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Current Affairs 13 January 2026

  1. Pax Silica: India’s Likely Entry into a U.S.-Led Tech–Supply Chain Bloc
  2. EV Retrofit Push in India: Converting Old Cars to Electric
  3. AI Translation of Parliamentary Proceedings into 22 Languages
  4. Two Consecutive PSLV Failures
  5. PESA Act Implemented in Jharkhand after 25 Years: Will It Change Tribal Lives?


Context & Why in News ?

  • India to be invited to join Pax Silica, a U.S.-led 8-nation initiative on:
    • Semiconductors
    • Critical minerals
    • Artificial Intelligence
  • Signals reset in IndiaU.S. strategic-tech cooperation after months of trade frictions.
  • India was excluded in the initial launch (Dec, Washington) despite Quad membership.

Relevance

GS II International Relations

  • IndiaU.S. strategic partnership
  • Minilateralism (Quad, I2U2)
  • Strategic autonomy vs alignment

GS III Economy & S&T

  • Semiconductors, AI, critical minerals
  • Supply chain security
  • Industrial policy (PLI, Semicon India)

What is Pax Silica?

  • Strategic techno-economic bloc, not a formal treaty.
  • Aims to:
    • Secure trusted semiconductor supply chains.
    • Reduce dependence on China-centric manufacturing & minerals.
    • Coordinate on AI governance, standards, and innovation.
  • Part of broader U.S. vision of friend-shoring and tech alliances.

Strategic Context: Why Pax Silica Matters Now ?

  • Semiconductors as geopolitics:
    • Chips = core of defence, AI, telecom, EVs.
  • Critical minerals:
    • Lithium, cobalt, rare earths → energy transition & defence.
  • AI race:
    • Economic productivity + military applications.
  • Pax Silica complements:
    • Quad tech agenda
    • I2U2 economic corridor
    • U.S. CHIPS & Science Act ecosystem.

Why India’s Participation is Significant ?

Strategic Dimension  

  • Indo-Pacific balancing:
    • Strengthens India’s role in shaping rules-based tech order.
  • Trust-based alignment:
    • Without formal alliance → preserves strategic autonomy.
  • Enhances India’s leverage in:
    • Quad
    • G20
    • Global tech governance forums.

Economic & Industrial Dimension

  • Aligns with India’s:
    • Semicon India Programme
    • PLI schemes
  • Access to:
    • Advanced chip design ecosystems.
    • Global value chains (fab, packaging, testing).
  • Helps India move up from:
    • Assembly → design, materials, and equipment.

Supply Chain Security

  • Reduces vulnerability to:
    • China-dominated rare earth processing.
  • Diversification of:
    • Mineral sourcing
    • Manufacturing nodes.

Why India Was Initially Excluded ?

  • Trade tensions:
    • U.S. imposed 50% tariffs on Indian goods.
  • Friction over:
    • India’s Russian oil imports.
  • Policy divergence:
    • Data localisation
    • Market access issues.
  • Current invitation reflects:
    • Pragmatic reset rather than ideological convergence.

Challenges & Risks for India

Strategic Risks

  • Over-alignment risks perception of bloc politics.
  • China factor:
    • Possible retaliation in trade or border diplomacy.

Economic Risks

  • High entry barriers:
    • Capital-intensive fabs.
    • Technology export controls (U.S. ITAR-like regimes).

Policy Risks

  • AI governance:
    • U.S. model vs India’s development-first approach.
  • Critical minerals:
    • India weak in domestic reserves → dependency persists.

Linkages with Other Groupings

  • Quad:
    • Security + tech norms.
  • I2U2:
    • Economic innovation corridor.
  • BRICS:
    • India must balance tech alignment with Global South leadership.

Way Forward for India

  • Selective participation:
    • Focus on semicon design, OSAT, minerals processing.
  • Insist on technology access, not just market integration.
  • Leverage Pax Silica for Global South:
    • Act as bridge between advanced tech & developing world.
  • Domestic reforms:
    • Ease land, power, water bottlenecks for fabs.
  • Parallel diversification:
    • Continue cooperation with EU, Japan, South Korea.

Pax Silica Members

  1. United States (Lead country)
  2. Japan
  3. Australia
  4. South Korea
  5. Singapore
  6. United Kingdom
  7. Netherlands
  8. Israel
  9. United Arab Emirates


Context & Why in News ?

  • Delhi government announced incentives under its upcoming EV Policy to promote retrofitting of old ICE vehicles into EVs.
  • Incentives include:
    • 50,000 for first 1,000 retrofitted vehicles.
    • Focus on 2-wheelers & 3-wheelers initially.
  • Policy aims to address urban air pollution, vehicle scrappage gaps, and affordability barriers to EV adoption.

Relevance

GS III Environment & Economy

  • Electric mobility
  • Urban air pollution
  • Circular economy

GS II Governance

  • Urban transport policy
  • CentreState regulation (CMVR)

What is EV Retrofitting? 

  • Retrofitting = converting an Internal Combustion Engine (ICE) vehicle into an Electric Vehicle (EV).
  • Key components replaced:
    • Engine → Electric motor
    • Fuel tank → Battery pack
    • Transmission simplified
  • Requires approval under Central Motor Vehicles Rules (CMVR) and testing by agencies like ARAI / ICAT.

Economic Analysis: Why Retrofitting Is Expensive ?

  • Retrofit cost:
    • 2-wheelers: ~₹60,000–₹1 lakh
    • 4-wheelers: ₹3.5–6 lakh
  • High cost drivers:
    • Battery (~40–50% of cost)
    • Low economies of scale
    • Certification & compliance costs

Concerns

  • Battery sourcing & disposal:
    • Environmental costs of lithium extraction.
  • Limited lifecycle benefit:
    • If retrofit lifespan < new EV lifespan.

Technology & Industry Dimension

  • Market maturity:
    • Retrofit industry still nascent.
  • Supply chain gaps:
    • Limited certified vendors.
  • Warranty issues:
    • Retrofit kits often offer:
      • ~3-year battery warranty
      • ~1 lakh km motor warranty
  • Safety & reliability:
    • Fire risk concerns if standards not enforced.

Key Challenges

Economic

  • High cost vs declining cost of new EVs.
  • Limited subsidy support compared to new EVs.

Institutional

  • Complex approval & certification.
  • Lack of uniform standards across states.

Environmental

  • Battery recycling ecosystem still weak.

Market

  • Low consumer confidence and limited scale.

Way Forward

  • Targeted retrofitting strategy:
    • Focus on:
      • 2W, 3W, taxis, delivery fleets.
  • Battery-as-a-Service (BaaS):
    • Reduce upfront retrofit cost.
  • Stronger incentives:
    • Link with vehicle scrappage policy.
  • Standardisation:
    • National retrofit standards & safety norms.
  • Urban low-emission zones:
    • Mandate retrofitting or EV-only access.
  • Parallel push:
    • Do not dilute incentives for new EVs.


Context & Why in News ?

  • From 2026, parliamentary proceedings and official paperwork will be translated using AI into 22 Scheduled Languages.
  • Announcement by the Om Birla, aligned with Lok Sabha Secretariat’s digitisation drive.
  • Aim: Full linguistic accessibility, real-time or near real-time translation.

Relevance

GS II Polity & Governance

  • Parliamentary functioning
  • Linguistic inclusion
  • E-governance

Constitutional & Legal Dimension

  • Article 120:
    • Allows use of Hindi/English and permits other languages as authorised by Parliament.
  • Eighth Schedule:
    • Recognises 22 Scheduled Languages → normative basis for inclusion.
  • Article 350:
    • Right to representation in one’s language.
  • Spirit of the Constitution:
    • Linguistic diversity + democratic participation.

Governance & Democratic Significance

  • Deepening representative democracy:
    • MPs, especially from non-Hindi states, can engage more effectively.
  • Public accessibility:
    • Citizens gain direct access to debates in their mother tongue.
  • Legislative quality:
    • Better comprehension → informed debate and scrutiny.
  • Transparency:
    • Entire proceedings, not just summaries, made accessible.

Technology & Administrative Dimension

  • Use of AI/NLP tools:
    • Machine translation + human post-editing.
  • Phased implementation:
    • Currently available in 10 languages → 22 by end-2026.
  • HumanAI hybrid model:
    • Contract translators + younger AI-literate professionals.
  • Digitisation push:
    • Linked with e-Vidhan, e-Parliament initiatives.

Ethical & Constitutional Concerns

  • Accuracy & nuance:
    • Legislative language is technical; mistranslation can alter meaning.
  • Accountability:
    • Who is responsible for errors—AI vendor or Secretariat?
  • Bias & data training:
    • Regional dialects under-represented in datasets.
  • Digital divide:
    • Access assumes digital literacy and connectivity.

Key Challenges

Technical

  • Context loss in:
    • Legal terms
    • Sarcasm, interruptions, procedural phrases.
  • Difficulty in low-resource languages.

Institutional

  • Over-reliance on AI without robust human oversight.
  • Version control between original and translated texts.

Democratic

  • Risk of misinterpretation influencing public opinion.
  • MPs may rely on AI translations during debates.

Way Forward

  • Human-in-the-loop model mandatory for final versions.
  • Authoritative language principle:
    • Original text prevails in case of dispute.
  • Standardised legislative glossaries across languages.
  • Independent audit of AI tools for bias and accuracy.
  • Capacity building:
    • MPs & staff trained to use translated material responsibly.
  • Gradual rollout with feedback loops.


Context & Why in News ?

  • Indian Space Research Organisations Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) has suffered two consecutive failures:
    • PSLV-C61 (May 2025): Pressure drop in PS3.
    • PSLV-C62 (Jan 2026): Disruption in roll rate of PS3, deviation from intended orbit.
  • First time in PSLV’s 32-year history that back-to-back failures have occurred.
  • Raises concerns beyond “bad luck” → systemic and organisational scrutiny.

Relevance

GS III Science & Technology

  • Space technology
  • Failure analysis & reliability

PSLV at a Glance

  • Four-stage launch vehicle:
    • PS1 & PS3: Solid stages
    • PS2 & PS4: Liquid stages
  • Known for high reliability and cost-effectiveness.
  • Backbone of India’s:
    • Earth observation
    • Navigation (IRNSS)
    • Commercial launches (earlier phase)

Failure History Snapshot

  • 5 failures / partial failures in ~64 launches.
  • Earlier failures were isolated & time-separated (1993, 1997, 2017).
  • 2025–26 failures clustered around PS3 → commonality demands scrutiny.

Technical Analysis

Why PS3 Matters ?

  • PS3 (third stage):
    • Solid motor
    • Provides crucial velocity shaping & attitude stability.
  • Failures observed:
    • Pressure drop (C61)
    • Roll-rate instability (C62)
  • Indicates possible issues in:
    • Motor casing integrity
    • Thrust vector alignment
    • Sensor-actuator feedback loop

Possible Technical Causes

  • Manufacturing variability in solid propellant.
  • Ageing supply-chain components.
  • Quality assurance gaps in:
    • Pressure regulators
    • Inertial navigation sensors
  • Configuration management challenges due to PSLV variants (CA, XL, DL).

Strategic

  • PSLV supports:
    • Surveillance
    • Weather & disaster management
    • Strategic payloads
  • Reliability dip → national security sensitivity.

Science & Technology Ecosystem Perspective

  • Maturity paradox:
    • Highly mature systems risk complacency.
  • ISRO increasingly focused on:
    • Gaganyaan
    • LVM3
    • Reusable Launch Vehicle
  • Risk of attention dilution for “legacy” systems like PSLV.

Comparative Insight 

  • NASA / ESA practice:
    • Mandatory public post-failure disclosures.
    • Independent review boards.
  • Transparency improves:
    • Learning curve
    • Public confidence
    • International credibility

Way Forward

  • Deep-dive PS3 audit:
    • Design, material science, manufacturing chain.
  • Public release of FAC findings (non-sensitive parts).
  • Digital twin & AI-based anomaly prediction.
  • Independent safety oversight board within ISRO.
  • Gradual phase-out / redesign of PSLV as small-launch ecosystem matures.
  • Strengthen role of private launch vehicles to reduce strategic dependence.


Context & Why in News ?

  • Panchayat (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act rules notified in Jharkhand in 2025–26, 25 years after statehood.
  • Applies fully in 13 districts, partially in 3.
  • Reignites debate on Gram Sabha supremacy, customary law, and administrative control in Fifth Schedule Areas.

Relevance

GS II Polity & Governance

  • Fifth Schedule
  • Tribal self-governance
  • Panchayati Raj in Scheduled Areas

GS I Indian Society

  • Tribal autonomy & customary law

Constitutional / Legal Dimension

  • Fifth Schedule (Article 244):
    • Mandates special governance for Scheduled Areas to protect tribal autonomy.
  • PESA, 1996:
    • Extends Part IX (Panchayats) to Scheduled Areas with modifications.
    • Core spirit: Gram Sabha as basic unit of self-governance.
  • Key Constitutional Anchors:
    • Article 13 (customary law protection via PESA).
    • Articles 38, 39(b): distributive justice, community control over resources.
  • Fault Line:
    • Jharkhand rules alleged to dilute Sections 4(a), 4(d) of PESA → erosion of protection to customary law, cultural identity, community ownership.

Governance & Administrative Dimension

  • What the Rules Provide:
    • Gram Sabha declared “supreme” in Scheduled Areas.
    • President chosen as per traditional customs.
    • Powers over:
      • Minor minerals, forest produce, small water bodies.
      • Local dispute resolution; fines up to ₹2,000.
  • Critical Governance Concerns:
    • District Deputy Commissioner:
      • Recognises and notifies Gram Sabhas and boundaries → top-down control.
    • Gram Sabha excluded from:
      • District Mineral Foundation (DMF).
      • Tribal Sub Plan (TSP).
  • Institutional Tension:
    • Panchayati Raj Institutions + bureaucracy vs customary institutions (Manki-Munda, Majhi-Pargana).

Economic & Resource Governance Dimension

  • Resource-rich State:
    • ~30% forest cover.
    • ~40% of India’s mineral reserves.
    • Annual mineral output: ~160 million tonnes.
  • Disconnect:
    • High resource extraction vs persistent tribal poverty.
  • Key Issue:
    • Gram Sabha authority limited to minor minerals, not major mining, DMF funds, or consent mechanisms.

Social & Human Development Dimension

  • Demographic Reality:
    • STs = 26.3% of population (~32.9 million).
    • 32 tribal communities; 8 PVTGs.
  • Persistent Deprivation:
    • Literacy (STs): 57.2% (2011).
    • Only 6.08% tribal households in salaried jobs.
  • Health Indicators:
    • 28% tribal women with BMI < 18.5 (NFHS-5).
    • High anaemia, malaria burden.
  • Water & Welfare:
    • Jal Jeevan Mission coverage: ~55%, tribal areas lagging.

Environment & Forest Rights Dimension

  • Forest Rights Act (FRA) Interface:
    • 110,756 claims filed; only ~56% approved by Aug 2025.
  • Civil Society Concern:
    • Jharkhand Forest Rights Forum alleges:
      • Bureaucratic dominance.
      • Community forest management rights diluted.
  • Structural Issue:
    • PESA + FRA not harmonised in rules → fragmented tribal governance.

Criticisms

Institutional

  • Gram Sabha authority conditional on administrative recognition.
  • Weak linkage with DMF, TSP, major development planning.

Legal

  • Omission of explicit terms like community ownership.
  • Customary law subordinated to executive discretion.

Implementation

  • Risk of symbolic decentralisation.
  • Panchayat secretaries and officials can override traditional institutions.

Ethical

  • Violates principle of self-rule as intrinsic tribal right, not state concession.

Way Forward

  • Amend Rules to fully mirror PESA Section 4:
    • Explicit protection to customary law, culture, community ownership.
  • Gram Sabha Primacy:
    • Recognition by community, not district officials.
  • Expand Economic Powers:
    • Mandatory Gram Sabha consent for DMF utilisation, major mining impacts.
  • PESAFRA Convergence Framework:
    • Single institutional platform for forest and village governance.
  • Capacity Building:
    • Legal literacy, financial powers, independent dispute resolution.
  • Governors Fifth Schedule Role:
    • Active use of discretionary powers to safeguard tribal interests.

Prelims Pointers

  • PESA applies only to Fifth Schedule Areas, not Sixth Schedule.
  • Jharkhand: last major Fifth Schedule state to notify PESA rules.
  • Gram Sabha under PESA ≠ Gram Sabha under normal Panchayati Raj.
  • Customary law protection is core to PESA, not optional.

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