The Hindu – UPSC News Analysis
Mains-Oriented Deep Analysis for Civil Services Aspirants
GS Papers Covered: GS-I · GS-II · GS-III · GS-IV · Essay · Prelims
Total Articles Analysed: 8 Key Stories
📋 Table of Contents
Click any article to navigate directly to its analysis
Thrissur Fireworks Tragedy — Regulatory Failures and the Human Cost of High-Risk Festivities
The April 21 explosion at a fireworks unit in Mundathikode, Thrissur — killing at least 12, injuring 24+, and damaging 50 houses — exposes systemic failures in licensing, safety enforcement, and political will in India’s unregulated pyrotechnics industry. The editorial calls for cold spark technology and genuine regulatory enforcement over vote-bank-driven laxity.
- What: A fireworks unit at Mundathikode (Thrissur, Kerala), preparing materials for the Thrissur Pooram festival’s sample fireworks display, exploded on April 21. 12 declared dead, 3 missing, 24+ injured; 50 houses damaged. The blast involved multiple sheds storing explosive materials over ~2.5 acres of paddy fields.
- Why in News: The editorial links the tragedy to failure in implementing the 2016 Puttingal temple fireworks accident (32 killed) judicial commission recommendations, vote-bank politics shielding hazardous activities, and absence of safe modern alternatives. A similar explosion killed 23 at a Tamil Nadu fireworks factory (Virudhunagar) days earlier.
- Key Violations (Expert Assessment): No safe distance between sheds; excess ash powder stockpile; no safety gear or fire-fighting equipment; untrained workers; likely use of banned chemicals (potassium chlorate); lax PESO enforcement.
- Explosives Act, 1884: Governs manufacture, possession, use, sale, transport of explosives in India. Licensing mandatory.
- Explosives Rules, 2008: Detailed regulations for fireworks — licensing, storage limits, safety distances, approved layout.
- PESO (Petroleum and Explosives Safety Organisation): Under DPIIT (Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade); regulates explosives licensing and safety. Licenses for fireworks units issued under PESO.
- Puttingal Temple Fireworks Accident (2016): 32 killed in Kollam, Kerala. A judicial commission was set up — its recommendations on licensing, materials, layout, and conduct of displays have been “progressively sidelined.”
- Noise Pollution (Regulation and Control) Rules, 2000: Prohibit sound-emitting fireworks between 10 pm and 6 am — routinely flouted.
- Thrissur Pooram: One of Kerala’s most famous temple festivals; competitive fireworks display between Thiruvambady and Paramekkavu temple authorities; politically sensitive due to vote-bank considerations.
- Cold Spark Technology: Modern alternative to conventional pyrotechnics — visually appealing, no explosive chemicals, environmentally safer, risk-free. The editorial calls for its adoption as an alternative to explosive-based fireworks.
🏛️ Constitutional Relevance: Art. 21 (Right to Life with Dignity — workers and bystanders killed in preventable accidents); Art. 48A (State duty to protect environment); Entry 33, List III (Concurrent List — production/supply of products including explosives). Fireworks safety is a concurrent subject with both Centre and States responsible.
- No safe distance between sheds
- Excess ash powder stockpiled
- No fire-fighting equipment
- Banned chemicals (potassium chlorate)
- Untrained workers
- Remote location — delayed rescue
- Puttingal (2016) commission recommendations ignored
- Vote-bank politics → enforcement reluctance
- PESO licensing inadequately enforced
- Explosives Act 1884 provisions flouted
- 12 dead (official); 3 missing
- 24+ injured; many grievously
- 50 houses damaged
- DNA testing for body part identification
- Families in trauma
- “Loudness” as marker of festival success
- Temple authorities compete in fireworks displays
- Vote-bank politics → authorities reluctant to enforce
- Fireworks integral to cultural identity
- Cold spark technology
- Laser light shows
- Community-managed light installations
- Kerala Sasthra Sahithya Parishad demands ban on explosive fireworks
- Judicial commission under retired HC judge
- Magisterial inquiry
- State + Centre compensation to families
- Declared state-specific disaster
- Thrissur Pooram to proceed without fireworks
⚠️ Governance & Enforcement Failures
- 2016 Puttingal commission recommendations were never implemented — regulatory memory loss
- Religious/cultural festivals entangled with vote-bank politics → enforcement paralysis
- PESO lacks field-level manpower for continuous monitoring of licensed units
- Open paddy fields used as fireworks units — not designed for explosive operations
- Workers were untrained, no safety gear provided — violation of OSH norms
✅ Reform Opportunities
- Mandatory cold spark/laser technology for all temple festivals — gradual transition
- District-level PESO monitoring teams with real-time inspection protocols
- Supreme Court/HC-mandated compliance monitoring for fireworks displays
- Worker safety insurance mandatory for all fireworks unit employees
- Kerala Sasthra Sahithya Parishad model — laws exist; enforcement is the gap
Regulatory Reform
Implement 2016 Puttingal commission recommendations — mandatory layout, safety distances, licensed facilities with approved buildings, fire-fighting equipment, and trained workers. PESO to conduct random inspections.
Technology Shift
Incentivise adoption of cold spark technology, drone light shows, and laser displays as safer festival alternatives. Gradual phase-out of high-decibel explosive fireworks from temple festivals.
Legal Accountability
Time-bound prosecution of license holders for safety violations. Mandatory worker compensation funds. Treat workplace deaths from preventable explosions as criminal negligence under BNS.
Cultural Transition
Engage temple authorities, youth, and festival committees on modern alternatives. Social scientist recommendation: “trained community groups managing light-based installations.” Youth may prefer safer alternatives if offered.
📌 Prelims Pointers
- PESO: Petroleum and Explosives Safety Organisation — under DPIIT; regulates explosives including fireworks
- Explosives Act, 1884: Governs manufacture, storage, use, transport of explosives; licensing by PESO
- Puttingal Temple Accident (2016): 32 killed in Kollam, Kerala — fireworks explosion; judicial commission set up
- Cold Spark Technology: Safe alternative to pyrotechnics — no explosive chemicals; visually similar effect
- Noise Pollution Rules, 2000: Prohibit sound-emitting fireworks between 10 pm and 6 am
- Potassium Chlorate: Chemical compound; banned in fireworks due to extreme sensitivity and explosive risk; suspected in Mundathikode blast
- Thrissur Pooram: Famous Kerala temple festival; competitive fireworks between two temple groups; politically sensitive
🖊️ UPSC Mains Model Question: “Recurring fireworks tragedies in India reflect a fundamental governance failure where cultural and political considerations override statutory safety obligations. Critically examine the regulatory framework for pyrotechnics in India and suggest comprehensive reforms.” (250 words / 15 Marks)
- A. Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas
- B. Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT), Ministry of Commerce ✓
- C. Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change
- D. Ministry of Home Affairs
PESO (Petroleum and Explosives Safety Organisation) is under DPIIT and is responsible for issuing licences and regulating safety in manufacture, storage, use, transport, and import/export of explosives (including fireworks) and petroleum products. The Explosives Act, 1884 and Explosives Rules, 2008 are its primary statutory instruments.
CAFE-III Emissions Norms — Incremental Change When Only Electrification Can Deliver
India’s auto industry unanimously agreed to new Corporate Average Fuel Efficiency (CAFE-III) targets — reducing CO₂ from ~113 g/km to 77 g/km by 2031-32. But the editorial warns that flexible compliance pathways, super-credits, credit banking, and 3-year averaging blocks will allow manufacturers to meet targets on paper without genuinely shifting to electric vehicles.
- What: India’s Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) proposed new CAFE-III standards — CO₂ targets fall from ~113 g/km (CAFE-II) to 77 g/km by 2031-32, to be implemented from April 2027 to March 2032. Auto industry has unanimously agreed, ending earlier disagreements between Maruti Suzuki and larger manufacturers.
- Why in News: The editorial critiques the framework as “too weak” despite an ambitious headline number. Multiple compliance flexibility mechanisms — credits for ethanol blending, super-credits for EVs, 3-year averaging — dilute the actual push toward electrification. Transport is India’s third-largest source of greenhouse gas emissions.
- Key Editorial Concern: CAFE-III risks becoming a framework that “manages emissions on paper rather than transforming them in practice.”
- CAFE (Corporate Average Fuel Efficiency) Standards: Regulations that set average CO₂ emissions per km across a manufacturer’s entire vehicle fleet — not individual vehicles. Manufacturers who fail to meet targets face penalties; those who exceed can earn credits.
- BEE (Bureau of Energy Efficiency): Under Ministry of Power; sets energy efficiency standards across sectors including vehicles.
- CAFE-I and CAFE-II: India introduced CAFE norms in phases — CAFE-I from 2017-18, CAFE-II from 2022-27. CAFE-III is the next phase.
- India’s EV Policy: Faster Adoption and Manufacturing of Electric Vehicles (FAME) — currently FAME-III under consideration. India’s EV penetration remains low (~6% of new vehicle sales in 2025-26).
- National Electric Mobility Mission Plan (NEMMP): Government’s long-term vision for EV adoption in India.
- E20 Fuel: 20% ethanol blend with petrol — India achieved this target in FY2025-26. CAFE-III proposes credits for vehicles compatible with E85 (85% ethanol blending).
- Super-Credits: A mechanism where certain advanced technologies (like BEVs) count multiple times (e.g., 3x) towards CAFE compliance — allowing manufacturers to offset non-compliant conventional vehicles without actually reducing their overall emissions significantly.
🏛️ Constitutional & Policy Context: Art. 48A (Protect and improve environment); Art. 51A(g) (Fundamental Duty to protect the environment); India’s NDC — 45% reduction in emission intensity of GDP by 2030 vs 2005; Net Zero by 2070. CAFE norms are central to India’s transport sector decarbonisation.
| Parameter | CAFE-II (2022-27) | CAFE-III (Proposed 2027-32) | Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|
| CO₂ Target (g/km) | ~113 g/km | 77 g/km by 2031-32 | Headline ambitious; but flexibility weakens real impact |
| Small Car Carve-out | Explicit carve-out for small cars (14-15% of sales) | Explicit carve-out removed | Positive change, but replaced by alternative compliance pathways |
| Ethanol Credits | Limited | Credits for E20→E85 compatible vehicles | Marginal improvement; doesn’t push electrification |
| EV Super-Credits | Basic credits | 1 EV counted as 3 vehicles for compliance | Allows laggards to buy credits instead of innovating |
| Compliance Assessment | Annual | 3-year block averaging | Reduces immediate pressure; weakens regulatory signal |
| Credit Banking/Trading | Limited | Expanded — early movers can sell surplus credits | Benefits tech leaders; reduces incentive for laggards to invest |
Sharper EV Incentives
Phase out super-credits for EVs by 2029; require actual fleet electrification. Link CAFE compliance directly to EV sales percentage — mandatory EV sales floors per manufacturer.
Annual Compliance
Revert to annual compliance assessment rather than 3-year blocks. This strengthens regulatory signalling and creates year-on-year urgency for manufacturers to reduce emissions.
FAME-III Alignment
Align CAFE-III with FAME-III incentives for EV buyers and manufacturers. Production-linked incentives for EVs must be conditional on CAFE compliance trajectories.
Carbon Pricing
Consider a carbon tax or emission trading system for the transport sector to complement CAFE norms. India’s Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS, 2023) should be extended to automobiles.
🎯 SDG Links: SDG 7 (Affordable Clean Energy), SDG 11 (Sustainable Cities — transport emissions), SDG 13 (Climate Action — India’s NDC commitments), SDG 12 (Responsible Consumption and Production). CAFE-III must align with Paris Agreement 1.5°C target.
📌 Prelims Pointers
- CAFE: Corporate Average Fuel Efficiency — sets fleet-wide CO₂ emission targets for manufacturers
- BEE: Bureau of Energy Efficiency — under Ministry of Power; sets CAFE standards in India
- CAFE-III target: 77 g CO₂/km by 2031-32 (from ~113 g/km under CAFE-II)
- Super-credits: Mechanism where advanced-tech vehicles (EVs) count multiple times for compliance — dilutes actual emission reduction
- Transport emissions: India’s third-largest source of greenhouse gas emissions
- E20/E85: 20%/85% ethanol blended petrol; India achieved E20 target in FY2025-26
- FAME scheme: Faster Adoption and Manufacturing of Electric Vehicles — India’s EV promotion scheme
🖊️ UPSC Mains Model Question: “India’s CAFE-III emissions norms represent an ambitious headline target but a weak compliance framework. Critically examine the norms and argue why genuine electrification of the transport sector, rather than incremental improvements, is essential for India’s climate commitments.” (250 words / 15 Marks)
- A. Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) under MoEFCC
- B. Ministry of Road Transport and Highways
- C. Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) under Ministry of Power ✓
- D. Automotive Research Association of India (ARAI)
BEE under the Ministry of Power is the nodal body for setting CAFE norms in India. ARAI provides technical testing support. CPCB deals with pollution standards (Bharat Stage emission norms) under MoEFCC. The CAFE framework focuses on fleet-average fuel efficiency/CO₂ targets for manufacturers, distinct from vehicle-level Bharat Stage norms.
Urban Electoral Disenfranchisement — SIR and the Crisis of Adult Franchise in India’s Cities
The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls — which removed millions of names disproportionately from urban areas — represents a systematic attack on the democratic right of adult franchise for India’s poorest urban residents: migrants, Dalits, slum-dwellers, and unorganised sector workers.
- What: An op-ed argues that SIR (Special Intensive Revision) of electoral rolls has systematically disenfranchised urban poor — Dalits, migrants, religious/ethnic minorities, slum-dwellers. Evidence: Tamil Nadu’s electorate shrank from 6.29 crore (2021) to 5.73 crore (2026), a net deletion of ~67 lakh voters, inflating the polling percentage arithmetically.
- Why in News: Tamil Nadu recorded 85.15% turnout (claimed as “historic”) and West Bengal 92.88% — but a letter in The Hindu and data analysis reveal that the turnout spike is partly a mathematical consequence of the SIR exercise reducing the denominator (total electorate).
- Key Cities with Massive Deletions: Patna (16.5 lakh), Ghaziabad (36.67%), Lucknow (30.88%), Kanpur (25.62%), Kolkata (Gulshan Colony: 90% missing), Mumbai (14 lakh).
- Article 326: Elections based on adult suffrage — every citizen 18+ years entitled to be registered as a voter. Disenfranchisement through bureaucratic exclusion violates this fundamental democratic right.
- Representation of the People Act, 1950: Governs preparation of electoral rolls. Section 22 allows corrections/deletions from electoral rolls. SIR is conducted under this framework.
- SIR (Special Intensive Revision): A comprehensive exercise to update electoral rolls — adding eligible voters and deleting ineligible ones (dead, shifted, duplicate). When done without adequate outreach, it systematically excludes mobile/migrant populations.
- T.N. Seshan (former CEC) principle: Cited in the article — “an address did not mean a luxury home, but merely a place where the person resided, even if that was under a tree or on the pavement.” This inclusive interpretation of residency for voter registration has been abandoned in practice under the document-intensive SIR.
- Tenth Schedule (Anti-Defection): Referenced in context of AAP MPs merging with BJP — 7 of 10 AAP Rajya Sabha MPs quit; AAP will seek disqualification under Tenth Schedule as the faction did not meet the 2/3rd threshold required within the parent party to avoid disqualification.
- Article 324: Superintendence, direction and control of elections vested in Election Commission. Opposition sought CEC removal under Article 324(5) — removal process requires Supreme Court inquiry before the President can remove the CEC.
| City/Region | Deletion Scale | Key Affected Group |
|---|---|---|
| Ghaziabad, U.P. | ~36.67% of voters deleted | High mobility urban/unorganised workforce |
| Lucknow, U.P. | ~30.88% voter deletions | Urban poor, migrant workers |
| Kanpur, U.P. | ~25.62% marked for removal | Unorganised sector workers (industrial town) |
| Patna, Bihar | 16.5 lakh names removed from draft rolls | Urban poor, migrant workers |
| Kolkata (Gulshan Colony) | 90% of voters missing in one locality | Marginalised urban community |
| Mumbai | ~14 lakh deleted; 50% informal housing residents registered | Slum-dwellers, informal settlement residents |
| Tamil Nadu (overall) | Net deletion of 67 lakh voters (6.29 crore→5.73 crore) | Urban constituencies saw highest proportionate deletions |
| West Bengal (Phase 1) | ~91 lakh names removed; electorate reduced by 12% | Minorities, migrants in border/minority-dominated districts |
- “Historic turnout” — statistical illusion: Tamil Nadu’s “85.15% record turnout” is partly artificial — the electorate denominator shrank by 10.45% (67 lakh voters). Even if the same number of people voted as in 2021, the percentage would be ~10 points higher mathematically.
- Booth-wise vote revelation: In small booths with a few hundred voters, voting patterns of demographic groups can be easily inferred by parties — undermining the secret ballot principle (Article 21 — right to privacy).
- Structural bias in SIR: Requires proof of stable residence from 2002/2005 — impossible for migrants who are a defining feature of India’s urbanisation. 40% of India’s urban population lives in slums (World Bank) — most of whom cannot produce these documents.
- Selective disenfranchisement concern: The article argues SIR constitutes “selective filtration” — those without “stable addresses” (read: urban poor, migrants, minorities) are systematically excluded, potentially serving political interests of ruling parties.
📌 Prelims Pointers
- Article 326: Adult suffrage — every citizen above 18 entitled to vote; no discrimination
- SIR: Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls — conducted under Representation of the People Act, 1950
- T.N. Seshan: Former CEC; known for electoral reforms; principle of inclusive voter registration (address = any place of residence)
- Article 324: Election Commission — superintendence, direction and control of elections; CEC removal requires Supreme Court inquiry + Presidential action
- Tenth Schedule: Anti-defection law; requires 2/3rd of original party members to merge with another party without disqualification
- World Bank statistic: ~40% of India’s urban population lives in slums — key data point for disenfranchisement argument
🖊️ UPSC Mains Model Question: “The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls, while aimed at voter list accuracy, has disproportionately disenfranchised India’s urban poor, migrants, and marginalised communities. Critically examine this paradox of democratic deepening and suggest a more inclusive voter registration framework.” (250 words / 15 Marks)
- A. Article 324 — empowers Election Commission to conduct elections
- B. Article 326 — every citizen above 18 years, not disqualified by any law, is entitled to be registered as a voter ✓
- C. Article 325 — no person to be ineligible for inclusion in electoral rolls on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex
- D. Article 329 — bars courts from questioning the validity of election laws
Article 326 guarantees elections to Lok Sabha and State Legislative Assemblies on the basis of adult suffrage — every citizen 18+ years who is not disqualified under any law on grounds of non-residence, unsound mind, crime, or corrupt/illegal practice. Article 325 is a related but separate provision prohibiting discrimination in electoral roll preparation. Both are important for UPSC.
India-US Trade Deal — “Constructive” Talks but No Deadline as Interim Agreement Remains Elusive
India and the US held their first in-person trade talks since October 2025 in Washington (April 20-23). Both sides described the talks as “constructive and forward-looking” covering market access, digital trade, and economic security alignment — but no deadline was set for the Interim Agreement or the broader Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA).
- What: India-US negotiating teams met in Washington (April 20-23) — first in-person round since October 2025. The February 7, 2026 joint statement had agreed on a framework for an Interim Agreement on reciprocal tariffs. But the Interim Agreement was delayed after the U.S. Supreme Court invalidated Trump’s reciprocal tariffs mechanism. The talks cover market access, non-tariff measures, investment promotion, economic security alignment, and digital trade.
- Why in News: Senior BJP leader Ram Madhav expressed confidence the deal would be signed “in less than a month” and that U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s India visit would be the occasion. Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal has said India will only sign after U.S. finalises tariffs on India and its competitors.
- The “Shaky Wicket” Concern: Ram Madhav acknowledged India-US relations are on a “very shaky wicket” due to tariff and economic issues, highlighting that even a strategic partner uses economic leverage against India.
| Issue Area | India’s Position | U.S. Position | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tariff Reciprocity | India’s average tariff higher than U.S.; wants gradual reduction | Trump’s reciprocal tariff invalidated by U.S. SC; seeking new framework | Pending — major sticking point |
| Market Access (Agriculture) | Protective of domestic farmers | Seeks greater access for U.S. agricultural products | Contentious |
| Digital Trade | Seeking data localisation provisions; digital services | Seeks open digital markets; IP protection | Under discussion |
| Investment Promotion | Welcomes FDI with conditions | Seeks protections for U.S. investors | Progressing |
| Energy Trade | Importing U.S. LNG/crude to reduce trade deficit perception | Wants India to buy more U.S. energy; reduce Russian oil imports | Partially addressed |
📌 Prelims Pointers
- Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA): Comprehensive India-US trade deal under negotiation; broader than Interim Agreement
- Interim Agreement: Narrower deal on reciprocal tariffs; was to be signed in March 2026 but delayed after U.S. Supreme Court invalidated Trump’s tariff mechanism
- GSP (Generalised System of Preferences): U.S. trade preference programme for developing countries — India was removed from GSP in 2019; restoration sought in BTA talks
- Jones Act Waiver: U.S. domestic shipping law; Trump extended 90-day waiver to allow non-American vessels to transport oil/gas — critical for post-West Asia war energy supply chain
- Marco Rubio: U.S. Secretary of State under Trump; planning India visit — possible occasion for trade deal signing
🖊️ UPSC Mains Model Question: “India-US trade relations, despite being described as a ‘comprehensive global strategic partnership,’ are characterised by persistent tensions over tariffs, market access, and economic nationalism. Critically examine the key fault lines and the prospects for a meaningful Bilateral Trade Agreement.” (250 words / 15 Marks)
- A. Prohibition on foreign nationals working in U.S. defence industries
- B. Requirement that goods transported between U.S. ports must be carried on U.S.-built, U.S.-owned, and U.S.-crewed ships ✓
- C. Regulation of tariffs on goods imported from developing countries
- D. Standards for digital trade and intellectual property in U.S. trade agreements
The Jones Act (Merchant Marine Act, 1920) requires that goods transported between U.S. ports must be on U.S.-built, U.S.-flagged, U.S.-owned, and predominantly U.S.-crewed vessels. Trump issued a waiver to this law to allow non-American vessels to transport oil and gas amid the West Asia war energy disruptions. Waivers are periodically granted during energy crises or supply emergencies.
Net FDI Hits 45-Month High in February 2026 — RBI Data Shows India Still Attracts Investment
Net FDI into India turned positive in February 2026 after six months of negative net flows, reaching $4.6 billion — the highest since May 2022. Gross FDI grew 61.6% to nearly $9 billion. But greenfield project announcements fell 11%, signalling that capital inflows are not uniformly translating into new capacity creation.
- What: RBI data shows Net FDI in February 2026 = $4.6 billion (45-month high; highest since May 2022). This ended a 6-month streak of negative net FDI. Gross FDI grew 61.6% to $9 billion (7-month high). Total gross FDI in April 2025-February 2026 = $88.3 billion, up 18.1% YoY.
- Why in News: Despite West Asia war disruptions and global uncertainty, India continues to attract FDI — reinforcing its “attractive destination” narrative. But greenfield project announcements fell 11% — a concerning signal for long-term capacity creation.
- Key Sources: Singapore, U.S., Mauritius, Japan, Netherlands — accounted for ~75% of total inward FDI. Manufacturing, computer services, financial services, business services, and communication services = 2/3rd of total equity inflows.
| Parameter | February 2026 | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Net FDI | $4.6 billion (45-month high) | Ended 6-month streak of negative net FDI |
| Gross FDI Inflows | ~$9 billion (61.6% growth; 7-month high) | Capital attraction despite global uncertainty |
| Gross FDI Apr-Feb FY26 | $88.3 billion (+18.1% YoY) | Sustained inflow trajectory |
| Greenfield FDI Announcements | Fell 11% in Apr-Jan 2026 to $65 billion | Concerning — long-term capacity creation declining |
| Top Source Countries | Singapore, U.S., Mauritius, Japan, Netherlands (~75% of total) | Reflects treaty benefits; some round-tripping concerns (Mauritius) |
| Top Sectors | Manufacturing, IT services, financial services, business services, telecom | Services-led FDI dominance; manufacturing growing |
| Total FDI Outflows | $4.4 billion (27-month low) | Sharp decline in repatriation by foreign companies |
📌 Prelims Pointers
- Net FDI: Gross FDI inflows minus outflows (repatriation + disinvestment + outward FDI by Indian companies)
- Greenfield FDI: Investment in creating new production capacity (factories, offices) — distinct from M&A/brownfield investments
- Top FDI source (historically): Mauritius (due to tax treaty); Singapore has now overtaken
- FDI Route in India: Automatic route (no prior approval) and Approval route (government/FIPB approval needed for certain sectors)
- DPIIT: Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade — tracks and promotes FDI in India
- RBI role: Monitors FDI data; publishes State of the Economy report monthly
🖊️ UPSC Mains Model Question: “India’s FDI inflows have shown resilience despite global disruptions, yet the decline in greenfield investment announcements raises questions about the quality of investment attraction. Critically examine India’s FDI performance and policy gaps.” (150 words / 10 Marks)
1. Greenfield FDI refers to investment in creating new production facilities, as distinct from mergers and acquisitions.
2. Mauritius and Singapore account for a large share of FDI into India primarily due to Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements.
3. Net FDI is calculated as gross FDI inflows minus FDI outflows (including repatriation and outward investment).
- A. 1 and 2 only
- B. 1, 2 and 3 ✓
- C. 2 and 3 only
- D. 1 and 3 only
Greenfield FDI creates new productive capacity (Stmt 1 correct). Mauritius and Singapore top FDI sources to India partly due to favourable DTAA provisions (though India has renegotiated the Mauritius treaty from 2016 to reduce treaty shopping — Stmt 2 broadly correct). Net FDI = Gross inflows minus outflows including repatriation, disinvestment, and outward FDI by Indian companies (Stmt 3 correct).
RBI Cancels Paytm Payments Bank Licence — A Fintech Regulation Milestone
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) cancelled the banking licence of Paytm Payments Bank Limited (PPBL) effective April 24, 2026 under Section 22(4) of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 — citing non-compliance with conditions of the Payments Bank licence. The RBI will apply to the High Court for winding up. Paytm (One97 Communications) distanced itself from its erstwhile subsidiary.
- What: RBI cancelled PPBL’s banking licence under Section 22(4) of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949. PPBL has been prohibited from conducting “banking business” with immediate effect. RBI will apply to High Court for winding up. PPBL has sufficient liquidity to repay all deposit liabilities.
- Background: PPBL was banned from onboarding new customers (March 2022); further restrictions imposed January-February 2024 (no deposits or top-ups). The licence cancellation is the final step in a 4-year regulatory enforcement action against PPBL.
- Why in News: The cancellation is the most high-profile Payments Bank licence revocation in India’s fintech history. It raises questions about regulatory oversight of fintech-bank hybrids and the long-term viability of the Payments Bank model.
- Payments Bank: A differentiated bank model introduced by RBI (2015) based on Nachiket Mor Committee recommendations. Can accept deposits (up to ₹2 lakh per customer); issue debit cards; provide remittance services. Cannot lend or issue credit cards. Capital requirement: ₹100 crore.
- Section 22(4), Banking Regulation Act, 1949: Empowers RBI to cancel a banking licence if the bank fails to comply with licence conditions.
- Nachiket Mor Committee (2013): Recommended differentiated banking licences (Payments Banks, Small Finance Banks) to advance financial inclusion.
- Safe Harbour (IT Act, Section 79): Also in news — platforms like Meta and X get protection from liability for user-generated content under Section 79(3)(b) if they comply with takedown notices. Sahyog portal enables police to send such notices.
- UPI (Unified Payments Interface): India’s real-time payments system — Paytm UPI continues to operate independently of PPBL through NPCI; Paytm app services unaffected by PPBL cancellation.
📌 Prelims Pointers
- Payments Bank: Differentiated bank — can accept deposits (up to ₹2 lakh), issue debit cards, provide remittance; cannot lend
- Section 22(4), Banking Regulation Act, 1949: RBI’s power to cancel banking licence for non-compliance
- Nachiket Mor Committee (2013): Recommended Payments Banks and Small Finance Banks for financial inclusion
- Current Payments Banks in India: India Post Payments Bank, Fino Payments Bank, Jio Payments Bank, Airtel Payments Bank, among others (PPBL now cancelled)
- UPI: Unified Payments Interface — managed by NPCI; continues independently of PPBL cancellation
- RBI winding up power: Under Section 22(4), RBI can cancel licence; then applies to HC for winding up of the entity
🖊️ UPSC Mains Model Question: “The cancellation of Paytm Payments Bank’s licence raises fundamental questions about the regulatory oversight of fintech-bank hybrids and the viability of the Payments Bank model for financial inclusion. Critically examine.” (150 words / 10 Marks)
1. Accept deposits from individuals up to ₹2 lakh per customer
2. Issue credit cards
3. Provide loans and advances to customers
4. Issue debit cards
- A. 1 and 4 only
- B. 2 and 3 only ✓
- C. 1 and 3 only
- D. 2, 3 and 4
Payments Banks CAN accept deposits (up to ₹2 lakh) and issue debit cards (Statements 1 and 4 are permitted activities). They CANNOT issue credit cards or provide loans/advances — these are restrictions that distinguish them from full-service commercial banks. The Payments Bank model was designed for payments and remittances, not for credit intermediation.
Karnataka Cabinet Approves Revised SC Internal Reservation — Quota Matrix: 5.25%:5.25%:4.5%
The Karnataka Cabinet approved a revised internal reservation formula for the 101 Scheduled Castes — dividing the 15% SC quota into three sub-categories (5.25%:5.25%:4.5%) — ending a four-decade struggle. CM Siddaramaiah called it a “historic decision” as recruitment for 56,432 posts will proceed immediately.
- What: Karnataka Cabinet approved internal reservation within the SC quota — distributing the 15% SC reservation across three sub-categories in the ratio 5.25%:5.25%:4.5%. Based on report by a technical committee headed by the Chief Secretary. Recruitment for 56,432 posts to proceed immediately.
- Why in News: This is directly related to the Supreme Court’s landmark 7-judge Constitution Bench judgment (August 2024) in State of Punjab vs Davinder Singh — which upheld States’ power to create sub-classifications within the SC/ST reservation quota (overruling the 5-judge Bench judgment in E.V. Chinnaiah, 2005).
- The 40-Year Struggle: Karnataka’s SC community has debated internal reservation since the 1980s. The most deprived SC sub-groups (like Madiga community) argue that dominant SC sub-groups (like Holeya community) captured most reservation benefits. Internal reservation corrects this.
- Article 341: Scheduled Castes — listed by Presidential Order; Parliament can include or exclude from the list. SC list is State-specific.
- Article 15(4) and 16(4): Constitutional provisions enabling reservation for SCs, STs, and SEBCs — basis for SC reservation in education and employment.
- State of Punjab vs Davinder Singh (2024): SC 7-judge Constitution Bench ruled that States CAN sub-classify within SC/ST reservation quota to prioritise the most deprived sub-groups. This overruled E.V. Chinnaiah (2005) which had held that sub-classification was unconstitutional as SCs form a “homogeneous class.”
- E.V. Chinnaiah vs State of AP (2005): SC 5-judge Bench had ruled that the SC list is a “homogeneous class” and States cannot sub-classify within it. This was overruled by Davinder Singh (2024).
- Creamy Layer Debate: The Davinder Singh judgment also raised (but did not conclusively decide) whether a “creamy layer” concept should apply within SC/ST reservation — a highly contentious issue.
- Rohini Commission: Central-level commission set up in 2017 to study sub-categorisation of OBC reservation. Its findings are relevant by analogy to SC sub-categorisation.
🏛️ Constitutional Chain: Art. 341 (SC list) → Art. 15(4)/16(4) (reservation powers) → Davinder Singh 2024 (sub-classification upheld) → Karnataka Cabinet decision (implementing sub-classification within SC quota). This is a landmark chain for UPSC Mains.
📌 Prelims Pointers
- State of Punjab vs Davinder Singh (2024): SC 7-judge Constitution Bench — States can sub-classify within SC/ST quota to prioritise most deprived sub-groups
- E.V. Chinnaiah vs State of AP (2005): SC 5-judge Bench — SC list is homogeneous; sub-classification unconstitutional (overruled by Davinder Singh)
- Karnataka SC quota: 15% for Scheduled Castes; now divided into 5.25%:5.25%:4.5% for three sub-categories
- Article 341: Presidential Order lists Scheduled Castes for each State; Parliament can amend
- Article 16(4): Enables reservation in public employment for “any backward class of citizens”
- Rohini Commission: Set up 2017 to study sub-categorisation within OBC reservation — findings relevant by analogy
🖊️ UPSC Mains Model Question: “The Supreme Court’s 2024 judgment in State of Punjab vs Davinder Singh has transformed the constitutional landscape of SC/ST reservation by permitting sub-classification. Critically examine the implications of this judgment and Karnataka’s implementation for social justice and equality.” (250 words / 15 Marks)
1. States have the power to sub-classify within the Scheduled Caste/Scheduled Tribe reservation quota.
2. The E.V. Chinnaiah (2005) judgment holding SC list as a “homogeneous class” was correctly decided.
3. Sub-classification must be based on data about the degree of backwardness and representation.
- A. 1 only
- B. 1 and 3 only ✓
- C. 2 and 3 only
- D. 1, 2 and 3
In Davinder Singh (2024), the 7-judge Constitution Bench held that States can sub-classify within SC/ST quota (Statement 1 correct), based on data about backwardness and representation (Statement 3 correct). Statement 2 is incorrect — the bench overruled E.V. Chinnaiah (2005), holding that SCs do not form a homogeneous class and that sub-classification is permissible to ensure equitable distribution of reservation benefits to the most deprived sub-groups.
Meta “Automatically Blocks” Flagged Content in India — Section 79(3)(b) IT Act and the Safe Harbour Erosion
India is now among a “limited” set of countries where Meta (Facebook/Instagram) automatically restricts content at scale based on local law requirements. The Sahyog portal — which allows police officials to send takedown notices under Section 79(3)(b) of the IT Act — threatens users’ free speech rights as Meta complies with non-binding notices that don’t legally require compliance.
- What: Meta (Facebook/Instagram) has been complying with a large number of takedown notices from State police and Union government through the Sahyog portal — which operates under Section 79(3)(b) of the IT Act. India is now among “limited countries” where Meta automatically restricts content at scale based on local law requirements.
- Why in News: The timeline for compliance was reduced from 36 hours to 3 hours (February 2026 IT Ministry rule). Non-compliance risks “safe harbour” loss under Section 79. Meta is complying even with non-binding notices — raising civil society concerns about over-removal of legitimate speech.
- X (Twitter) contrast: X has challenged the Sahyog portal in the Karnataka High Court and does NOT comply with police takedown notices when it believes the content is lawful — providing a contrast to Meta’s compliance approach.
- Section 79, IT Act, 2000: “Safe harbour” provision — protects intermediaries (social media platforms, ISPs) from liability for user-generated content as long as they comply with takedown notices and due diligence requirements.
- Section 79(3)(b): Safe harbour is lost if the intermediary, “upon receiving actual knowledge” or being notified by government/court, fails to expeditiously remove or disable access to unlawful content.
- Sahyog Portal: Government portal that provides authorised police officials a web link to send takedown notices to social media platforms. Notices are not court orders but administrative notices claiming “actual knowledge” under Section 79(3)(b).
- IT (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021: Require significant social media intermediaries (SSMIs) with 5 million+ users to comply with takedown orders, establish grievance redressal mechanisms, appoint nodal contact officers.
- Shreya Singhal vs Union of India (2015): SC struck down Section 66A of IT Act as unconstitutional. Also read down Section 79(3)(b) — “actual knowledge” must come from court orders, not executive notices — a reading that the current Sahyog portal may be violating.
🏛️ Constitutional Context: Art. 19(1)(a) — Freedom of Speech and Expression; Art. 19(2) — Reasonable restrictions (grounds: sovereignty, security, public order, decency, contempt of court, defamation). Judicial oversight of content takedowns is essential to prevent executive overreach into Art. 19(1)(a) rights.
📌 Prelims Pointers
- Section 79, IT Act: Safe harbour for intermediaries — protection from liability for user content if due diligence followed
- Section 79(3)(b): Safe harbour lost if platform fails to remove content after receiving “actual knowledge” of unlawfulness
- Sahyog Portal: Government portal for police to send takedown notices to social media platforms
- Shreya Singhal (2015): SC struck down Section 66A; read down Section 79(3)(b) — actual knowledge must come from court, not executive notice
- IT Rules 2021: Require SSMIs (5 million+ users) to comply with takedowns, appoint officers, establish grievance mechanisms
- 3-hour takedown window: New rule (February 2026) reduces earlier 36-hour compliance window — applies to unlawful content flagged under IT Ministry directives
🖊️ UPSC Mains Model Question: “The Sahyog portal and India’s evolving intermediary liability regime risk undermining both free speech and due process by enabling executive-directed content removal without adequate judicial oversight. Critically examine.” (150 words / 10 Marks)
1. Struck down Section 66A of the IT Act as unconstitutional for being vague and overbroad.
2. Read down Section 79(3)(b) to require court orders (not executive notices) to trigger safe harbour loss.
3. Upheld the government’s power to block websites under Section 69A of the IT Act.
Select the correct answer:
- A. 1 and 2 only
- B. 1, 2 and 3 ✓
- C. 1 and 3 only
- D. 2 and 3 only
In Shreya Singhal (2015): (1) Section 66A was struck down as unconstitutional (vague, chilling effect on free speech); (2) Section 79(3)(b) was read down — “actual knowledge” must come from court orders, not executive/police notices; (3) Section 69A (website blocking with procedural safeguards) was upheld as constitutionally valid. All three holdings are important UPSC facts.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
SEO-optimised FAQs for UPSC aspirants — covering key topics from April 25, 2026 analysis
📰 The Hindu – UPSC News Analysis | April 25, 2026
Prepared by Legacy IAS Academy · Bengaluru · UPSC Civil Services Coaching
This document is for educational purposes only. All news content is sourced from The Hindu, Bengaluru Edition.


