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Current Affairs 30 September 2025

  1. More Women Employed in Agriculture, but Half of Them Are Unpaid
  2. The Wassenaar Arrangement: The Need to Reform Export Control Regimes
  3. E-Waste Collection Faces Gaps as Informal Sector Plays Huge Role
  4. Suriname Pledges to Protect 90% of Forests
  5. India’s Push for Polymetallic Sulphides (PMS) Exploration


Basics

  • Agriculture = backbone of Indian economy; largest employer of women.
  • Women now make up 42% of Indias agricultural workforce.
  • Women’s employment in agriculture surged 135% in past decade, as men moved to non-farm jobs.
  • Yet, participation has not translated into higher incomes or recognition.

Relevance

  • GS-1 (Society):
    Gender issues, womens participation in rural economy.
    Social inequality, unpaid labour, empowerment gaps.
  • GS-2 (Governance, Social Justice):
    Policies for women farmers, FPOs, SHGs, digital inclusion initiatives.
    Land rights, credit schemes, gender budgeting, legal recognition of women as farmers.
  • GS-3 (Economy, Agriculture):
    Feminisation of agriculture, wage gaps, labour productivity.
    Agri-export potential (India–UK FTA), value chains, high-margin crops.

Current Situation

  • Unpaid Labour: 1 in 3 working women is unpaid; unpaid women in agriculture rose from 23.6 million to 59.1 million in 8 years.
  • Regional Inequities: Bihar & UP → >80% women in agriculture, >50% unpaid.
  • Systemic Barriers:
    • Only 13–14% landholdings owned by women.
    • 20–30% wage gap vis-à-vis men.
    • Limited asset ownership, credit, decision-making power.
  • Macroeconomic Picture: Despite rising participation, agriculture’s GVA share fell from 15.3% (2017-18) to 14.4% (2024-25) → feminisation reinforced inequities.

Opportunities

  1. Global Trade Shifts
    1. India–UK FTA → projected 20% boost in agri exports in 3 years; >95% products duty-free.
    1. Women-heavy value chains: rice, spices, dairy, ready-to-eat foods.
    1. Export-oriented growth can transition women from labourers → entrepreneurs.
  2. Value-Addition & Premium Markets
    1. High-margin areas: processing, packaging, branding, exporting.
    1. Growth sectors: tea, spices, millets, organics, superfoods.
    1. Tools: Geographical Indications (GI), branding, export standards.
  3. Digital Innovations
    1. Platforms: e-NAM, mobile advisories, precision farming apps, voice-assisted tech.
    1. Formalises women’s labour + expands credit, schemes, pricing access.
    1. Examples:
      1. BHASHINI, Jugalbandi → multilingual, voice-first government access.
      1. L&T Digital Sakhi → digital literacy training for rural women.
      1. Odishas Swayam Sampurna FPOs, Rajasthans Mahila Kisan Producer Company, Assam tea-sector training.

Challenges

  • Structural: Low digital literacy, language barriers, lack of devices.
  • Institutional: Weak recognition of women as farmers → exclusion from schemes/loans.
  • Economic: Wage gap, landlessness, invisibility of unpaid work.
  • Cultural: Male dominance in decision-making, gendered stereotypes in farming roles.

Reforms & Solutions

  1. Land & Labour Reforms
    1. Joint/individual land ownership for women.
    1. Legal recognition as “farmers” → eligibility for credit, insurance, government support.
  2. Institutional Support
    1. Expand women-centric FPOs/SHGs with export orientation.
    1. Credit schemes, gender-responsive budgeting, targeted subsidies.
  3. Digital Inclusion
    1. Subsidised smartphones/devices, local language interfaces, AI-powered advisory systems.
    1. Scale up models like Digital Sakhi, BHASHINI, Jugalbandi.
  4. Trade & Value Chain Integration
    1. Embed gender provisions in FTAs (training, credit, market linkages).
    1. Promote women-led branding & GI-tagged exports.

Implications

  • Structural Game-Changer: Women-led agricultural development can address both economic growth and social equity.
  • Economic Potential: Unlocking women’s contributions in high-value agri chains can add significantly to exports, GVA, and rural incomes.
  • Global Context: With climate change and shifting trade, resilient, inclusive, and sustainable agriculture needs women at the core.
  • Governance Dimension: Recognition, legal empowerment, and digital inclusion are critical for sustainable transformation.
  • Social Impact: Enhances food security, reduces poverty, empowers households, and improves child welfare (education, nutrition).

Conclusion

Women’s rising presence in agriculture must not reinforce invisibility but instead unlock transformative potential.

  • Path forward: recognition, ownership, digital access, and trade-linked empowerment.
  • A women-led agri model is not just about social justice; it is a strategic economic imperative for Indias global ambitions.


Basics

  • Wassenaar Arrangement (WA):
    • Multilateral export control regime (est. 1996).
    • Members: 42 states (India joined in 2017).
    • Aim: prevent proliferation of conventional arms and dual-use goods/technologies.
    • Operates via voluntary coordination: states adopt common control lists, but implementation depends on domestic laws.
  • Traditional focus:
    • Physical exports → devices, chips, hardware, software modules.
    • Military and WMD-use technologies.

Relevance

  • GS-2 (International Relations, Governance):
    Indias multilateral commitments, export control regimes.
    Cybersecurity diplomacy, human rights in tech governance.
  • GS-3 (Security, Science & Technology):
    Dual-use technologies, AI/cloud exports, intrusion software, surveillance risks.
    Strategic implications for national and global security.

Contemporary Challenge

  • Cloud & AI realities:
    • “Export” ≠ physical transfer anymore → remote access, API calls, SaaS, cloud hosting.
    • Example: Microsoft Azure, AWS — global backbones where a user in one country can access sensitive capabilities hosted elsewhere.
    • Digital surveillance & intrusion tools now used in repression, profiling, and cyber warfare.
  • Gap: WA control lists don’t clearly treat cloud services, SaaS, AI models as “exports.”
  • Result: grey zones → states exploit loopholes; surveillance tech proliferates without oversight.

Why Reform is Needed ?

  1. Human Rights Risks
    1. Cloud-based surveillance → mass profiling, repression (e.g., Israel–Palestine debates, authoritarian regimes).
    1. Dual-use: “intrusion software” could aid both cyber defence & authoritarian crackdowns.
  2. Geopolitical Stakes
    1. Some states benefit from surveillance exports → resist reform.
    1. National laws differ → fragmented enforcement.
  3. Structural Weakness of WA
    1. Voluntary nature → uneven application.
    1. Consensus requirement → one state can block updates.
    1. Patchy coverage: e.g., EU has dual-use rules, U.S. EAR stricter, others laxer.

Proposed Reforms

  1. Expand Scope
    1. Explicitly include cloud infrastructure, SaaS, AI systems, biometric databases, cross-border data transfers in control lists.
  2. Binding Obligations
    1. Move beyond voluntary → mandatory treaty with minimum standards, export denial in atrocity-prone regions.
  3. End-Use Controls
    1. Licensing based not only on tech specs but on user identity, jurisdiction, human rights risk.
  4. Agility & Oversight
    1. Create a technical committee/secretariat to fast-track updates.
    1. Sunset clauses: periodic review & removal/addition of items.
  5. Global Information-Sharing
    1. Shared watchlists of flagged customers/entities.
    1. Real-time red alerts on misuse.
  6. Accountability Mechanisms
    1. Corporate human rights duties, procurement restrictions on violators.
    1. Peer review to check national implementation.

India’s Position

  • Joined WA in 2017; incorporated lists into domestic framework.
  • Engagement has been legitimacy-driven, not reformist.
  • Opportunity for India:
    • Position itself as advocate of human rights–sensitive tech governance.
    • Push for inclusion of AI, cloud, and surveillance exports.
    • Balance innovation and sovereignty concerns with global responsibility.

Implications

  • WA relevance eroding → designed for hardware era, now facing cloud/AI surveillance.
  • Risks of inaction → authoritarian regimes exploit loopholes, global human rights abuses.
  • Reform obstacles → geopolitical rivalries, innovation fears, sovereignty claims.
  • Pragmatic path:
    • Incremental expansion of control lists.
    • Align with EU’s dual-use regulation.
    • Build coalitions of like-minded states (EU, India, Japan) to press reform.

Conclusion

  • WA must evolve from hardware-centric export controls to cloud & AI governance.
  • Without reform, it risks irrelevance in an era where surveillance, digital repression, and cross-border data exploitation are primary threats.
  • For India, engaging proactively in reform debates offers strategic leverage as both a tech hub and a responsible democracy.


Basics

  • Definition: E-waste = discarded electronic & electrical equipment (EEE) like mobiles, laptops, fridges, batteries.
  • Indias Position: World’s 3rd largest generator of e-waste (after China & USA).
  • Quantum: 4.17 million metric tonnes in 2022 → surged 73% by 2023-24 to 7.23 MMT approx (official + unofficial).

Relevance

  • GS-3 (Environment & Ecology, Economy):
    E-waste management, circular economy, sustainable resource recovery.
    Strategic materials (rare earths), reducing import dependency, domestic recycling potential.
  • GS-2 (Governance):
    E-Waste Management Rules, Extended Producer Responsibility, policy compliance and audits.

Policy Framework

  • Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR): Manufacturers responsible for collection & recycling of end-of-life products.
  • E-Waste Management Rules, 2016 (amended 2022): Formalized collection targets, introduced EPR certificates, banned unscientific dismantling.
  • 1,500 crore mineral recycling scheme (2025): To boost rare earths & strategic metals recovery.
  • CPCB Portal: Tracks EPR compliance & audits.

Current Challenges

  • Informal Sector Dominance: Handles 90–95% of e-waste via unsafe methods (open burning, acid leaching).
  • Low Formal Recycling: Only ~43% of e-waste recycled formally despite growth in facilities.
  • Health Hazards: Informal workers exposed to lead, cadmium, mercury, brominated plastics.
  • Data Gaps: No uniform inventory system; mismatch in national vs global estimates.
  • Paper Trading under EPR: Fake reporting of recycling for incentives.
  • Traceability Issues: Lack of downstream tracking of recovered materials → leakage back into informal streams.

Economic & Strategic Dimensions

  • Resource Value: E-waste contains copper, aluminum, gold, silver, palladium, rare earth elements (REEs).
  • Supply Chain Risks: Global fragility + China’s curbs on REE exports heighten India’s strategic vulnerability.
  • Potential: India could meet 70% of REE demand in 18 months with strong policy & industry integration (Attero).
  • Circular Economy Gap: Repair-focused informal operations prevent materials recovery → undermines resource security.

Social Dimensions

  • Livelihoods: Informal sector employs ~95% of workforce in e-waste handling.
  • Integration Need: Skilling, EPR floor pricing, and cooperative models needed for inclusion.
  • Best Practice: “Mandi-style” aggregation models by firms like Attero to link informal collectors with formal recyclers.

Way Forward

  • Inventory & Audits: Standardized national inventory; third-party audits for EPR compliance.
  • Technology Scale-up: Investment in hydrometallurgical & pyrometallurgical recycling facilities.
  • Integration of Informal Sector: Training, social security, microcredit, buy-back systems.
  • EPR Reform: Floor pricing for EPR credits; strict penalties for paper trading.
  • Policy Push: Incentivize domestic rare-earth recycling to reduce import dependence.
  • Awareness & Consumer Role: Incentives for take-back, deposit-refund systems, repair-to-recycle pipelines.


Basics

  • Country: Suriname, small South American nation, ~93% forest cover.
  • Recent Pledge: Commit to permanently protect 90% of its tropical forests.
  • Context: Announced during Climate Week, New York, ahead of COP30 (Belem, Brazil).
  • Significance: Surpasses the global 30×30 target (protect 30% of land and oceans by 2030).

Relevance

  • GS-1 (Environment & Ecology):
    Forest conservation, biodiversity protection, carbon sinks, climate change mitigation.
  • GS-2 (International Relations, Governance):
    Global climate commitments, COP30, 30×30 target, international funding & cooperation.

Forest & Climate Context

  • Forest Coverage: 93% of land heavily forested → one of the highest in the world.
  • Carbon Sink Status: Suriname is one of only three countries worldwide absorbing more CO₂ than it emits.
  • Biodiversity:
    • Jaguars, tapirs, giant river otters
    • 700+ bird species
    • Blue poison dart frog
  • Role in Climate Mitigation: Preserving intact forests stabilizes global climate, prevents CO₂ emissions.

Policy & Legal Measures

  • Conservation Law Updates: Expected by end of 2025 to strengthen forest protection.
  • Indigenous & Maroon Land Rights: Potential recognition of ancestral lands to empower local forest stewardship.
  • Forest Management:
    • Expansion of eco-tourism opportunities
    • Participation in carbon credit markets

Financial & International Support

  • Donor Commitment: $20 million from environmental coalitions to support forest protection & local jobs.
  • Global Leadership: Sets a benchmark for Amazonian countries struggling with deforestation (e.g., Brazil, Peru).

Challenges

  • Land Rights Issues:
    • Suriname does not legally recognize Indigenous & tribal land rights.
    • Local communities crucial for forest protection but currently lack formal authority.
  • Illegal Activities:
    • Mining, logging, and roadbuilding threaten forests.
    • Past international court rulings have been ineffective in halting concessions.
  • Implementation Needs:
    • Sustainable economic alternatives to extraction for local communities.
    • International technical and financial support.

Environmental & Socio-Economic Implications

  • Biodiversity Conservation: Protects key species and preserves ecosystem services.
  • Climate Mitigation: Maintains a significant carbon sink.
  • Local Livelihoods: Supports eco-tourism, carbon markets, and sustainable forestry jobs.
  • Global Example: Provides a model for forest-rich nations with high deforestation pressure.

Way Forward

  • Legal Recognition: Granting Indigenous and tribal land rights to enable community-led conservation.
  • Enforcement: Strengthen monitoring, anti-illegal logging, and mining measures.
  • Financial & Technical Support: International funding for alternative livelihoods, monitoring tech, carbon credit integration.
  • Integrated Conservation Strategy: Balance biodiversity protection, climate goals, and socio-economic development.


Basics

  • Topic: India’s push for Polymetallic Sulphides (PMS) exploration in the Indian Ocean.
  • Significance: PMS are rich in strategic and critical metals (copper, zinc, lead, gold, silver) essential for renewable energy, green technology, and electronics.
  • Historic First: India is the first country to secure two International Seabed Authority (ISA) contracts for PMS exploration, covering the largest area in the world.

Relevance

  • GS-3 (Science & Technology, Economy, Security):
    Deep-sea exploration, hydrothermal vents, ROV/AUV technology.
    Strategic minerals for renewable energy, electronics, EV batteries.
    Critical minerals security, reducing import dependence, supply chain resilience.
  • GS-2 (International Relations):
    UNCLOS, International Seabed Authority, maritime law, global positioning of India in seabed mining.

Geographical Context

  • Carlsberg Ridge:
    • Location: Indian Ocean, between Indian Plate and Somali Plate.
    • Features: Rough topography, high mineralization, hydrothermal vents.
    • Role: Major source of Polymetallic Sulphides.
  • Other key locations: Central Ridge, Mid-Indian Ridge, Madagascar Ridge.

Phases of India’s PMS Exploration

  1. Phase I – Reconnaissance Surveys:
    1. Goal: Identify promising PMS sites via seabed surveys and remote sensing.
  2. Phase II – Targeted Exploration:
    1. Methods: Conduct near-seabed surveys and ROVs (Remotely Operated Vehicles) to assess resource potential.
  3. Phase III – Resource Evaluation:
    1. Goal: Estimate extractable quantities and assess economic viability.

India’s Previous PMS Exploration

  • 2016: NCOPR conducted exploration in Indian Ocean and Southwest Indian Ocean.
  • Achievements: Developed expertise in deep-ocean mining, hydrothermal vent mapping, and resource characterization.
  • Ongoing research: Ocean Mission programme to enhance deep-ocean exploration capabilities.

Significance of the Carlsberg Ridge

  • Geology: High topography, mineralized hydrothermal vent systems.
  • Minerals: Rich in copper, zinc, lead, gold, silver.
  • Strategic importance: Supports renewable energy, electronics, and green technologies.
  • Hydrothermal Activity: Deposits formed by hot fluids interacting with basaltic ocean crust, creating metal-rich chimneys.

How PMS Exploration Differs from Other Underwater Minerals

  • Seabed complexity: PMS deposits concentrated near hydrothermal vents; irregular and uneven seafloor makes extraction challenging.
  • Dynamic positioning required: Unlike sand or nodules, PMS mining requires precise navigation and site-specific systems.
  • Advanced techniques: Geophysical and hydrographic surveys, autonomous vehicles (AUVs and ROVs), sampling, and lab analysis.

Economic & Strategic Importance

  • Critical metals: PMS contain copper, zinc, lead, gold, silver essential for EV batteries, electronics, and renewable energy.
  • Geopolitical significance:
    • Reduces dependence on China for critical metals.
    • Positions India as a leader in deep-sea resource exploration.
  • Renewable energy transition: Metals support solar, wind, and electric mobility sectors.

International Seabed Authority (ISA)

  • Role: Governs resource exploration beyond national jurisdictions.
  • Indias position:
    • Submitted two PMS exploration applications.
    • Follows UNCLOS framework and deep-sea mining protocols.
  • Approval process: Requires ISA review and compliance with environmental safeguards.

Challenges

  • Technical:
    • Deep-sea exploration at ~4000–5000 meters depth.
    • Difficult terrain with active hydrothermal vents.
  • Environmental:
    • Potential disturbance to fragile ocean ecosystems.
    • Need for sustainable extraction techniques.
  • Financial:
    • High capital and operational costs.
    • Uncertain global market prices for metals.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen domestic capabilities: Advanced ROVs, AUVs, remote sensing, and deep-sea mapping.
  • International collaboration: Partner with ISA, research institutes, and technology providers.
  • Environmental safeguards: Develop sustainable extraction and monitoring protocols.
  • Strategic stockpiling: Use PMS metals to support Indias renewable energy and tech industries.

September 2025
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