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Current Affairs 02 January 2026

  1. Centre’s tobacco tax rejig to take effect from Feb. 1
  2. Ancient Marathi literature reveals savannas are not degraded forests
  3. Why does India need climate- resilient agriculture?
  4. Ikkis: The story of 2nd Lt Arun Khetarpal & the Battle of Basantar
  5. Amazonian stingless bees first insects to get legal rights in the world


Why in News ?

  • The Union Finance Ministry has issued notifications to implement a new taxation regime on tobacco products from 1 February 2026 under the Central Excise (Amendment) Act, 2025.
  • Key elements include:
    • Revival and revision of excise duty on cigarettes (earlier reduced to a nominal level under GST).
    • Enforcement of a cess on pan masala units under the Health Security and National Security Act, 2025.
    • End of the GST Compensation Cess from 1 February.
    • Revision of GST rates on tobacco productsbeedis shifted to 18% (from the earlier 28% slab); other tobacco products moved to a 40% slab.
  • The Ministry flagged that cigarette affordability has not declined in the past decade, contrary to global public-health guidance recommending annual real price increases through higher specific excise duties.

Relevance  

  • GS-3 (Economy)
    • Taxation, GST architecture, cess vs tax, fiscal federalism, sin-tax economics, price elasticity.
  • GS-2 (Health & Governance)
    • Public health policy, NCDs, regulation of harmful products, Centre–State coordination.

Conceptual Foundations 

  • Indirect Taxes on Tobacco (Pre-GST vs Post-GST)
    • Pre-GST: Central excise + State VAT + surcharges.
    • Post-GST (2017): GST (12/18/28% slabs), plus GST Compensation Cess; central excise continued only on cigarettes (but reduced to a nominal level).
  • Types of Tobacco Taxes
    • Specific excise → fixed per unit (effective for health policy; raises price uniformly).
    • Ad valorem tax → % of price (can be evaded via down-trading to cheaper brands).
  • GST Compensation Cess (2017–2022, later extended)
    • Purpose: compensate States for revenue losses due to GST implementation.
    • Funded partly by cess on sin/luxury goods (incl. tobacco).
  • Economic Rationale for Sin Taxes”
    • Correct negative externalities (health costs, productivity loss).
    • Recommended by WHO-FCTC: regular increases in real prices; prefer specific excise.
  • Price Elasticity of Demand for Tobacco
    • Low but not zero; higher among youth & low-income users → taxation is an effective control tool.

What Has Changed — Policy Moves from 1 Feb 2025

  • Excise Duty on Cigarettes Raised/Restored from nominal levels to a meaningful specific levy.
  • Cess on Pan Masala Units brought into force under the 2025 Act.
  • GST Compensation Cess Ends from 1 February.
  • Re-structuring of GST Rates on Tobacco
    • Beedis: moved to 18% category (from the now-defunct 28% slab).
    • Other tobacco products: shifted to 40% slab.
  • Policy Logic Cited by Government
    • Cigarettes have become more affordable relative to income growth.
    • Aim is to align with global public-health benchmarks mandating periodic excise hikes.

Implications — Economy, Health, Governance

  • Public Health
    • Likely reduction in initiation and consumption over time, especially among youth.
    • Supports NCD control, lowers long-term healthcare burden.
  • Revenue & Fiscal Federalism
    • Higher excise may boost Union revenues; cessation of compensation cess changes Centre–State fiscal dynamics.
    • States may seek alternative revenue sources post-cess.
  • Equity & Behavioural Effects
    • Taxes are regressive in incidence but progressive in health gains (larger benefits for poorer households).
  • Industry & Supply Chain
    • Possible down-trading to cheaper/illicit products; need strong track-and-trace enforcement.
    • Beedi sector largely informal → compliance and monitoring challenges.
  • Trade & Compliance
    • Risk of illicit cross-border trade → requires customs vigilance and FCTC-aligned controls.

Analytical Perspectives 

  • Does tobacco taxation balance revenue and health objectives?
    • Compare specific vs ad valorem models; global lessons (WHO-FCTC, Thailand, Philippines).
  • Post-GST cess withdrawal and Statesrevenue space
    • Options: buoyancy via GST expansion vs targeted sin-tax rationalisation.
  • Beedi sector paradox
    • High consumption, low taxation, informal labour → policy trade-offs (health vs livelihoods).

Prelims-Ready Pointers

  • Excise duty on cigarettes continues outside GST (Union power).
  • Compensation Cess → designed to offset States’ GST revenue losses; ends from 1 Feb 2025.
  • From 1 Feb 2025:
    • Beedis → 18% GST category.
    • Other tobacco products → 40% GST slab.
  • Specific excise is considered more effective for tobacco control than ad valorem taxes.

Way Forward 

  • Periodic, inflation-indexed specific excise increases.
  • Track-and-trace systems to curb illicit trade.
  • Differential taxation aligned to harm continuum (discourage smoked forms strongly).
  • Health-earmarked revenues for NCD prevention and cessation programmes.
  • Support measures for workers/farmers in tobacco & beedi value chains during transition.


Why in News ?

  • A new study published in People and Nature (British Ecological Society) shows that the savannas of western Maharashtra are ancient ecosystems, not degraded forests.
  • Using medieval Marathi literature, oral traditions, archival records, and ecological evidence, researchers trace open tree–grass landscapes back at least 750 years, predating colonial timber extraction.
  • The study challenges the prevailing narrative that savannas are the result of deforestation or anthropogenic degradation, and calls for distinct conservation policies that value both biodiversity and local culture.

Relevance

  • GS-1 (Geography / Indian Society)
    • Physical geography of biomes, human–environment interactions, cultural landscapes.
  • GS-3 (Environment & Ecology)
    • Ecosystem classification, biodiversity conservation, grasslands vs forests, policy impacts.

Basics — Concepts & Foundations

  • What are Savannas?
    • Mixed tree–grass ecosystems with open canopies, seasonal drought, and fire–grazing interactions.
    • Characterised by thorny trees, drought-adapted shrubs, perennial grasses, and browsing-resilient species.
  • Savannas vs Forests (Conceptual Difference)
    • Savannas → Fire- and grazing-maintained, open, low tree density, grass-dominated.
    • Closed Forests → Dense canopy, shade-tolerant species, fire-sensitive ecology.
  • Indian Ecological Terminology (Historical)
    • vana / jāgala → wild, open, drier landscapes (scrub, savanna, grasslands).
    • anūpa → wetter marshes and closed forests.
    • Modern misinterpretation equates vana with “dense forest”, leading to policy misclassification.
  • Two Savanna Types in Maharashtra
    • Fine-leaf savannas → drier belts (≤1000 mm rainfall).
    • Broadleaf savannas → wetter belts (≥700 mm rainfall).
    • Both co-occur across the 700–1000 mm rainfall zone.

Evidence Base — What the Study Found ?

  • Textual & Oral Records (13th–20th centuries)
    • Sources: ovis, narrative poems, hagiographies, myths across Pune, Satara, Solapur, Sangli, Nashik.
    • Recurrent descriptions of:
      • thorny trees, grasslands, seasonal drought
      • pastoral livelihoods & grazing landscapes
    • Sacred landscapes (e.g., Shinganapur / Kothalāgirī) embed tree species as cultural symbols.
  • Flora Identified (62 species)
    • 27 savanna indicators; 14 forest species → strong signal of historic open-canopy ecologies.
    • Key species: Vachellia leucophloea, Senegalia catechu, Capparis divaricata, Butea monosperma, and grasses like Sehima nervosum.
  • Functional Traits Indicating Savanna Ecology
    • thick bark, spines, clonal resprouting, fire & grazing tolerance.
  • Triangulated with 11 Independent Evidence Lines
    • Archival photos & paintings → sparsely wooded uplands.
    • Colonial revenue records → pasture commons, hay meadows.
    • Hunting logs & bird lists → savanna-specialist fauna.
    • Hero stones → pastoral conflict & cattle raids.
    • Archaeological evidence → blackbuck motifs, grazer remains in Chalcolithic contexts.

Conclusion: Savannas are ancient and persistent ecosystems, not outcomes of recent deforestation.

Why This Matters ? 

  • Ecological Misclassification Problem
    • Policies often treat savannas as wastelands” or degraded forests → leads to:
      • inappropriate afforestation/plantation drives,
      • biodiversity loss (grassland fauna decline),
      • disruption of pastoral livelihoods.
  • Cultural-Ecological Linkages
    • Savannas host sacred groves, pastoral traditions, ritual landscapes.
    • Conservation must integrate local knowledge + biodiversity objectives.
  • Conservation Reorientation Needed
    • Manage as distinct ecosystems (fire-grazing dynamics, native grasses),
    • Avoid blanket tree-plantation policies in open landscapes.


Why in News ?

  • Climate shocks, soil degradation, water stress, and rising input volatility are weakening India’s agricultural productivity and farmer incomes.
  • A policy commentary highlights the need for Climate-Resilient Agriculture (CRA) — integrating biotechnology, bio-inputs, genome-edited seeds, precision & digital tools, and climate advisories — to safeguard food security while reducing ecological stress.
  • Despite initiatives such as NICRA (ICAR, 2011) and the National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture (NMSA), adoption gaps, poor bio-input quality, digital divides, and fragmented policy coordination constrain progress.

Relevance  

  • GS-1 (Geography / Society) → climate variability, livelihoods, rainfed agriculture.
  • GS-3 (Economy & Environment) → food security, agricultural productivity, biotechnology, sustainable agriculture, climate change adaptation, bio-inputs, resource efficiency.

Concepts & Foundations 

  • Climate-Resilient Agriculture (CRA): Core Idea
    • Adapt farming systems to climate variability, extreme weather, and resource stress while maintaining productivity and environmental sustainability.
  • Key Components
    • Biotechnology tools — climate-tolerant & genome-edited crops (heat, drought, salinity, pest tolerance).
    • Bio-inputs — biofertilizers, biopesticides, soil-microbiome approaches (reduced chemical dependence).
    • Digital & AI tools — precision irrigation, crop-health monitoring, yield prediction, climate advisories.
    • Climate-smart practices — zero tillage, residue management, SRI, aerobic/direct-seeded rice, diversified systems.
  • Conceptual Distinction (Static)
    • CRA ≠ only mitigation → mainly adaptation + risk-proofing agriculture.
    • Linked syllabus themes: sustainability, food security, resource efficiency, technology & innovation.

Why India Needs Climate-Resilient Agriculture ?

  • High exposure to climate risk
    • ~51% of net sown area is rainfed; produces ~40% of food → highly vulnerable to rainfall variability and drought.
  • Rising frequency of climate extremes
    • Heatwaves, erratic monsoons, floods, pest outbreaks → yield instability and income shocks.
  • Degrading natural resources
    • Soil nutrient depletion, groundwater stress, stubble burning, chemical-input dependency.
  • Food security & demographic pressure
    • Large and growing population → need stable, climate-proof productivity.
  • Environmental health & sustainability
    • CRA reduces chemical load, emissions, and ecosystem damage while preserving productivity.

Where India Stands — Policies, Institutions, Initiatives

  • NICRA (ICAR, 2011)
    • 448 climate-resilient villages; demonstrated SRI, zero-till wheat, residue incorporation, climate-tolerant varieties, aerobic/direct-seeded rice.
  • National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture (NMSA)
    • Focus: rainfed areas, integrated farming, soil health, water-use efficiency, resource conservation.
  • BioE3 Policy (recent)
    • Positions CRA as a biotechnology-led adaptation pathway; promotes genome-edited crops and bio-inputs.
  • Market & technology ecosystem
    • Growing bio-input industry; expanding agritech & AI advisory platforms, precision irrigation, crop-monitoring tools.

Key Challenges in Scaling CRA 

  • Low adoption among small & marginal farmers
    • Constraints: awareness, affordability, access to technologies & advisory services.
  • Quality risks in bio-inputs
    • Inconsistent standards for biofertilizers/biopesticides → distrust, poor outcomes.
  • Slow rollout of climate-resilient / gene-edited seeds
    • Uneven State-level distribution; regulatory caution slows diffusion.
  • Digital divide
    • Limited access to devices, connectivity, data literacy → weak penetration of AI/precision tools.
  • Resource stress outpacing adaptation
    • Soil degradation, water scarcity, rising climate volatility.
  • Fragmented policy & institutional coordination
    • Overlaps across agriculture, biotechnology, environment, and rural development → implementation friction.

Why CRA is Strategic for India ?

  • Risk-buffering for farmers → stabilises yields & incomes under climate uncertainty.
  • Productivity with sustainability → reduces chemical dependence while improving soil & ecosystem health.
  • Tech-led structural transformation → strengthens innovation, agri-value chains, and agri-startup ecosystems.
  • Supports national priorities → food security, SDGs, NDC adaptation goals, water & soil conservation.

Way Forward — Policy & Implementation Priorities

  • Accelerate climate-tolerant & genome-edited crop deployment with strong regulatory clarity.
  • Strengthen standards & certification for biofertilizers and biopesticides; build reliable supply chains.
  • Last-mile digital inclusion → climate advisories, AI decision tools, precision farming access for smallholders.
  • Financial enablers → climate insurance, concessional credit, transition incentives, outcome-based support.
  • Integrated national CRA roadmap (BioE3-aligned) → unify biotechnology, climate adaptation, and agriculture policy for scale & coherence.
  • Localised extension & capacity-building → community participation, farmer-producer organisations, region-specific packages.

Prelims-Ready Pointers

  • ~51% rainfed area → ~40% food output → high climate vulnerability.
  • CRA tools: bio-inputs, genome-edited seeds, soil-microbiome insights, AI-based advisories, precision irrigation.
  • Flagship initiatives: NICRA (ICAR), NMSA, BioE3-aligned biotechnology push.
  • Key barriers: quality of bio-inputs, digital divide, slow seed rollout, fragmented coordination.


Why in News ?

  • A recent feature revisits the Battle of Basantar (Indo-Pakistan War, 1971) through the story of Second Lieutenant Arun Khetrapal, the youngest recipient of the Param Vir Chakra.
  • The narrative is linked to the film Ikkis, which portrays his courage during one of the most decisive tank battles on the western front of the 1971 war.

Relevance

  • GS-1 (History — Post-Independence India)
    • Major wars, national security events, military leadership and heroism.
  • GS-3 (Internal Security / Defence)
    • Border security, armoured warfare, strategic geography (Shakargarh Bulge, riverine barriers).

Context & Background

  • Indo-Pakistan War of 1971: Two Fronts
    • Eastern Theatre → Liberation of Bangladesh (offensive operations).
    • Western Theatre → Objective was to contain Pakistan and prevent escalation; included key defensive–offensive battles such as Basantar.
  • Location
    • Shakargarh Bulge (between the Ravi & Chenab rivers, near Jammu–Pathankot axis).
    • A strategic wedge—if Pakistan broke through, it could threaten Punjab, Pathankot, and access to Kashmir.
  • Battle of Basantar (Dec 1971) — Core Idea
    • Indian aim: secure a bridgehead across the Basantar river, block Pakistani armoured thrusts, and hold territory under heavy counter-attacks.

Operational Overview — What Happened ?

  • Indian Advance
    • Indian armoured & infantry units crossed the heavily mined Basantar river, creating a bridgehead under intense fire.
  • Pakistani Counter-attacks
    • Multiple Patton tank assaults to dislodge Indian forces.
  • Role of 2nd Lt Arun Khetrapal (Poona Horse Regiment)
    • Refused to abandon his burning tank, fought on, and destroyed several enemy tanks.
    • Continued firing despite being ordered to withdraw; died in action after disabling another advancing tank.
    • His actions were pivotal in breaking the Pakistani assault and holding the bridgehead.

Decorated Soldier — Key Facts for Prelims

  • 2nd Lt Arun Khetrapal
    • Param Vir Chakra (Posthumous) — youngest recipient.
    • National Defence Academy parade ground and gates at IMA, Dehradun & NDA, Khadakwasla named in his honour.

Strategic Significance of the Battle

  • Military Significance
    • Prevented Pakistan from penetrating the western sector.
    • Secured the Pathankot–Jammu axis, protecting vital logistics corridors.
  • Psychological & Doctrinal Impact
    • Demonstrated armoured warfare capabilities and combined-arms coordination.
    • Reinforced the role of defensive-offensive operations on active borders.
  • War Outcome Context
    • Contributed to favourable ceasefire terms on the western front.

Overview

  • Shakargarh Bulge as a Vulnerability
    • Natural salient projecting into India → high-value defensive priority.
  • Armour vs Armour Battles in South Asia
    • Basantar illustrates terrainengineering–minefield integration as decisive in tank warfare.
  • Role of Individual Leadership in War Outcomes
    • Tactical courage at the platoon level can shape operational success.

Prelims-Ready Pointers

  • Battle of Basantar → Western Front, Dec 1971, Shakargarh Bulge.
  • Regiment involved → Poona Horse (armoured regiment).
  • Award → Param Vir Chakra (youngest awardee).
  • Objective → Hold bridgehead across Basantar; repel Pakistani tank counter-attacks.

Way Forward

  • Preserve battlefields & regimental histories as military-heritage resources.
  • Integrate lessons on combined arms, logistics protection, and armoured tactics in professional military education.
  • Use biographies and films to strengthen public awareness of national security history.


Why in News ?

  • A municipal ordinance in Satipo, Peru (Amazon region) has granted legal rights to native Amazonian stingless bees — the first case in the world where insects have been recognised as rights-bearing entities.
  • The Declaration of Rights for Native Stingless Bees grants them the right to exist, thrive, restore habitats, live in pollution-free environments, and be legally represented in cases of harm.
  • The initiative was led by Amazon Research Internacional (Rosa Vásquez Espinoza) in collaboration with the Earth Law Center, aligning Indigenous ecological knowledge and Rights-of-Nature jurisprudence.

Relevance

  • GS-3 (Environment & Ecology)
    • Biodiversity conservation, pollinators, ecosystem services, invasive species, climate impacts.
    • Environmental governance, Rights of Nature, community-based conservation.

Concepts & Foundations

  • Rights of Nature — Core Idea
    • A legal-philosophical approach where ecosystems or species possess inherent legal rights, independent of human use-value.
    • Earlier examples:
      • Whanganui River (New Zealand, 2017) — granted legal personhood.
      • Ganga & Yamuna (India, 2017—judicial recognition, later limited in scope).
      • Amazon & Andes jurisdictions — constitutional or municipal nature-rights frameworks (Ecuador, Bolivia).
  • What Makes This Case Distinct
    • First time a specific insect group has been recognised as a legal rights holder rather than merely a protected species.
  • Who Are Stingless Bees? (Ecology Basics)
    • Ancient lineage of bees; non-stinging, cavity-nesting, highly social species.
    • Keystone rainforest pollinators — pollinate >80% of Amazon flora and crops like coffee, cocoa, avocado, blueberries.
    • Culturally important to Indigenous Amazonian communities (medicine, livelihoods, rituals).

What the Ordinance Recognises 

  • Right to exist and thrive
  • Right to maintain healthy populations
  • Right to a pollution-free habitat
  • Right to ecologically stable climatic conditions
  • Right to regenerate natural cycles
  • Right to legal representation in cases of threat or harm

Implication: Harm to bees or their habitats can be pursued as a legal injury.

Why Protection Was Needed ?— Risk Drivers

  • Climate change → heat stress, rainfall disruption
  • Deforestation & habitat loss
  • Pesticide exposure
  • Competition from introduced European honeybees
  • Erosion of Indigenous knowledge systems

Significance — Governance, Law, Environment

  • Shift from conservation-as-resource to conservation-as-rights
    • Recognises species as moral and legal stakeholders.
  • Integration of Indigenous knowledge & modern science
    • Supports biocultural heritage preservation.
  • Precedent-setting value
    • Could influence municipal and national biodiversity laws globally.
  • Operational Challenges
    • Defining guardianship & representation mechanisms.
    • Balancing economic uses (apiculture, agriculture) with species-rights claims.
    • Monitoring compliance in remote rainforest landscapes.

Prelims-Ready Pointers

  • First insects to receive legal rightsAmazonian stingless bees (Peru, Satipo ordinance).
  • Key rationale → ecological keystone role + Indigenous cultural significance.
  • Rights granted include existence, healthy populations, habitat protection, climate stability, regeneration, legal representation.
  • Led by Rosa Vásquez Espinoza (Amazon Research Internacional) with Earth Law Center.
  • Pollinate >80% of Amazonian flora and several global crops.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen pollinator protection frameworks (wild bees beyond honeybees).
  • Integrate community stewardship and traditional knowledge into conservation.
  • Promote pesticide regulation, habitat corridors, diversified agro-ecosystems.
  • Explore rights-based or trustee-based models for critical ecosystems/species where appropriate.

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