Yojana April 2026 — Complete UPSC Summary
Futuristic Science & Technology
A chapter-by-chapter deep-dive into Yojana April 2026 — covering AI at population scale, cybersecurity, India's space ecosystem, disaster resilience, and green technology. Enriched with value addition, current data, Mains practice questions, and key terms. Relevant for GS Paper III and Essay.
Artificial Intelligence at Population Scale
India is repositioning Artificial Intelligence as the next pillar of Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) — following the transformative success of Aadhaar, UPI, and DigiLocker. This chapter of Yojana April 2026 marks a critical conceptual shift: from AI as a laboratory experiment to AI as a mass-scale governance tool deployed across 140 crore citizens' lives.
AI as a Tool for Public Good — Sectoral Transformation
India's AI deployment strategy is distinguished by its emphasis on real-world, citizen-facing use cases rather than closed institutional applications:
- Agriculture: Voice-based AI assistants allow farmers to access schemes, conduct crop surveys, and receive advisories in local languages — directly reducing information asymmetry in rural India.
- Healthcare: AI-powered diagnostic tools assist frontline ASHA and ANM workers in detecting tuberculosis and diabetic retinopathy — enabling early diagnosis where specialist care is unavailable.
- Fintech: Integration of AI with UPI systems enables voice-enabled digital payments — enhancing financial inclusion for low-literacy and differently-abled populations.
- Governance & Judiciary: AI-driven real-time translation and transcription improve access to justice in India's linguistically diverse courts and administrative proceedings.
This represents a fundamental transition from technology-centric AI → citizen-centric AI, embedded in everyday governance systems rather than isolated pilot projects.
IndiaAI Mission — The Foundational Architecture
India's AI strategy is structured around the IndiaAI Mission — a comprehensive initiative that democratises access to AI's core building blocks:
- Compute Infrastructure: Shared GPU clusters at subsidised rates (₹65–₹100/hour) accessible to startups, researchers, and public institutions — removing the most significant barrier to AI development in India.
- Data Ecosystem (AIKosh Platform): A national repository of 10,000+ datasets and 286+ AI models tailored to Indian socio-economic contexts — languages, agriculture, health, governance.
- Application Layer: AI solutions integrated into crop monitoring, disaster prediction (landslides, floods), beneficiary verification in welfare schemes, and healthcare diagnostics — a whole-of-government approach.
India AI Impact Summit 2026 — Global Leadership
The India AI Impact Summit 2026 marked India's formal claim to global leadership in AI governance for the Global South. The key shift: from AI risk and regulation discourse (dominant in Europe) → AI for development and public good (India's model).
The New Delhi Declaration, endorsed by 90+ countries, emphasised democratisation of AI access, promotion of inclusive and human-centric AI, development of secure, trusted, and ethical AI systems, and building AI-ready human capital and resilient infrastructure.
Building an Inclusive AI Innovation Ecosystem
- Establishment of AI labs and training centres in Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities — moving AI beyond metros
- Launch of YUVA AI for ALL programme across platforms like DIKSHA and iGOT Karmayogi
- Focus on trustworthy AI: deepfake detection, AI watermarking, and model evaluation frameworks
- Support for startups through funding, mentorship, and global collaboration networks
India's AI governance model differs fundamentally from the EU AI Act approach: While the EU emphasises risk classification and regulatory compliance (prohibiting high-risk applications), India's model is deployment-first with ethical guardrails — prioritising public good applications and building trust through demonstrated outcomes rather than pre-deployment restrictions.
- EU AI Act (2024): Risk-based regulation — prohibits some AI applications, mandates transparency for high-risk uses; primarily regulates private sector deployment.
- India's approach: Mission-driven deployment — democratise access, govern through output accountability; positions AI as public utility comparable to electricity or roads.
- Key insight for UPSC: India's DPI+AI convergence model — Aadhaar for identity, UPI for payments, AI for intelligence — is being watched as a Global South alternative to both Silicon Valley and Beijing AI governance paradigms.
- YUVA AI for ALL: Modelled on the success of digital literacy missions; uses gamified learning and vernacular interfaces to build AI literacy among youth in Tier-2/3 cities and rural areas.
Cyber Security & Digital Trust
As India advances its digital transformation — with 95 crore internet users, 500 million+ WhatsApp users, and real-time payment systems processing billions of transactions — cybersecurity has become central to digital trust, economic stability, and national sovereignty. Yojana April 2026 frames cybersecurity not as a technical compliance requirement but as a cornerstone of democratic governance.
The BRAIN Convergence and Expanding Attack Surface
The convergence of Biotechnology, Robotics, Artificial Intelligence, and Nanotechnology (BRAIN) is creating a new generation of smart systems — from autonomous vehicles to AI-governed welfare platforms — that are interconnected across physical, digital, and human dimensions. Each connection point is a potential vulnerability.
Four Key Types of Cyber Fraud in India (2024-26)
Cybersecurity Architecture — Six Critical Layers
Effective cybersecurity requires simultaneous protection across all six interdependent layers — a breach at any single layer can compromise the entire system:
| Layer | Specific Risks | Example Threats |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Material & Communication | Hardware supply chains, satellite systems | Compromised semiconductor chips, undersea cable attacks |
| 2. Hardware & Systems | Backdoor implants, control system manipulation | Planted firmware in imported equipment |
| 3. OS & Network | Update vulnerabilities, network protocols | Ransomware, BGP hijacking |
| 4. Application | Insecure APIs, cloud breaches | Data theft, remote system control |
| 5. Task/Functional | Algorithm manipulation | Bias injection in AI governance systems |
| 6. Human (Weakest Link) | Social engineering, behavioural exploitation | Phishing, pig butchering, phantom hacking |
Digital Trust — The Foundation
Digital Trust is the confidence users place in systems to ensure data privacy, system integrity, and secure transactions. It is built through security-by-design approaches, continuous monitoring, auditing, and threat intelligence, and use of Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) for authentication, encryption, and data integrity.
Trust is dynamic — it depends on competence, reliability, and ethical practices of institutions. India's DPDP Act 2023 and IT Rules 2025 (3-hour deepfake takedown mandate) are legislative pillars of this trust architecture.
Cyber Resilience — The New Paradigm
Traditional cybersecurity was about prevention. Modern cyber resilience is about continuity — ensuring services continue even during active attacks. This shift encompasses preparation and risk mitigation, real-time threat detection, rapid response and recovery, and continuous adaptation to evolving threats.
- ₹22,845.73 crore lost to cybercriminals in India in 2024 — a 206% increase from ₹7,465.18 crore in 2023 (Ministry of Home Affairs data)
- IT Rules 2025 (November 15, 2025): First legislative definition of 'Synthetically Generated Information' (deepfakes); 3-hour government content takedown; 2-hour removal of non-consensual intimate deepfakes
- DPDP Act 2023 + Rules 2025 (November 14, 2025): India's first comprehensive data protection law — explicit consent framework, penalties up to ₹250 crore, Data Protection Board of India
- Privacy vs. Traceability deadlock: WhatsApp (500M+ Indian users) has argued that First Originator Traceability would break end-to-end encryption for all users — a fundamental tension between security and civil liberties
- CERT-In: Mandates 6-hour incident reporting for critical infrastructure sectors — the fastest mandatory reporting timeline globally for some categories
India's Space & Deep-Tech Ecosystem
In the 21st century, national power is increasingly determined by technological depth rather than mere industrial capacity. India's space and deep-tech trajectory reflects one of the most significant strategic transformations in its post-independence history — from a technology service provider to a frontier technology creator aligned with Viksit Bharat @2047.
Evolution — From Service Provider to Technology Creator
India's space programme, led by ISRO and inspired by Vikram Sarabhai, was originally rooted in developmental objectives — using space technology to solve ground-level problems of communication, weather, and agriculture. Landmark missions demonstrate expanding capability:
- Mars Orbiter Mission (Mangalyaan, 2014): India became the first country to successfully reach Mars orbit on its first attempt, at a cost lower than Hollywood's Gravity film.
- Chandrayaan-3 (2023): India became the first country to soft-land near the lunar south pole — a strategic location rich in water-ice deposits with implications for future space economy.
- Aditya-L1 (2023): India's first solar observatory at L1 Lagrange point — studying solar wind and coronal mass ejections that affect Earth's communications and GPS systems.
IN-SPACe — The Reform That Unlocked Private Innovation
The establishment of IN-SPACe (Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre) fundamentally restructured India's space sector — opening it to private participation, enabling companies to build satellites and launch vehicles, and transforming industry players from component suppliers to independent operators.
Rise of Private Space — Key Startups
- Skyroot Aerospace: Developed Vikram-S — India's first privately developed rocket; working on Vikram-1 orbital launch vehicle.
- Agnikul Cosmos: Built and launched Agnibaan — India's first semi-cryogenic engine-powered rocket, with a 3D-printed engine (world's first single-piece 3D-printed rocket engine).
- Pixxel: Building hyperspectral earth observation satellites for agriculture monitoring, climate analysis, and urban planning applications — raising $95 million in Series C (2024).
Deep-Tech — The Strategic Technology Stack
The space ecosystem is reinforced by four converging deep technologies that collectively define India's technological sovereignty:
- Artificial Intelligence: Satellite data analytics, climate monitoring, crop advisory systems using remote sensing data
- Semiconductors: Radiation-hardened chips for space systems; India Semiconductor Mission targeting ₹76,000 crore investment to build domestic fab capacity
- Quantum Technologies: National Quantum Mission (₹6,003 crore, 2023-31) for secure communication networks and quantum computing applications
- Robotics & Automation: Spacecraft assembly, planetary exploration rovers, and precision manufacturing
Bharat-VISTAAR — Space Meeting Society
India's space programme is uniquely oriented towards public welfare. The Bharat-VISTAAR platform integrates satellite data, AI, and weather intelligence to provide hyper-local agricultural advisories, climate risk assessment, improved crop productivity guidance, disaster management support, urban planning data, and environmental monitoring. This distinguishes India's space model from commercial-first or defence-first approaches.
- Gaganyaan Mission: India's human spaceflight programme — targeting sending 3 Indian astronauts to space for 3 days in Earth's low orbit; first uncrewed test (G1) planned 2025; crewed mission 2026-27.
- Indian Space Station: India plans its own space station by 2035 — named Bharatiya Antariksh Station (BAS). First module planned for 2028.
- Lunar Economy: Chandrayaan-3's landing near the south pole positions India strategically for the emerging lunar resource economy — water-ice at the south pole could support permanent lunar presence.
- NavIC Enhancement: NavIC (Navigation with Indian Constellation) is being expanded from 7 to 12 satellites, improving accuracy for civilian use from 20m to 5m — enabling smart agriculture, precision logistics, and disaster response.
- National Deep Tech Startup Policy: Proposed policy to provide funding, regulatory sandboxes, and IP support for deep-tech startups in AI, quantum, biotech, and space — addressing the 'valley of death' between research and commercialisation.
From Relief to Resilience
With rising frequency of heatwaves, floods, cyclones, and health emergencies, India's disaster governance has undergone a fundamental philosophical shift: from relief-centric response to resilience-based governance. Yojana April 2026 frames this as a paradigm shift making Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) a core development principle — not a post-disaster response mechanism.
Three Structural Shifts in India's Disaster Risk Landscape
- Climate-induced intensification: Increasing frequency of extreme weather — intense rainfall, stronger cyclones, prolonged heatwaves. India's 2023 monsoon was the most spatially erratic on record. The 2024 Wayanad landslide demonstrated how climate-soil moisture-urbanisation interactions create compound disasters.
- Interconnected and cascading risks: Disasters now simultaneously disrupt transport, energy, health, communication, and supply chains — making risk management multi-sectoral. The 2015 Chennai floods demonstrated how infrastructure failure cascades across domains.
- Rising uncertainty and new vulnerabilities: Urbanisation in hazard-prone areas, industrial risks, and cyber-physical dependencies require planning based on future climate projections rather than historical disaster patterns.
Institutional Framework for Disaster Governance
- Disaster Management Act, 2005: Multi-tier governance (National → State → District → Local) — India's legal backbone for disaster response.
- NDMA (National Disaster Management Authority): Policy guidance and inter-agency coordination, chaired by the Prime Minister.
- NDMP (National Disaster Management Plan): Aligned with the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (2015-2030) — emphasis on prevention, mitigation, and preparedness rather than relief.
The Aswal Model — Risk-Informed Governance
The Aswal Model applies quality assurance principles to governance — with the core idea that resilience must be built into systems from the design stage, not added after failure. It operates through four interlinked stages:
| Stage | What It Involves | Tools Used |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Risk Knowledge | Scientific assessment of hazards, exposure, vulnerability, and capacity | Geospatial data, climate modelling, AI-based prediction |
| 2. Decision Support | Translating risk into policies, building codes, land-use planning | Risk-informed urban planning, building code enforcement |
| 3. Implementation | Institutional execution, regulation, capacity building at district level | NDRF, SDRF, local civil defence, community training |
| 4. Learning & Adaptation | Post-disaster analysis to refine policies and institutional systems | After-action reports, feedback loops, adaptive governance |
Evidence from India — Successes and Gaps
- ✅ Odisha Cyclone Management (success): Science + governance synergy — early warning systems, evacuation planning, and community awareness has drastically reduced fatalities from cyclones like Fani (2019) and Amphan. Odisha's model is studied globally.
- ✅ Ahmedabad Heat Action Plan (success): First city-level heat action plan in South Asia — temperature data, vulnerability mapping, public advisories, and hospital preparedness. Heat mortality reduced significantly since implementation.
- ❌ Urban Floods — Mumbai, Chennai, Bengaluru (gap): Persistent flooding reflects gaps in integrating scientific drainage data with urban planning and land-use regulation. Building on floodplains continues despite risk data.
- ❌ Himalayan Landslides (gap): Despite availability of remote sensing and slope stability data, lack of timely policy implementation and construction control exacerbates risks — Joshimath subsidence and Chamoli disaster highlight this.
- Sendai Framework (2015-2030): 4 priorities — understand disaster risk; strengthen disaster risk governance; invest in DRR for resilience; enhance disaster preparedness for effective response. Target: substantially reduce disaster mortality by 2030.
- CDRI — Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure: India-founded international initiative (launched 2019) — 43 countries and 7 international organisations. Focuses on making infrastructure disaster-resilient globally — India's climate diplomacy tool.
- India's NDRF performance: National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) — 16 battalions, 13,000+ personnel — has become one of the world's most operationally active disaster response forces, deployed in international disasters (Turkey earthquake, Nepal floods).
- Technology integration: Vayu Doot (AI-based cyclone prediction), IFLOWS-Mumbai (integrated flood early warning), Landslide Atlas of India — 147 districts identified as high-risk.
- Joshimath lesson: Land subsidence in Joshimath (2023) — over 700 structures damaged — exposed the cost of allowing urbanisation in geologically sensitive Himalayan terrain without geological surveys or land-use controls.
Green Technologies for India's Sustainable Future
India's development pathway toward Viksit Bharat @2047 is increasingly anchored in sustainability, resilience, and technological innovation. Green technologies are emerging as the critical bridge between economic growth and environmental stewardship — rooted in both traditional ecological ethics (Panchbhoota philosophy, Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam) and modern science.
Energy Transition — India's Renewable Revolution
India has become the 4th largest renewable energy producer globally, achieving milestones that were considered ambitious targets just five years ago:
Key Policy Instruments for Green Transition
- FAME-II + PM E-DRIVE: Electric mobility schemes targeting two-wheelers, three-wheelers, and public transport — with focus on sustainable EV ecosystem (clean electricity sources, battery recycling, charging infrastructure).
- Pumped Storage + BESS: Battery Energy Storage Systems supported through Viability Gap Funding (VGF) — addressing the intermittency challenge of solar and wind energy.
- GOBARdhan: Converting organic/agricultural waste into Biogas and Compressed Biogas (CBG) — creating circular value from rural waste streams while reducing methane emissions from open dumping.
- Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR): Under E-Waste Management Rules 2022 and Battery Waste Management Rules — making producers responsible for end-of-life recovery; 60% legacy waste processed by 2026.
- Micro-irrigation (Per Drop More Crop): Covering 95+ lakh hectares — combining water conservation with agricultural productivity through drip and sprinkler systems.
- PM-KUSUM: Targeting 34,800 MW solar capacity in the agriculture sector — solar-powered irrigation pumps eliminating diesel dependence and providing farmers with additional income through grid injection.
- Perform Achieve and Trade (PAT) Scheme: Market-based energy efficiency scheme for energy-intensive industries — 27.07 MTOE savings achieved; covers cement, steel, aluminium, and fertiliser sectors.
- Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS): India's domestic carbon market — incentivising emissions reduction through economic signals rather than mandates.
- National Green Hydrogen Mission: Targeting 5 MMT annual green hydrogen production by 2030 — decarbonising hard-to-abate sectors like steel, chemicals, and fertilisers.
🔴 SHANTI Act 2025 — The Nuclear Energy Paradigm Shift
The SHANTI (Strategic Harnessing of Atomic and Nuclear Technology for India) Act 2025 is perhaps the most significant energy policy development of 2025 for UPSC purposes. It marks a paradigm shift by:
- Opening nuclear energy to private participation and FDI up to 49% — ending the decades-old public-sector monopoly in nuclear power
- Integrating nuclear power into the green energy mix as a reliable, low-carbon baseload source — complementing the intermittent nature of solar and wind
- Enabling India to pursue Net Zero targets more credibly — nuclear provides 24/7 carbon-free electricity that renewables cannot match alone
Green Tech: Uses science to protect natural resources and reduce negative environmental impact (renewable energy, sustainable agriculture, eco-friendly products).
Clean Tech: Improves performance and efficiency while reducing environmental impact (solar panels, wind turbines, recycling programs, wastewater treatment).
Climate Tech: Specifically focused on mitigating greenhouse gas emissions and human-induced climate change (carbon capture, electric vehicles, sustainable infrastructure).
- India's NDC targets (updated 2022): 500 GW non-fossil fuel capacity by 2030; 50% cumulative electricity from non-fossil sources by 2030; reduce emissions intensity of GDP by 45% from 2005 levels by 2030; Net Zero by 2070.
- SHANTI Act 2025 in context: India has 7 nuclear power plants with 22 operating reactors (7.5 GW capacity). SHANTI Act aims to increase nuclear capacity to 22.5 GW by 2031-32 and 100 GW by 2047 through private investment.
- Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS): India launched its domestic carbon market in 2023; linked to PAT (Perform Achieve Trade) mechanism; aims to be equivalent to EU ETS in size — Asia's largest voluntary carbon market by 2030.
- Critical minerals strategy: Green tech (EVs, solar panels, wind turbines) requires critical minerals — lithium, cobalt, nickel, rare earths. India's Khanij Bidesh India Ltd (KABIL) is securing overseas critical mineral assets. India signed mineral agreements with Australia, Argentina, and EU in 2023-25.
- Green Hydrogen economy: India targets becoming the world's largest green hydrogen exporter by 2030 — using surplus renewable electricity to produce H2 for domestic hard-to-abate sectors and export to Europe and Japan.
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for UPSC Mains 2026
Yojana April 2026 covers five high-priority UPSC topics — AI, Cybersecurity, Space, Disaster Resilience, and Green Technology. Legacy IAS covers these comprehensively in our GS Phase with answer writing practice, mentor-guided notes, and monthly magazine analysis. UPSC Mains 2026: August 21.


