Call Us Now

+91 9606900005 / 04

For Enquiry

legacyiasacademy@gmail.com

Current Affairs 01 September 2025

  1. Partners, not rivals’: India & China
  2. What are Blue Dragons, which caused beach closures in Spain?
  3. Fertiliser crisis
  4. Mini-cloudbursts’ are on the rise: IMD chief
  5. The importance of India’s federal design
  6. Inside the APK scam: how fake apps are used for financial fraud
  7. Why NRIs are choosing India for medical tourism
  8. Decoding cryptos


Relevance : GS 2(International Relations -Bilateral relations with China)

Context

  • Event: PM Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping met on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) Summit in Tianjin, China (August 31).
  • Key Message: Both sides agreed to be partners, not rivals, emphasizing mutual trust and respect.
  • Context: Meeting came after a five-year military standoff along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in Eastern Ladakh.
  • Objective: To gradually normalize bilateral ties strained by the border conflict.
  • Readouts:
    • Indias stance: Strategic autonomy, fair trade, repairing ties.
    • Chinas stance: Don’t let border issues define overall relations.
  • Modis Visit: First trip to China in five years; also aimed at balancing global power shifts after turbulence in India–US ties (under Trump).
  • Border Milestones:
    • Oct 2024: Border patrol leaders met, discussed sensitive points.
    • Aug 2025: 24th round of border talks held, easing tensions.
  • Modi–Putin Meet: Same day, focus on tariffs after US levied 50% duty on Indian goods.

Strategic Context

  • India–China ties oscillate between cooperation and competition.
  • SCO platform used by India to engage without appearing weak, while balancing against US/Japan strategic pressures.
  • Post-2020 Galwan clash, this marks Indias calibrated re-engagement.

Border Issue Management

  • Border is core irritant; India insists peace at LAC is prerequisite for broader cooperation.
  • China emphasizes compartmentalization – don’t let border disputes spill into trade/investment.
  • Recent patrol-level and ministerial talks show slow but steady de-escalation.

Economic & Trade Angle

  • China remains India’s largest trading partner despite tensions (>$135 bn trade, 2024).
  • India seeks fair trade, reduced deficit, and technology access.
  • China wants continued export market in India amid Western decoupling.

Diplomatic Rebalancing

  • India leveraging ties with US, Japan, and Russia to avoid overdependence on China.
  • Engagement with Xi signals India’s multi-alignment policy – strategic autonomy at core.
  • “Partners, not rivals” line meant more for optics to stabilize ties ahead of SCO/BRICS agendas.

Security & Geopolitical Dimensions

  • Both nations are nuclear powers and neighbors, yet security dilemma persists.
  • India wary of China–Pakistan axis and China’s influence in Indian Ocean (String of Pearls).
  • Dialogue reduces immediate risk of escalation, but trust deficit remains.


Relevance : GS 3(Environment and Ecology- Marine Biodiversity)

What are Blue Dragons?

  • Scientific Name: Glaucus atlanticus.
  • Category: Small sea slug (gastropod mollusk), belongs to the family Glaucidae.
  • Appearance:
    • Barely 4 cm long.
    • Striking blue & silver coloration → camouflage in ocean (countershading strategy).
  • Habitat:
    • Float upside down on the ocean surface, drifting with currents.
    • Found in warm tropical/subtropical waters (Pacific, Atlantic, Indian Oceans).
  • Feeding:
    • Prey on venomous cnidarians like Portuguese man o’ war, bluebottles, jellyfish.
    • Ingest venom & concentrate it in their finger-like appendages.
    • Their sting can be more potent than their prey.

 

Why Dangerous?

  • Venom Potency:
    • Capable of delivering stings stronger than jellyfish they consume.
    • Toxins can cause severe pain, nausea, vomiting, allergic reactions.
    • In rare cases, may lead to death.
  • Public Health Concern:
    • Presence along tourist beaches → caused closure of several beaches in Spain.

Global Distribution

  • Recorded in: Australia, South Africa, India (rare sightings), USA (Texas), Portugal, Spain.
  • Rare in the Mediterranean Sea, but recent sightings have increased.
  • First record in Spain → 1839 (Canary Islands).
  • Since 2016 → increasing frequency, linked to climate change & shifting ocean currents.

Why Rising Now?

  • Climate Change Factor:
    • Mediterranean → among the fastest-warming seas (warming 20% faster than global oceans).
    • Rising sea surface temperature → 4–5°C anomalies.
    • Expanding habitats of tropical species into temperate zones.
  • Ocean Currents & Wind Patterns:
    • Stronger winds & altered currents carry them closer to coasts.
  • Food Availability:
    • Bloom in jellyfish populations → attracts blue dragons.

Ecological Role

  • Predator of Jellyfish: Helps regulate jellyfish populations.
  • Indicator Species: Their movement indicates shifts in ocean temperature & biodiversity patterns.

Conclusion

  • Blue dragons are both a public health concern and an ecological indicator species, symbolizing how climate change-driven ocean warming and current shifts are altering marine biodiversity.
  • Their rising presence in new habitats reflects broader climate challenges, requiring integrated responses in marine conservation, tourism safety, and coastal management policies.


Relevance : GS 3(Agriculture and Food Security -Fertiliser Production and Subsidies)

Context

  • Rainfall & Crop Sowing
    • India had a very good southwest monsoon (June–August: 8.9% above normal rainfall).
    • Farmers planted more kharif crops: paddy, pulses, coarse cereals, maize.
    • As of Aug 22, rice acreage was 420.4 lakh hectares (vs 390.8 lakh last year).
  • Fertiliser Consumption Surge
    • With more sowing, fertiliser demand shot up.
    • Major nutrients: Nitrogen (N), Phosphorus (P), Potassium (K), Sulphur (S).
    • Fertiliser sales (Apr–Jul 2025 vs Apr–Jul 2024):
      • Urea: 108.86 lt (+21.6%)
      • DAP: 56.68 lt (+33.6%)
      • NPKS: 50.03 lt (+15.5%)
      • SSP: 45.06 lt (+8.6%)
      • MOP: 12.42 lt (-43.6%)
  • Imports & Supply Gaps
    • India imports ~25–30% of fertiliser needs.
    • Urea: imports down to 1.24 mt (Apr–Jun 2025) from 2.6 mt last year.
    • DAP: imports down to 1.88 mt from 2.1 mt.
    • Morocco & China are key suppliers.
    • Global supply disruptions and China’s export restrictions worsened shortages.
  • Shortages & Queues
    • Farmers queued for urea/DAP at sowing time (July).
    • Pre-stocking by farmers added stress.
    • Shortage visible in rice-growing regions needing higher fertiliser doses.
  • Policy Lessons
    • Govt underestimated higher fertiliser demand due to increased paddy acreage.
    • Future planning must account for fertiliser-intensive crops like rice/pulses.
    • Imports need advance booking; rabi demand must be secured early.

Why the Shortage Happened

  • Domestic production lag: India still depends on imports for ~30% of fertilisers.
  • High demand spike: Good monsoon encouraged extra planting, esp. rice.
  • Global disruption:
    • China restricted exports of urea/DAP.
    • Morocco’s output limited.
    • Prices of raw materials like phosphoric acid and ammonia surged.
  • Inefficient planning: Govt procurement underestimated demand in kharif 2025.

Economic Impact

  • Farmers: Higher fertiliser prices in black markets, long queues at centres.
  • Inflation risk: Fertiliser shortages can reduce yields → push up food inflation.
  • Fiscal stress: Fertiliser subsidies already exceed ₹2 lakh crore annually; shortages may force more imports at higher costs.

Agriculture & Food Security

  • Rice & Pulses (nitrogen-demanding crops) most affected.
  • Potential yield losses if farmers can’t access fertiliser on time.
  • Could reduce India’s exportable rice surplus, impacting global food markets.

Strategic Dependence

  • India relies heavily on a few suppliers (China, Morocco, Oman, Russia).
  • Import volatility = strategic vulnerability.
  • Need for domestic revival of fertiliser manufacturing capacity.

Policy Lessons & Reforms

  • Advance contracts for imports before kharif season.
  • Diversify sourcing (Africa, Gulf countries, new FTAs).
  • Invest in domestic production via joint ventures & PLI-type incentives.
  • Promote alternative inputs: nano-urea, biofertilisers, integrated nutrient management.
  • Better demand forecasting using satellite data & crop sowing trends.


Basics

  • Cloudburst:
    • Sudden, extreme rainfall in a localized area (≥100 mm/hr over a few sq. km).
    • Common in hilly regions due to orographic lift and moisture-laden winds.
  • Mini-cloudburst:
    • Smaller in scale, but with intense rainfall (typically 50–100 mm/hr).
    • Increasingly reported in recent years.
  • Forecasting:
    • IMD states that cloudbursts remain impossible to forecast due to their highly localized and short-lived nature.
    • Mini-cloudbursts, though more frequent, are also hard to predict with current models.

Relevance : GS 3(Disaster Management – Floods , Cloudbursts, Environment – Climate Change)

Recent Rainfall Trends (2025 Monsoon till Aug 31)

  • Overall Monsoon (June–Aug 2025): 6% above normal (76.2 cm vs usual 70 cm).
  • Regional distribution:
    • Northwest India: +26% above normal (Uttarakhand, UP, Punjab, Haryana, J&K, Rajasthan, Delhi).
    • Central India: +8.6% above normal.
    • Southern Peninsula: +9.3% above normal; August rainfall (25 cm) = 3rd highest since 2001.
    • East & Northeast India: –17% deficit despite being the traditional rain-surplus zone.
  • September Outlook: Expected above normal rainfall (+9% vs average 16.7 cm), continuing a trend noticed since 1980.

Heavy Rainfall Episodes

  • August 2025:
    • 700+ instances of heavy rain (≥20 cm/day), 2nd highest since 2021 (behind 800+ in 2024).
    • Northern India: August rainfall = 26.5 cm, highest since 2001.
  • Drivers of extreme events:
    • Interaction between Western Disturbances (from Mediterranean) and Bay of Bengal storms → convergence of moisture → intense rain bursts.
    • Resulted in devastating floods and landslides in Himachal Pradesh, J&K, Uttarakhand.

Key Analytical Insights

  • Mini-cloudbursts on the rise:
    • May be linked to climate change-driven shifts: warming atmosphere holds more moisture, increasing probability of intense short-duration rainfall.
    • Urbanization + deforestation in hilly areas amplifies impacts (flash floods, landslides).
  • Changing monsoon dynamics:
    • September becoming wetter since 1980 (possibly due to delayed monsoon withdrawal + oceanic-atmospheric changes like Indian Ocean Dipole).
    • Regional inequality: Surplus in NW & Central India, deficit in East & NE → disrupts agriculture, hydrology, disaster preparedness.
  • Forecasting limitations:
    • While seasonal/weekly monsoon forecasts improving, sub-hourly localized predictions like cloudbursts remain beyond current radar and model resolution.
    • IMD using Doppler radars + AI-based nowcasting to reduce unpredictability.
  • Policy & Preparedness Implications:
    • Need for micro-level disaster management plans, especially in Himalayan states and urban flood-prone zones.
    • Resilient infrastructure + improved early warning systems essential.


Basics

  • Context:
    • SC hearing Zahoor Ahmed Bhat v. UT of J&K.
    • Plea: non-restoration of statehood violates citizensrights + federalism (basic structure).
  • SC stance:
    • Separation of powers → some decisions belong to govt., not judiciary.
    • But federal design of Constitution requires statehood restoration.

Relevance : GS 2(Polity and Constitution – Federalism, Statehood)

Constitutional Provisions on State Creation

  • Article 1: India = Union of States, not a federation of states.
  • Processes of State creation:
    • Admission: political unit joins India (e.g., J&K in 1947 through Instrument of Accession).
    • Establishment: acquisition under international law (e.g., Goa 1961, Sikkim 1975).
    • Formation (Art. 3): reorganisation of existing states → increase, decrease, alter boundaries/names.
  • Limits of Art. 3:
    • Parliament can diminish a states area but cannot convert it into a Union Territory permanently.
    • Making J&K a UT is exceptional, not meant to be permanent.

Federal Design of India

  • Union vs Federation:
    • Word Union chosen deliberately → strong Centre, inseparable unity.
    • Yet federalism built into Basic Structure → equitable distribution of powers/resources.
  • Balance of power:
    • Unitary tilt → Centre strong enough to preserve unity & integrity.
    • Federal features → state participation & representation (Rajya Sabha permanent under Art. 83(1)).
  • Basic Structure Doctrine (Kesavananda Bharati, 1973):
    • Federalism = unamendable feature of the Constitution.
    • Arbitrary dilution (e.g., indefinite UT status for J&K) undermines basic structure.

J&K Case Study

  • 2019: J&K Reorganisation Act split J&K into UT of J&K + UT of Ladakh.
  • Dec 2023 SC verdict:
    • Upheld abrogation of Articles 370 & 35A.
    • Directed restoration of statehood to J&K + assembly elections.
  • Oct 2024: Elections to 90-member Assembly held, but statehood still withheld.
  • Criticism:
    • Without statehood, federal balance tilted in favour of Union.
    • LG holds overriding power, reducing elected govt. authority → weakens democracy.

Constitutional Context

  • Why statehood matters:
    • Ensures representation of people at Union level.
    • Strengthens federal bargain: Centre strong but States empowered.
    • Prevents constitutional inconsistency: a UT with an assembly ≠ true federal design.
  • Implications of delay:
    • Creates trust deficit between Union & people of J&K.
    • Weakens cooperative federalism.
    • Sets precedent for excessive centralisation.
  • Constitutional principle:
    • Restoring J&K’s statehood is not just political, but a constitutional necessity to uphold federalism.

What Next?

  • Union Government: obligated (per SC) to restore J&K’s statehood.
  • Timeline: Centre may justify delay citing ground realities/security concerns, but indefinite postponement undermines federal design.
  • Broader lesson:
    • Federalism = cornerstone of Basic Structure.
    • States cannot be downgraded permanently to UTs without damaging India’s constitutional identity.


Basics

  • APK files: Android Package Kit files, used to install apps on Android (like .exe files on Windows).
  • Modus operandi:
    • Victim gets a call/message claiming urgent action (blocked account, subsidy, electricity bill).
    • Sent a link to download an app disguised as a govt./bank portal.
    • App installs easily, mimics official branding.
    • Once permissions are granted, the device is compromised → financial & personal data stolen.

How the Fraud Works

  • Permissions requested: access to SMS, contacts, call logs, notifications, location, microphone.
  • Functions after install:
    • Monitors real-time activity.
    • Intercepts OTPs and passwords.
    • Closes fixed deposits, siphons funds.
    • Mirrors & transmits data to fraudster servers in encrypted form.
  • Techniques:
    • Apps appear dormant during install to bypass antivirus checks.
    • Minor modifications to logo/name/URL allow reuse after blacklisting.

Scale of the Problem

  • Cybercrime surge: 900% rise between 2021–2025 (Parliament data).
  • National Cyber Crime Portal (2025): 12,47,393 cases logged in 6 months.
  • Telangana Cyber Security Bureau (Jan–Jul 2025):
    • 2,188 APK fraud cases.
    • ₹779.06 crore lost.
    • 20–30 cases/day; daily loss = ₹10–15 lakh.
    • High-value scams: up to ₹30–40 lakh each.
  • Apps in circulation: Hundreds of cases linked to ~10 core APK files reused repeatedly.

Who Operates These Apps?

  • Local ecosystem:
    • 60–70% developed in India (Delhi-NCR, Meerut, UP, Jamtara, Jharkhand).
  • International linkages:
    • 30–40% traced to U.S., U.K., China.
  • Distribution channels:
    • Telegram channels, dark web marketplaces, pre-built APK kits sold for a fee.
  • Organised underground economy: coders, distributors, mule account handlers.

How Victims Are Targeted

  • Digital surveillance & data leaks:
    • Fraudsters purchase leaked customer databases (from malls, hospitals, service portals).
    • Data includes names, numbers, emails, addresses, income, profession.
  • Target profile:
    • High-earning professionals (doctors, bankers, teachers, real estate agents).
  • Social engineering:
    • Messages are customised, urgent, and exploit trust to force quick action.

Investigations & Challenges

  • Cyber forensics:
    • Only 20–30% of APKs successfully decrypted.
    • Often reveal just server addresses, rarely developer signatures.
  • Financial trails:
    • Stolen funds funneled into mule accounts, quickly converted into cryptocurrency.
    • Local accomplices sometimes arrested, masterminds remain elusive (esp. offshore).
  • Tech interventions:
    • Google removed ~50 malicious apps recently.
    • But platforms don’t pre-scan all hosted apps; fraudsters use fake identities for hosting/publishing.

Comprehensive Analysis

  • Structural Drivers:
    • Widespread smartphone penetration + digital payments boom.
    • Weak cyber hygiene & low awareness among users.
    • Cheap dark web data sets fueling targeted scams.
  • Systemic Gaps:
    • Lack of strong pre-screening by app stores.
    • Delays in forensic decryption and inter-agency coordination.
    • International jurisdiction hurdles in catching masterminds.
  • Economic & Social Impact:
    • Daily financial hemorrhage of ₹10–15 lakh.
    • Trust deficit in digital systems, affecting adoption of fintech/government platforms.
  • Policy Imperatives:
    • Stricter KYC norms for digital wallets and hosting accounts.
    • Mandatory app vetting by intermediaries.
    • Investment in cyber forensic capacity and cross-border cooperation.
    • Public awareness campaigns on phishing & fake apps.


Basics

  • Medical tourism: Traveling across borders to seek healthcare due to cost, quality, or accessibility reasons.
  • NRI context: Rising healthcare costs abroad, distance from family, and affordability in India make it an attractive option.
  • Key drivers:
    • Cost savings (60–90% cheaper vs. U.S./Europe).
    • Comparable or superior quality of care in many specialties.
    • Growing adoption of health insurance policies tailored for NRIs.
    • Digital ease in policy purchase and claim settlement.

Relevance : GS 2(Social Issues- Healthcare)

Cost Advantage

  • Heart bypass surgery:
    • U.S.: $70,000–$1,50,000
    • India: $5,000–$8,000
  • Knee replacement:
    • U.S.: up to $50,000
    • India: $4,000–$6,000
  • Complex surgeries:
    • U.S.: > $1,00,000
    • India: $10,000–$20,000
  • Medicines: Up to 90% cheaper in India compared to global markets.
  • Insurance premiums: 25–40 times cheaper in India vs. U.S./GCC.

Adoption of Health Insurance by NRIs

  • Growth trend: >150% rise in NRI adoption in 1 year.
    • Young NRIs (<35 years): 148% growth.
    • Women buyers: 125% growth.
  • Coverage: Includes parents/elderly living in India.
  • Recurring care: Helps cover long-term costs of cancer, respiratory, cardiac, and infectious diseases.

Policy & Digital Push

  • Government initiatives: Heal in India, promoting India as a healthcare hub.
  • Digital platforms: NRIs can explore, compare, and buy insurance remotely.
  • Cashless claims: Seamless access across Indian hospitals, bridging geographical distance.
  • Tier-3 cities rising: ~50% of NRI claims now from smaller hubs (Thrissur, Kollam, Thane) besides metros (Hyderabad, Chennai, Kochi, Thiruvananthapuram).

Healthcare Infrastructure & Quality

  • Accredited hospitals: India has >40 JCI-accredited hospitals meeting global standards.
  • Specialties in demand: Cardiology, oncology, organ transplants, orthopedics, dentistry.
  • Doctor pool: Large number of English-speaking, globally trained doctors.
  • Technology: Advanced robotic surgeries, telemedicine, and diagnostics.

Financial Ripple Effect

  • Direct impact: Savings on procedures free up funds for mortgages, education, retirement.
  • Macro-level effect: India’s medical tourism market is expected to cross $13 billion soon.
  • Insurance as a catalyst: Extends protection beyond surgery costs → covers recurring illnesses.
  • Regional development: Smaller towns benefit as insurance claims and hospital infra expand beyond metros.

Comprehensive Analysis

  • Push factors abroad:
    • Exploding healthcare costs in U.S. & GCC.
    • Long wait times for elective surgeries in U.K./Canada.
    • Limited insurance portability for NRIs abroad.
  • Pull factors in India:
    • Affordability without quality compromise.
    • Comprehensive insurance offerings for NRIs and families.
    • Emotional and cultural comfort of being treated near family.
  • Challenges:
    • Quality disparity between top-tier hospitals and smaller facilities.
    • Need for transparent insurance claim processing.
    • Risk of over-commercialization of care.
  • Future outlook:
    • With digital health ecosystems, expanded insurance, and govt. policy support, India is positioned as a global hub combining healthcare + financial protection.


Basics

  • Blockchain recap: A digital, decentralised ledger where transactions are recorded in blocks linked sequentially.
  • Verification need: Every transaction must be validated before being added to the blockchain.
  • Difference from banks:
    • Banks → verified by officials in a centralised system.
    • Cryptos → verified by miners/validators in a decentralised network.
  • Consensus mechanism: The method by which blockchain participants agree on the validity of transactions.

Relevance : GS 3(Economy – Digital Currencies , Technology – Block Chain

Consensus Mechanisms

  • Proof of Work (PoW):
    • Miners solve complex puzzles using computing power.
    • Winner adds block + earns rewards (coins + fees).
    • Secure but energy-intensive, slow, costly.
    • Example: Bitcoin.
  • Proof of Stake (PoS):
    • Validators chosen based on how much crypto they “stake.”
    • Honest validators earn fees/rewards; dishonest ones lose staked coins.
    • Faster, more energy-efficient.
    • Example: Ethereum (post-Merge), Solana.
  • Core purpose of both: Prevent fraud, ensure security, incentivize participation.

Other Consensus Mechanisms (Emerging)

  • Delegated Proof of Stake (DPoS): Voting system where stakeholders elect validators (EOS, Tron).
  • Proof of Authority (PoA): Validators selected based on reputation/identity.
  • Hybrid models: Combining PoW + PoS for balance of security and scalability.

Key Factors Before Investing in Cryptos

  • Network security: Must have active, decentralised nodes that resist hacking.
  • Transaction efficiency: Speed (TPS – transactions per second) + fees (affect usability).
  • Market reputation: Coin’s history, community support, transparency of developers.
  • Real-world utility: Adoption potential in payments, finance, supply chain, gaming, healthcare.
  • Volatility: Prices swing dramatically; not suitable for risk-averse investors.
  • Regulatory environment: Varies across countries; legal uncertainty remains a big risk.

Types of Cryptocurrencies

  • Bitcoin (BTC): First, most famous; store of value (“digital gold”).
  • Altcoins:
    • Ethereum: Smart contracts, DeFi, NFTs.
    • Solana, Cardano, Polygon: Faster transactions, scalable dApps.
  • Stablecoins: Pegged to assets (e.g., USDT, USDC); reduce volatility.
  • Utility tokens: Access to services (Binance Coin, Chainlink).
  • Governance tokens: Voting rights in decentralised organisations (UNI, AAVE).
  • Meme coins: Community/hype driven (Dogecoin, Shiba Inu).
  • Sector-specific coins: Gaming (Axie Infinity), supply chain (VeChain), finance (Ripple/XRP).

Opportunities

  • Wealth creation: Early adopters of BTC/ETH saw exponential gains.
  • Financial inclusion: Provides access where banking infrastructure is weak.
  • Innovation: Smart contracts, decentralised finance (DeFi), NFTs, tokenisation of assets.
  • Portfolio diversification: Non-correlated asset, but very high risk.

Risks & Challenges

  • Extreme volatility: Gains/losses can exceed 30% in days.
  • Regulatory crackdowns: Uncertain legal status in India, US, EU.
  • Scams & rug pulls: Many coins are hype-based, without real value.
  • Environmental impact: PoW energy consumption (e.g., Bitcoin mining).
  • Custody risk: Losing private keys = permanent loss of funds.
  • Liquidity traps: Small coins may lack active buyers/sellers.

Takeaways

  • Cryptos are more than speculation: They represent a new financial architecture (DeFi, Web3, tokenised economies).
  • Long-term value likely lies in:
    • Coins with real-world utility (payments, contracts, decentralised apps).
    • Strong developer community + transparent governance.
  • Short-term risk: High; better suited for informed, risk-tolerant investors.
  • Cautionary stance: Research > Hype. Diversify. Don’t over-allocate.
  • Global future: Cryptos may evolve into mainstream finance if regulation balances innovation + investor protection.

September 2025
MTWTFSS
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930 
Categories