The Hindu UPSC News Analysis For 13 July 2026

The Hindu — UPSC Analysis

Monday, 13 July 2026

Bengaluru City Edition  ·  Vol. 57 No. 165  ·  Curated for Prelims & Mains | GS I · II · III · IV

Legacy IAS Academy
GS2 — IR · GS3 — Security

Iran attacks West Asian nations; Strait of Hormuz "closed"

Context

Iran struck several West Asian states — Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Jordan and Oman — early on July 12 in response to U.S. strikes on 140 targets inside Iran, and declared the Strait of Hormuz "closed". The U.S. said its strikes would weaken Iran's ability to threaten shipping and insisted traffic keeps flowing through the vital waterway.

Background & Key Facts

  • U.S. strikes: Hit 140 targets — missile and drone launch sites, ammunition dumps, and communication equipment — including in Bandar Abbas and Hajiabad; strikes were "heavier than in recent days".
  • Iran's retaliation: The IRGC said it targeted U.S. military assets across the region; three Iranian missiles struck across Jordan (no injuries), and sirens sounded in the UAE.
  • Shipping attack: A Cyprus-flagged commercial vessel (GFS Galaxy) was attacked off Oman; 11 Indian crew members were on board, with one Indian seafarer missing. India "strongly condemned" the strike and blamed an Iranian body.
  • Hormuz status: Iran said the strait would remain closed until calm is restored; the U.S. and Trump asserted the strait "remained open" and that the U.S. alone must control it.
  • Editorial — "oil conundrum": CMIE/CoC data show India's crude imports from Russia surging (~40%), a pattern the editorial calls "driven by confusion, not strategy", warning of concentration risk and eroded bargaining power.
  • Editorial — Israel's isolation: Argues Israel's post-Oct 7 conduct has produced "self-inflicted" strategic isolation, with the Abraham Accords strained and U.S. political cover weakening.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Chokepoint weaponisation: Iran's "closure" of Hormuz — through which a large share of Gulf oil and LPG bound for India transits — directly threatens India's energy security, freight costs and inflation.

Seafarer safety: The attack on an Indian-crewed vessel underscores the risk to the ~250,000-strong Indian merchant-marine workforce and the need for naval protection.

✅ Way Forward
  • Sustain supplier diversification and strategic reserves; deploy naval escorts for Indian-crewed vessels.
  • Diplomatic de-escalation and protection of freedom of navigation.
📝 Prelims Relevance
Strait of Hormuz · Bandar Abbas IRGC · CENTCOM Abraham Accords Flag of convenience (shipping)
15M Mains Question: The weaponisation of the Strait of Hormuz exposes the fragility of India's energy security. Examine India's strategic and operational options. (15 marks, 250 words)
MCQ: Hormuz & shipping

Consider the following statements:

  1. Bandar Abbas is a major Iranian port near the Strait of Hormuz.
  2. A "flag of convenience" vessel is registered in a country different from that of its owners.
  3. The Strait of Hormuz connects the Persian Gulf directly to the Red Sea.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (a) — Bandar Abbas is an Iranian port near Hormuz (1 correct); a flag-of-convenience ship (like the Cyprus-flagged GFS Galaxy) is registered abroad (2 correct). Hormuz connects the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman/Arabian Sea, not the Red Sea — so 3 is wrong.
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GS3 — Economy · Sci & Tech

Why has China banned helium exports?

Context

On July 10, China's Ministry of Commerce and General Administration of Customs temporarily banned helium exports (effective 4.30 pm IST) without stating a reason, amid a global supply squeeze aggravated by curbs on Russian exports and heightened West Asia tensions — spotlighting helium as a strategic resource.

Background & Key Facts

  • China's position: China imports more than 80% of its helium; it produces only ~1.6% of the world's supply. The ban is meant to preserve helium for its domestic chip industry.
  • Major producers: The U.S. (~40% of global supply), followed by Qatar, Russia, Canada and Algeria. In 2024, the U.S. privatised its Federal Helium Reserve, selling assets to the Messer Group.
  • Why it's critical: Helium has the lowest boiling point (−269 °C), doesn't react chemically, and is used as a coolant in MRI machines and semiconductor fabrication (removing heat from silicon wafers), plus rockets, welding, and balloons/airships.
  • Non-renewable: Helium is produced by radioactive decay of uranium/thorium deep in the crust, trapped in natural-gas reservoirs. Being extremely light, it escapes Earth's gravity once released — a genuinely finite resource.
  • Sectoral demand: ~22% cryogenics (coolants), 17% controlled atmospheres, 17% lifting gas, 15% MRI scanners, 9% aerospace, 5% leak detection.
  • Costly logistics: Helium must be stored/transported in vacuum-jacketed stainless-steel vessels made by few companies worldwide; even so, some boils off. In June 2026 pure helium fetched ~$50/cubic foot.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Resource nationalism: China's ban — while it imports most of its own helium — signals stockpiling for strategic industries and adds to a fragile, concentrated global supply chain.

India's exposure: India imports nearly all its helium; supply shocks threaten healthcare (MRI), semiconductors and research infrastructure — reinforcing the case for strategic reserves and recovery from LNG streams.

✅ Way Forward
  • Diversify helium sources, invest in recovery from LNG plants, and build strategic reserves.
  • Promote recycling and helium-conserving technologies in MRI and research.
📝 Prelims Relevance
Helium — properties & uses Federal Helium Reserve (USA) Cryogenics · MRI · semiconductors Critical minerals/resources
10M Mains Question: Helium is emerging as a strategic, non-renewable resource. Discuss its criticality and India's vulnerability to supply shocks. (10 marks, 150 words)
MCQ: Helium

Consider the following statements about helium:

  1. It has the lowest boiling point of any element.
  2. It is chiefly extracted from natural-gas reservoirs.
  3. The United States is the world's largest producer.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (d) — All correct: helium has the lowest boiling point (−269 °C), is extracted from natural-gas reservoirs (formed by radioactive decay), and the U.S. is the largest producer (~40% of global supply).
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GS2 — Polity · Local Governance

How DDCs changed local governance in J&K

Context

The restructuring of Jammu and Kashmir and the administrative framework built through District Development Councils (DDCs) remain the subject of legal and constitutional debate. Formed in 2021, the DDCs completed their first five-year term on February 24, 2026.

Background & Key Facts

  • Origin: DDCs were introduced via a 2020 amendment after the abrogation of Article 370, to fully integrate J&K with the constitutional framework applicable to the rest of India and to strengthen grassroots democracy.
  • 73rd/74th Amendments: Provide for a three-tier Panchayati Raj (Gram Panchayats, Block Development Councils, Zila Panchayats) and urban local bodies. In most of India, the District Planning Committee (DPC) under Article 243ZD integrates panchayat and municipal plans into a district development plan.
  • Key difference: J&K's DDC is a directly elected body that also functions as an administrative authority with executive and developmental powers — unlike the DPC, which is a coordinating body reflecting decentralised planning. The DDC is thus a "parallel administrative authority".
  • Criticism: The DDC bypasses existing institutions such as Zila Panchayats and urban local bodies, aggregating development priorities from the ground up while functioning as an instrument of centralised bureaucratic control rather than democratic decentralisation.
  • Representation concern: Allocation of seats across districts does not adequately reflect variations in population — e.g., a district with ~2.5 lakh people (Kishtwar) and a large one have the same number of DDC members, creating imbalance.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Substitution vs supplement: By creating a directly-elected body that also administers, the DDC risks weakening provincial and State-level tiers rather than deepening the three-tier PRI system envisaged by the 73rd/74th Amendments.

Uniform political value: Equal seats regardless of population dilutes the "one person, one vote" principle at the district level.

✅ Way Forward
  • Restore the DPC model within the 73rd/74th framework; empower and finance local governments.
  • Rationalise seat allocation to reflect population and strengthen genuine decentralisation.
📝 Prelims Relevance
73rd & 74th Amendments Article 243ZD (DPC) District Development Councils Panchayati Raj Institutions
15M Mains Question: Do J&K's District Development Councils strengthen or substitute grassroots democracy? Examine in light of the 73rd/74th Constitutional Amendments. (15 marks, 250 words)
MCQ: DPC & DDC

Consider the following statements:

  1. The District Planning Committee is provided for under Article 243ZD of the Constitution.
  2. In most States, the DPC consolidates plans prepared by panchayats and municipalities.
  3. The J&K DDC is a coordinating body without executive powers.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (a) — 1 and 2 are correct. Unlike the DPC, the J&K DDC is a directly-elected body with executive and developmental powers (a parallel administrative authority) — so 3 is wrong.
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GS2 — Polity · Elections

Disproportionate SIR deletions in Manipur's tribal constituencies

Context

An analysis of deletions during the enumeration phase of the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) in Manipur shows that Scheduled Tribe (ST) constituencies — though only 37.8% of the electorate — accounted for 64.2% of all deletions.

Background & Key Facts

  • Data: The draft SIR rolls (released July 5) show 19 ACs in the hill areas — which are a dominant preserve of the Kuki-Zo and Naga communities — accounting for 64.2% of the 20.93 lakh voters deleted, despite being 37.8% of the electorate.
  • ST-seat deletion rate: 4.4% of voters were deleted in ST constituencies vs 2.1% in General + SC constituencies.
  • Reason breakdown: In ST constituencies, 76.1% of deletions were recorded as "Permanently Shifted" (vs 51% in general seats); "Death" was 12.9%. This aligns with the ~mass displacement of the Kuki-Zo after the May 2023 violence.
  • Gender skew: Female voters were deleted at a higher rate than male in ST seats — for every 1,000 male voters deleted, 1,271 female voters were deleted (a female deletion rate of 27.2%).
  • Geography: Deletions were concentrated in and around Churachandpur — a Kuki-Zo district that was the epicentre of the conflict.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Disenfranchisement risk: Marking displaced conflict-victims as "permanently shifted" and deleting them at double the general rate risks disenfranchising an already vulnerable community, echoing warnings that the SIR could become "a pathway to exclusion".

Gendered impact: The higher female deletion rate compounds vulnerability, likely reflecting documentation loss and displacement patterns among women.

✅ Way Forward
  • Special enumeration provisions for displaced ST voters; review "permanently shifted" deletions.
  • Gender-sensitive verification and restoration mechanisms before final rolls.
📝 Prelims Relevance
Special Intensive Revision (SIR) ST-reserved constituencies Chief Electoral Officer Electoral rolls
10M Mains Question: Data show disproportionate electoral-roll deletions in Manipur's tribal seats during the SIR. Discuss the risks to inclusive democracy in conflict zones. (10 marks, 150 words)
MCQ: SIR deletions

In Manipur's SIR enumeration, ST constituencies accounted for what share of deletions relative to their share of the electorate?

  1. 37.8% of deletions vs 64.2% of the electorate
  2. 64.2% of deletions vs 37.8% of the electorate
  3. Equal share of both
  4. 50% of deletions vs 50% of the electorate
Answer: (b) — ST constituencies formed 37.8% of the electorate but accounted for 64.2% of deletions, with 76.1% recorded as "permanently shifted" — reflecting displacement of the Kuki-Zo after the May 2023 violence.
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GS3 — Science & Tech · Space

ISRO tests Gaganyaan crew-module systems

Context

ISRO successfully carried out two major tests of the Gaganyaan crew-module systems — one on the crew-module uprighting system (CMUS) and another on the "clean separation" of the umbilical mechanism linking the crew module and service module.

Background & Key Facts

  • Test 1 — Uprighting: Ensured proper upright orientation of the crew module after splashdown in the sea — a crucial crew-safety requirement. The CMUS consists of all elements of the CMUS (crew-module uprighting system); high-pressure gas-bottle inflation tests validated the system.
  • Test 2 — Clean separation: Verified separation of the "umbilical mechanism" — the link between the crew module (where astronauts live) and the service module (which provides propulsion) — at the CSU-1 and CSU-2 disconnects.
  • Gaganyaan: India's first human spaceflight mission, aiming to send astronauts to low-Earth orbit and return them safely.
  • Significance: The tests protect the parachutes and associated subsystems by ensuring clean separation during descent, decelerating the crew module for a safe splashdown.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Human-rating rigour: Human spaceflight demands exhaustive validation of splashdown, uprighting and separation systems — these ground tests de-risk the crewed mission.

Strategic capability: Success advances India toward the small club of nations with independent human-spaceflight capability, feeding into the broader Gaganyaan and space-station roadmap.

✅ Way Forward
  • Progress to integrated abort tests and uncrewed test flights before the crewed mission.
  • Build ecosystem and workforce for sustained human-spaceflight operations.
📝 Prelims Relevance
Gaganyaan Crew Module · Service Module Low-Earth Orbit ISRO
10M Mains Question: Human-rating a spacecraft demands rigorous system validation. Discuss the significance of the Gaganyaan mission for India's space ambitions. (10 marks, 150 words)
MCQ: Gaganyaan

In the Gaganyaan mission, the "service module" primarily:

  1. Houses the astronauts during flight
  2. Provides propulsion and support functions
  3. Contains the parachute deceleration system alone
  4. Is the ground-based mission control
Answer: (b) — The service module provides propulsion and support, while the crew module houses the astronauts. ISRO tested the clean separation of the umbilical link between the two and the crew-module uprighting system for post-splashdown safety.
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GS2 — International Relations

EU & 14 countries reaffirm the South China Sea ruling

Context

The U.S., EU and 14 other Western and Asian nations reaffirmed (on the 2016 arbitration ruling's anniversary) that China's expansive claims in the South China Sea are illegal. China again rejected the ruling as "null and void" and "not binding".

Background & Key Facts

  • The 2016 ruling: An arbitration tribunal at The Hague (under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea — UNCLOS) invalidated China's "nine-dash line" claim, ruling largely in favour of the Philippines.
  • Signatories: A 27-nation-plus grouping; other countries backing the statement include Japan, Australia, New Zealand and Canada.
  • China's stand: Refused to join the arbitration in 2013 and insists the tribunal had no jurisdiction over what it calls a sovereignty/maritime-delimitation dispute; says it "does not accept" any solution imposed on it.
  • Legal basis: The reaffirming states called the ruling "final and legally binding" under international law.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Rules vs power: The episode highlights the gap between a binding UNCLOS ruling and enforcement against a permanent UNSC member — a challenge for the rules-based maritime order India champions in the Indo-Pacific.

India's stake: Freedom of navigation in the South China Sea is vital to India's trade and its Act East policy, even though India is not a claimant.

✅ Way Forward
  • Support for UNCLOS-based dispute resolution and a binding Code of Conduct in the South China Sea.
  • Coordinated action through Quad and ASEAN-led mechanisms to uphold freedom of navigation.
📝 Prelims Relevance
UNCLOS · PCA (The Hague) Nine-dash line South China Sea claimants Code of Conduct (ASEAN)
10M Mains Question: The 2016 South China Sea ruling tests the enforceability of the rules-based maritime order. Discuss its significance for the Indo-Pacific and for India. (10 marks, 150 words)
MCQ: South China Sea

The 2016 arbitration ruling on the South China Sea:

  1. Was delivered by a tribunal constituted under UNCLOS.
  2. Invalidated China's "nine-dash line" claim.
  3. Was accepted and implemented by China.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (a) — The ruling came from a UNCLOS tribunal at The Hague (1) and invalidated the nine-dash line, favouring the Philippines (2). China rejected it as "null and void" — so 3 is wrong.
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GS2 — Governance · Education

Judging graduates, not entrance scores

Context

This op-ed (by Mamidala Jagadesh Kumar, former UGC Chairman) argues recruiters should stop using JEE/GATE ranks or placement resumes to shortlist candidates, and instead judge graduates on what they achieve during their degree — aligning with the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020's push for holistic, multidisciplinary education.

Background & Key Facts

  • The problem: An entrance rank captures a snapshot of a student's performance on a single day; it does not reflect what students build through their degree — projects, internships, communication and behavioural skills, and demonstrated maturity.
  • NEP alignment: NEP 2020 emphasises critical thinking, creativity, ethical judgment, problem-solving and holistic development; recruiters relying on JEE/GATE ranks work against this ecosystem.
  • Equity dimension: Entrance ranks favour those who can afford intense coaching, prejudicing first-generation and rural students; removing entrance-rank filters prevents a "prejudicial and often irrelevant" data point from becoming a default filter.
  • A better signal: Institutions and recruiters should assess a student's present competence — CGPA, portfolios, group discussions, communication and behavioural assessments — rather than an entrance rank recorded years earlier.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Signal vs substance: An entrance rank is a stale proxy; over-reliance on it entrenches an "examination-dominated system" NEP seeks to move beyond and reduces incentive for genuine learning.

Social mobility: Weighting entrance ranks disadvantages economically weaker, non-English-medium and rural learners, undermining equity in employment.

✅ Way Forward
  • Recruiters should assess competence built during the degree (portfolios, projects, interviews).
  • Institutions should design curricula and placement processes that reward holistic development.
📝 Prelims Relevance
NEP 2020 JEE · GATE Holistic education · CGPA
10M Mains Question: Over-reliance on entrance-exam ranks undermines both equity and the goals of NEP 2020. Critically examine and suggest alternatives for assessing graduates. (10 marks, 150 words)
MCQ: NEP & assessment

The op-ed's argument against using entrance-exam ranks to judge graduates rests primarily on the ground that such ranks:

  1. Are always inaccurate measures of ability
  2. Capture a single-day snapshot and prejudice disadvantaged learners, working against NEP 2020's holistic goals
  3. Are prohibited by the UGC Act
  4. Cannot be verified by employers
Answer: (b) — The core argument is that entrance ranks reflect a single-day snapshot, ignore competence built during the degree, and disadvantage first-generation/rural learners — contrary to NEP 2020's emphasis on holistic development.
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GS1 — Geography · GS3 — Disaster Mgmt

A.P. and the next El Niño challenge

Context

Ahead of another likely strong El Niño, Andhra Pradesh faces the prospect of oppressive heat, rainfall deficits and drought — testing the State's preparedness, with early warnings and structural fixes needed to protect agriculture.

Background & Key Facts

  • El Niño mechanism: Above-normal sea-surface temperatures in the Pacific Ocean beyond 2 degrees Celsius suppress the formation of low-pressure systems over the Bay of Bengal, reducing monsoon rainfall over A.P.
  • Historic pattern: In the 10 years the State's rainfall preparedness has been the best, the first two and 2023 were El Niño years. In 2015, A.P. received at least 2,300 people in the country (drought hardship); in 2023, 21 of 26 districts had rainfall deficits of 42.2%.
  • IMD warning: The IMD indicates a likelihood of El Niño; a strong El Niño year could see rainfall means/deviations differ. The APSDMA (A.P. State Disaster Management Authority) forms the drought-response backbone.
  • Response measures: The agriculture department began alerting farmers on drought-hardy crops in rain-fed areas (e.g., Rayalaseema, to tide over the crisis); questions of structural issues (water conservation, resilient cropping) must be addressed.
  • Long-period average: The State's LPA rainfall (~690 mm) sets the benchmark against which deviations are measured; a double or heavy deviation signals drought or excess.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Anticipatory vs reactive: The State's best years show early warnings and timely advisories cut crop losses — the lesson is to institutionalise anticipatory action rather than reacting after a deficit sets in.

Structural fixes: Water conservation, drought-resilient cropping and diversification are needed to reduce vulnerability, especially in rain-fed Rayalaseema.

✅ Way Forward
  • Strengthen IMD/APSDMA early-warning-to-farmer chains and drought-resilient cropping.
  • Invest in water conservation, watershed management and crop diversification.
📝 Prelims Relevance
El Niño / ENSO Long-Period Average (LPA) IMD · SDMA Rain-fed agriculture
10M Mains Question: El Niño events sharply raise drought risk for rain-fed regions. Discuss how anticipatory disaster management can build agricultural resilience. (10 marks, 150 words)
MCQ: El Niño

With reference to El Niño and the Indian monsoon, consider the following statements:

  1. El Niño involves above-normal warming of the equatorial Pacific sea surface.
  2. El Niño years are generally associated with suppressed monsoon rainfall over India.
  1. 1 only
  2. 2 only
  3. Both 1 and 2
  4. Neither 1 nor 2
Answer: (c) — Both correct: El Niño is the abnormal warming of the equatorial Pacific, which tends to suppress low-pressure formation and reduce Indian monsoon rainfall, raising drought risk in rain-fed regions.
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GS3 — Sci & Tech · Economy

Fading research hubs stalling Kerala's bio-economy

Context

This op-ed argues Kerala's premier biological research institutions are in decline as policy support for basic research erodes and centres of excellence become politicised — threatening the State's leap into the global bio-economy.

Background & Key Facts

  • Case study: The Jawaharlal Nehru Tropical Botanic Garden and Research Institute (JNTBGRI) in Thiruvananthapuram — established after the 1972 UN Conference on the Human Environment (Stockholm) — transformed ~300 acres into one of Asia's finest tropical-plant research centres, housing 50,000+ plant accessions (5,000+ species).
  • Benefit-sharing model: JNTBGRI pioneered the 'Jeevani' anti-fatigue herbal formulation, based on the traditional knowledge of the Kani tribe — an internationally acclaimed model of access and benefit-sharing (ABS). In 2024, it received the Botanic Gardens Conservation International's Global Genome Initiative for Gardens Award.
  • Decline: These achievements rested on scientists' freedom, leadership and institutional stability. Today, senior scientists have retired without adequate replacement; research scholars have dwindled; institutional expertise built over decades is at risk.
  • Bio-economy context: Globally, biology underpins digital-era value creation — biotechnology, natural products, synthetic biology, nutraceuticals and biodiversity-based industries.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Basic vs applied research: A drift toward visible, immediate outcomes and politicisation of institutions erodes the basic research that alone yields long-term, transformative value.

Institutional autonomy: Scientific autonomy, merit-based leadership and timely recruitment are prerequisites for centres of excellence to keep delivering.

✅ Way Forward
  • Renewed commitment to basic science with autonomy, transparent leadership and timely recruitment of young scientists.
  • Stronger university partnerships and responsible biodiversity-based industries.
📝 Prelims Relevance
JNTBGRI · Jeevani · Kani tribe Access & Benefit-Sharing (ABS) Stockholm Conference 1972 Bio-economy
10M Mains Question: Basic scientific research is the foundation of the bio-economy. Discuss the challenges facing India's research institutions and the reforms needed. (10 marks, 150 words)
MCQ: Jeevani & ABS

The 'Jeevani' herbal formulation, associated with JNTBGRI, is celebrated as a model of:

  1. Genetically modified crop development
  2. Access and benefit-sharing based on tribal traditional knowledge
  3. Synthetic pharmaceutical manufacturing
  4. Marine bio-prospecting
Answer: (b) — 'Jeevani', an anti-fatigue formulation based on the Kani tribe's traditional knowledge, is an internationally acclaimed model of access and benefit-sharing (ABS) between researchers and an indigenous community.
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GS3 — Sci & Tech · Environment

Eärendil-1 orbital mirror — the light-pollution debate

Context

On July 9, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) authorised a company, Reflect Orbital, to launch and operate a test satellite — Eärendil-1 — designed to deploy a large mirror in orbit to reflect sunlight to specific spots on Earth, despite controversy over its effect on astronomy and orbital debris.

Background & Key Facts

  • Name: Eärendil-1 is named for a character in Tolkien's The Silmarillion; it will be a single satellite in a non-geostationary orbit with a "deployable, highly specular thin-film reflector".
  • Purpose: To reflect sunlight to specific spots on the ground at night, extending usable solar-power hours and providing light during "critical operations" like emergency or humanitarian missions.
  • Orbit: Altitude ~625 km, high inclination of 88°; the FCC granted a limited two-year licence.
  • Concerns: The American Astronomical Society (AAS) raised concerns about increased background skyglow disrupting optical astronomy. Reflect Orbital must coordinate with NASA, the NSF and the NTIA to protect astronomy, and avoid conjunction angles that interfere with other missions.
  • Precedent: Not the first orbital mirror — Russia deployed Znamya-2 as part of orbital space-mirror experiments in the 1990s.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Utility vs astronomy: Night-time solar power and emergency lighting must be weighed against light pollution that degrades ground-based astronomy and disrupts ecosystems/circadian rhythms.

Governance gap: Orbital reflectors, mega-constellations and debris raise the question of who governs the "commons" of the night sky — a regulatory frontier.

✅ Way Forward
  • Robust inter-agency coordination and international norms to protect dark skies and manage orbital debris.
  • Environmental-impact assessment of skyglow before commercial scale-up.
📝 Prelims Relevance
Light pollution · skyglow Non-geostationary orbit Orbital debris FCC · NASA · NSF
10M Mains Question: Orbital reflectors promise night-time utility but threaten dark skies. Discuss the trade-offs and the governance challenges of the increasingly crowded orbital commons. (10 marks, 150 words)
MCQ: Orbital mirror

Eärendil-1, in the news, is:

  1. A NASA deep-space telescope
  2. An orbital mirror satellite designed to reflect sunlight to spots on Earth
  3. A new GPS augmentation satellite
  4. An Indian Earth-observation satellite
Answer: (b) — Eärendil-1, by Reflect Orbital (FCC-licensed), is a test orbital mirror designed to reflect sunlight to specific ground locations at night — drawing objections from astronomers over increased skyglow.
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GS2 — IR · GS1 — Geography

Chinese concerns over Brahmaputra dam safety

Context

A study by Chinese geologists has found that an active fault line under the world's largest hydropower project on the Brahmaputra (Yarlung Tsangpo) River in Tibet could affect its structural stability — raising fresh safety and downstream concerns for India.

Background & Key Facts

  • The project: China's mega-hydropower project on the Yarlung Tsangpo (the Tibetan name for the Brahmaputra), near the "Great Bend" before the river enters Arunachal Pradesh.
  • The finding: Chinese scientists say the Paizhen Fault runs under the reservoir area of the project — a seismically active Himalayan zone — potentially threatening structural stability.
  • Location: The project is close to the border with Arunachal Pradesh, India.
  • India's concerns: As a lower riparian, India worries about water flow control, sudden releases/floods, sediment disruption, and the seismic risk of a large dam in an earthquake-prone region.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Transboundary river governance: The absence of a comprehensive India–China water treaty on the Brahmaputra leaves India dependent on hydrological data-sharing MoUs, with limited leverage over upstream construction.

Seismic + strategic risk: A dam on an active fault in a fragile Himalayan zone poses cascading downstream risks — from flooding to reduced dry-season flows — with strategic implications for the Northeast.

✅ Way Forward
  • Press for robust hydrological data-sharing and a transboundary water-management framework with China.
  • Strengthen India's own downstream infrastructure, flood forecasting and Brahmaputra basin resilience.
📝 Prelims Relevance
Yarlung Tsangpo / Brahmaputra Great Bend · Arunachal Pradesh Riparian rights Himalayan seismic zones
15M Mains Question: China's mega-dam on the Yarlung Tsangpo raises seismic, ecological and strategic concerns for India. Discuss the challenges of transboundary river governance. (15 marks, 250 words)
MCQ: Brahmaputra

The Yarlung Tsangpo, in the news, is:

  1. The Tibetan name for the Brahmaputra River
  2. A tributary of the Indus
  3. A river flowing into the South China Sea
  4. The Tibetan name for the Sutlej
Answer: (a) — The Yarlung Tsangpo is the Tibetan name for the Brahmaputra, which takes a "Great Bend" before entering Arunachal Pradesh. China's mega-dam there sits near an active fault, raising downstream safety concerns for India.
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GS2 — Polity · Judiciary

Judicial vacations & case pendency

Context

This editorial examines how court vacations lengthen the wait for justice for crores of litigants, even as the Supreme Court and High Courts carry a massive pendency — and asks what reforms can reduce delay without eroding judicial well-being.

Background & Key Facts

  • Pendency scale: As of mid-2025, ~63.6 lakh cases pending in the district courts, and more than ~92,000 in the Supreme Court. Judicial vacancies — up to a third of High Court seats lie vacant — worsen the backlog.
  • Vacation practice: The SC and HCs shut down with three or four Benches functioning during a summer break; a week's break plus other holidays adds up.
  • Renaming, not reform (2024): The Court renamed the "summer vacation" as "partial court working days" — a change even the CJI said is largely one of nomenclature.
  • Solutions floated: Fast-track vacancy filling; better court management; expanded Lok Adalats and mediation (the 2023 Mediation Act mentioned). Lok Adalats settled more than 2.59 crore cases in a single national sitting in December.
  • Data point (News in Numbers): "Five crore Indians wait when the courts take a break" — the human cost of institutional downtime.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Access to justice: Delay is itself a denial of justice; long vacations amid record pendency deepen the litigant's wait, disproportionately hurting the poor and undertrials.

Well-being vs throughput: Judges need rest to function; the challenge is redesigning court calendars and filling vacancies rather than merely renaming breaks.

✅ Way Forward
  • Fast-track judicial appointments; strengthen court management and staggered leave.
  • Scale mediation, Lok Adalats and alternative dispute resolution to cut backlog.
📝 Prelims Relevance
Lok Adalats Mediation Act, 2023 Judicial vacancies · Collegium Article 21 (speedy trial)
10M Mains Question: "Justice delayed is justice denied." Discuss how judicial vacancies, case pendency and court vacations affect access to justice, and suggest reforms. (10 marks, 150 words)
MCQ: Judiciary & ADR

Consider the following statements:

  1. Lok Adalats can settle disputes through compromise and their awards have the status of a civil-court decree.
  2. Mediation in India is governed by the Mediation Act, 2023.
  3. The right to a speedy trial has been read into Article 21 of the Constitution.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (d) — All correct: Lok Adalat awards are deemed civil-court decrees; mediation is governed by the Mediation Act, 2023; and the Supreme Court has held the right to a speedy trial to be part of Article 21.
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Prelims

📝 Quick Prelims Revision — MCQ Bank

Q1 — India–Canada CEPA

India and Canada concluded the third round of negotiations for which agreement?

  1. A Free Trade Agreement in goods only
  2. The Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA)
  3. A Bilateral Investment Treaty
  4. A Mutual Defence Pact
Answer: (b) — India and Canada concluded the third round of talks for the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA), covering goods, services, IP, rules of origin and technical barriers, with two-way trade projected to grow.
Q2 — Places of Worship Act

The Places of Worship (Special Provisions) Act, 1991, referenced in the Ayodhya fund-row debate:

  1. Freezes the religious character of a place of worship as it existed on August 15, 1947.
  2. Exempted the Ram Janmabhoomi–Babri Masjid dispute from its ambit.
  1. 1 only
  2. 2 only
  3. Both 1 and 2
  4. Neither 1 nor 2
Answer: (c) — Both correct: the 1991 Act maintains the religious character of places of worship as on 15 August 1947, and it specifically exempted the Ayodhya (Ram Janmabhoomi–Babri Masjid) dispute from its scope.
Q3 — Taliban farm ties

The Taliban administration sought deeper cooperation with India primarily in which sector during recent engagement?

  1. Defence manufacturing
  2. Agriculture and allied areas
  3. Nuclear energy
  4. Space technology
Answer: (b) — The Afghan (Taliban) delegation sought deeper cooperation in agriculture and allied areas, meeting the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development and the ICAR during its India engagement.
Q4 — ESIC

The Employees' State Insurance Corporation (ESIC), in the news for expanding facilities, functions under which Ministry?

  1. Ministry of Health and Family Welfare
  2. Ministry of Labour and Employment
  3. Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment
  4. Ministry of Finance
Answer: (b) — The ESIC, a statutory social-security body, functions under the Ministry of Labour and Employment. It announced adding seven healthcare facilities across six States to serve ~53 lakh beneficiaries.
Q5 — Hamad bin Khalifa

Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, who passed away recently, was the former ruler of which country?

  1. UAE
  2. Qatar
  3. Bahrain
  4. Kuwait
Answer: (b) — Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani was the former Emir of Qatar, widely regarded as an architect of modern Qatar; he launched Al Jazeera in 1996 and oversaw the country's rapid growth before abdicating in favour of his son in 2013.
Q6 — Motor insurance (homemaker's value)

A recent Supreme Court judgment on motor-accident compensation is notable for:

  1. Quantifying the economic value of a homemaker's unpaid work
  2. Abolishing third-party motor insurance
  3. Making health insurance mandatory for all drivers
  4. Exempting electric vehicles from insurance
Answer: (a) — The Court recognised and quantified the economic value of a homemaker's unpaid labour and caregiving for motor-accident compensation under the Motor Vehicles Act — establishing a "Loss of Domestic Care" basis.
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❓ FAQs

Frequently asked exam-oriented questions — 13 July 2026 edition

Why is helium considered a strategic, non-renewable resource?
Helium forms deep underground through radioactive decay of uranium/thorium and is trapped in natural-gas reservoirs. Once released it is too light to be held by Earth's gravity and escapes into space — so it is effectively finite. It is critical for MRI coolants, semiconductor fabrication, rockets and cryogenics, and supply is concentrated in a few producers (U.S., Qatar, Russia, Canada, Algeria).
How does a J&K DDC differ from a District Planning Committee?
A District Planning Committee (Article 243ZD) is a coordinating body that consolidates plans made by panchayats and municipalities — reflecting decentralised, grassroots planning. The J&K DDC is a directly-elected body that also functions as an administrative authority with executive and developmental powers, which critics say makes it a parallel structure that can bypass Zila Panchayats and centralise control.
Why do El Niño years worry Indian agriculture?
El Niño is the abnormal warming of the equatorial Pacific. When sea-surface temperatures rise beyond about 2°C, they suppress the low-pressure systems that draw the monsoon over India, reducing rainfall — as seen in A.P.'s severe deficits in 2015 and 2023. Rain-fed regions like Rayalaseema face the highest drought risk, making anticipatory advisories and drought-resilient crops essential.
Why does the 2016 South China Sea ruling matter for India?
The UNCLOS tribunal invalidated China's "nine-dash line", affirming a rules-based maritime order. Though India is not a claimant, freedom of navigation in the South China Sea is vital to its trade and Act East policy. The episode illustrates the gap between a binding ruling and its enforcement against a powerful state — a core concern for the Indo-Pacific order India supports.
What are India's concerns about China's Brahmaputra mega-dam?
The dam sits on the Yarlung Tsangpo near an active fault (the Paizhen Fault) in a seismically fragile Himalayan zone, close to Arunachal Pradesh. As a lower riparian, India worries about controlled water releases and floods, sediment disruption, dry-season flow reduction, and dam-failure risk — compounded by the absence of a comprehensive India–China water treaty.

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Analysis based on The Hindu, Bengaluru City Edition, 13 July 2026. Prepared for academic use. Static background and frameworks added for exam preparation; original article text has been paraphrased, not reproduced.

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