Cement, Data Centers).

3.     Thorium Utilization: Accelerating R&D into Molten-Salt Reactors and Thorium cladding with HALEU to bypass the slow “Breeder Reactor” route and utilize India’s vast thorium reserves.

Critical Challenges & Way Forward

·       High Capital Outlay: Reaching 100 GW requires an estimated $200 billion (₹18 lakh crore). Success depends on creating transparent financing and insurance models.

·       Regulatory Clarity: The government must notify clear rules regarding fuel ownership, waste management, and exclusion zones for single-unit captive reactors.

·       Efficiency in Execution: Leveraging the proven 220 MW PHWR as a “workhorse” can reduce construction timelines to 40 months through modularization and fleet-mode execution.

Conclusion: The SHANTI Act is a “tectonic shift” in India’s energy policy. However, the transition from a government-led model to a market-driven one will require robust secondary regulations to ensure safety, public trust, and economic viability.

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GS Paper II (Bilateral, Regional, and Global Groupings and Agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests) and GS Paper III (Effects of Liberalization on the Economy).

 

The World Trade Organization is flailing

 

Analysis: The Crisis of Trade Multilateralism – Lessons from WTO MC14

Context

The fourteenth Ministerial Conference (MC14) of the WTO, held in March 2026, was a pivotal moment for the global trading order. However, the failure to reach a consensus on a ministerial declaration highlights a deepening “legislative crisis” within the 166-member body.

Key Outcomes and Flashpoints

1. The Lapse of the E-commerce Moratorium

·       The Shift: Since 1998, members had a moratorium on customs duties for digital transmissions. This lapsed on March 31, 2026.

·       Impact: Developing nations can now theoretically impose tariffs on digital trade (e.g., software downloads, streaming) to raise revenue.

·       The Split: 66 members signed a separate E-commerce Agreement (ECA) to keep digital trade duty-free, creating a fragmented legal landscape outside the core WTO rulebook.

2. Intellectual Property (TRIPS) Moratorium

·       A long-standing moratorium on “non-violation complaints” under the TRIPS agreement was broken.

·       The Risk: Developing countries fear that their public health laws (e.g., generic medicine production) could be challenged by developed nations even if no specific WTO law is broken, simply because it “nullifies anticipated benefits” of IP holders.

3. The Plurilateral Debate (IFD Agreement)

·       The Investment Facilitation for Development (IFD) agreement, supported by 129 members, failed to be incorporated into the WTO.

·       India’s Stance: India blocked its inclusion citing the absence of legal safeguards for incorporating “plurilateral” (sub-group) agreements into the “multilateral” (full-group) acquis. India advocates for inclusive, rather than exclusive, rule-making.

Structural Threats to the WTO

·       U.S. Unilateralism: The U.S. is increasingly bypassing foundational rules like the Most-Favored Nation (MFN) treatment. This echoes the 1970s “Section 301” era where the U.S. took unilateral punitive actions against trade partners.

·       Dispute Settlement Paralysis: The appellate function remains stalled, leaving the WTO without a “court” to settle trade wars.

·       Fragmentation: As the WTO fails to deliver, countries are creating rules via regional or plurilateral blocks, hollowing out the “one-roof” global system.

Way Forward for India

1.     Lead on Legal Guardrails: India should propose the legal framework required to integrate plurilateral agreements into the WTO without compromising the interests of non-signatories.

2.     Defend Special & Differential Treatment (S&DT): India must resist attempts by developed nations to dilute provisions that give developing countries more time and flexibility to implement rules.

3.     Digital Trade Strategy: With the e-commerce moratorium gone, India needs a balanced domestic policy that protects consumer interests while exploring new revenue streams from digital imports.

Conclusion

MC14 signifies a shift from a “rules-based” order to a “power-based” order. For the WTO to remain relevant, it must evolve to address 21st-century challenges (like digital trade and investment) without abandoning the consensus-based spirit that protects smaller economies from hegemonic tendencies.

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Text & Context

GS Paper II (Indian Constitution: Evolution, Features, Amendments, & Significant Provisions; Separation of Powers; Parliament and State Legislatures).

 

The executive office without a limit

Analysis: Executive Term Limits and the Crisis of Parliamentary Accountability

Context

On March 22, 2026, Prime Minister Narendra Modi surpassed the record for the longest tenure as a head of an elected government in India (8,931 days). This milestone raises a fundamental constitutional debate: Why does India lack executive term limits?

The Constituent Assembly’s Rationale

Dr. B.R. Ambedkar argued against term limits based on two pillars of accountability:

1.     Daily Assessment: Continuous scrutiny via questions, adjournment motions, and no-confidence motions in the legislature.

2.     Periodic Assessment: Scrutiny by the electorate during general elections.

·       The Logic: Unlike the Presidential system (fixed term, e.g., USA), the Parliamentary system’s Executive stays only as long as it enjoys the “confidence of the House.”

The “Structural Impairment” (The Tenth Schedule)

The analysis argues that the 52nd Amendment (1985), which introduced the Anti-Defection Law, has unintentionally broken Ambedkar’s “daily assessment” mechanism:

·       Neutralized No-Confidence: Legislators risk disqualification if they vote against the party whip. Thus, a Prime Minister with a majority is shielded from legislative removal, making the “confidence of the House” a formality.

·       Lack of Intra-Party Democracy: Unlike the UK (where parties can change leaders internally, e.g., Thatcher or Johnson), Indian laws and party structures lock legislators into absolute loyalty to the leader.

The Presidential Irony

·       Ceremonial Office: A convention exists (following Rajendra Prasad) that a President serves no more than two terms.

·       Executive Office: The Prime Minister, who wields real power, has no such convention or legal limit, relying solely on the “periodic verdict” of elections.

Risks of Prolonged Incumbency

While multiple terms reflect democratic endorsement, the content highlights “compounding advantages” that can lead to incremental institutional decay:

·       Control over appointments (Election Commission, Judiciary, Regulatory bodies).

·       Ability to shape the information environment and policy cycles over decades.

·       The State-level parallel: Leaders like Jyoti Basu and Naveen Patnaik demonstrate that this is a systemic, not just a central, phenomenon.

Proposed Constitutional Reforms

1.     Amend the Tenth Schedule: Exempt “votes of confidence” from disqualification provisions to allow legislators to vote their conscience without losing their seats.

2.     Formal Term Limits: Introduce a constitutional amendment limiting consecutive terms for Prime Ministers and Chief Ministers (potentially allowing a return after a cooling-off period).

3.     Institutionalize Intra-Party Democracy: Ensure that leadership challenges can happen within parties without legal repercussions.

Conclusion for UPSC Aspirants

This issue touches upon the “Basic Structure” debate regarding Parliamentary Democracy. If the legislature can no longer hold the executive accountable daily due to the Anti-Defection Law, the “checks and balances” essential to our Constitution are weakened. The milestone is not just a record of longevity but a prompt to evaluate if the self-correcting capacity of the Indian state needs a reboot.

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Text & Context

GS Paper II (India and its Neighborhood; Effect of Policies of Developed and Developing Countries on India’s interests) and GS Paper III (Energy; Infrastructure; Science & Technology).

Analysis: China’s Energy Resilience Amidst Global Geopolitical Volatility

Analysis: Executive Term Limits and the Crisis of Parliamentary Accountability

Context

While India faces energy shortages and social panic due to the escalating Israel-US-Iran conflict, China has remained largely insulated. This resilience is the result of two decades of proactive strategic planning, geographical leverage, and a rapid transition to a green economy.

1. Overcoming the “Malacca Dilemma”

China has successfully reduced its vulnerability to the Malacca Strait (a key chokepoint heavily monitored by the US):

·       Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR): China has built an massive SPR capacity—roughly 120 days of storage—allowing it to bypass imports from the Strait of Hormuz for several months if necessary.

·       Pipeline Diversification: Unlike India’s stalled projects (TAPI, IPI), China has operationalized pipelines from Russia and Central Asia. Approximately 20% of its crude oil now arrives via land, bypassing maritime chokepoints.

·       Proactive Global Diplomacy: Chinese national oil companies (Sinopec, CNPC) have secured deep-pocket investments in conflict-prone but resource-rich zones like Sudan and Angola.

2. Climate Strategy as Industrial Policy

China leveraged its status as a “large polluter” to secure technology transfers and domestic growth:

·       Technology Leapfrogging: The 2008 US-China framework for energy cooperation provided the foundation for China’s dominance in solar panels, wind energy, and carbon sequestration.

·       Domestic Mandates: Stringent air quality targets in Beijing and other cities forced a bureaucratic and industrial shift toward energy efficiency and tidal power long before the current crisis.

3. Reducing Demand: The EV Revolution

China has decoupled economic mobility from oil demand more effectively than any other large economy:

·       Market Dominance: As the world’s largest consumer of Electric Vehicles (EVs), China uses tax concessions and preferential registration (lottery systems) to drive adoption.

·       Impact: This massive shift to electric mobility significantly reduced China’s oil import requirements in 2025, providing a buffer against price spikes in the Middle East.

4. The Economic Factor

·       Structural Slowdown: China’s modest growth target (4.5% for 2026) and a nearly stalled construction sector (cement, iron, steel) have naturally lowered its total energy appetite.

·       Transition from “World’s Factory”: As China moves away from heavy-industrial manufacturing, its energy intensity per unit of GDP is declining.

Critical Lessons for India (UPSC Perspective)

Feature

China’s Position

India’s Challenge

Energy Storage

120 days SPR.

Limited SPR (approx. 9.5 days).

Infrastructure

Extensive land-based pipelines.

Stalled trans-national pipelines (TAPI/IPI).

EV Adoption

High (State-mandated/Incentivized).

Growing, but hindered by charging infra.

Diplomacy

Aggressive resource acquisition.

Vulnerable to Middle East volatility.

Conclusion

China’s “escape” from the current energy crisis is not accidental but the result of geopolitical foresight. For India, the situation underscores the urgent need to accelerate Strategic Petroleum Reserves, diversify energy corridors (like the International North-South Transport Corridor), and aggressively pursue electric mobility to reduce “Hormuz/Malacca” dependencies.

 

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