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Current Affairs 04 November 2025

  1. High Seas Treaty
  2. ₹1 Lakh Crore Research, Development and Innovation (RDI) Scheme
  3. Digital Arrest Scams — Supreme Court’s Concern
  4. Heavy Metal Contamination in the Cauvery River: Case Study
  5. Tropical Forests Forever Fund


 Why in News ?

  • High Seas Treaty (formally Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction – BBNJ Agreement) was ratified by over 60 countries in September 2025, triggering its enforcement in January 2026.
  • Marks the first legally binding global agreement to conserve and sustainably use marine biodiversity in international waters — i.e., beyond national Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs).

Relevance:

  • GS-2 (International Relations):
    • Global environmental governance under UNCLOS and BBNJ.
    • Equity and common heritage principle in marine resource sharing.
  • GS-3 (Environment & Biodiversity):
    • Marine biodiversity conservation and SDG-14 (Life Below Water).
    • Role in climate resilience and ocean sustainability.
    • Implications for India
    ’s Blue Economy and Deep Ocean Mission.

Background

  • 2004: UN General Assembly (UNGA) created an ad-hoc working group to fill the gaps in UNCLOS (1982), which lacked specific mechanisms for conserving biodiversity in the high seas.
  • 2011: States agreed on four negotiation pillars —
    • Marine Genetic Resources (MGRs)
    • Area-Based Management Tools (ABMTs) incl. Marine Protected Areas (MPAs)
    • Environmental Impact Assessments (EIAs)
    • Capacity Building & Technology Transfer
  • 2018–2023: Four Intergovernmental Conferences negotiated the draft.
  • March 2023: Agreement reached.
  • June 2023: Treaty adopted by UN.
  • September 2025: Crossed ratification threshold → comes into force January 2026.

Key Features of the Treaty

  • Scope: Applies to areas beyond national jurisdiction (covering ~60% of world’s oceans).
  • Core Objective: Ensure conservation, sustainable use, and equitable benefit-sharing of marine biodiversity.

Marine Genetic Resources (MGRs)

  • Defined as genetic material from marine plants, animals, microbes etc.
  • Recognised as “Common Heritage of Humankind” — meaning benefits must be shared equitably.
  • Prevents biopiracy by advanced nations exploiting deep-sea organisms for pharmaceuticals and biotechnology.

Area-Based Management Tools (ABMTs) & Marine Protected Areas (MPAs)

  • Facilitate creation of global MPAs in high seas for biodiversity protection.
  • Combine scientific data and indigenous knowledge in decision-making.
  • Aim to enhance climate resilience and marine ecosystem stability, supporting food security.

Environmental Impact Assessments (EIAs)

  • Mandates EIAs for activities affecting high-sea ecosystems, including cumulative and transboundary effects.
  • Ensures transparency, prior notification, and global scrutiny of high-sea projects (mining, geoengineering, etc.).

Capacity Building & Technology Transfer

  • Developed nations to support scientific infrastructure and ocean tech access for developing countries.
  • Promotes inclusive participation in marine research and resource utilisation.

Significance

  • Global Ocean Protection: Covers the half of Earths surface that currently lacks strong governance.
  • Supports SDG-14 (Life Below Water) — protecting at least 30% of oceans by 2030 (“30×30 target”).
  • Climate & Food Security: Preserves fish stocks, coral ecosystems, and carbon sequestration zones.
  • Equity in Marine Resource Access: Reduces dominance of Global North in marine biotechnology.

Major Issues & Challenges

Legal Ambiguity

  • Conflict between “Freedom of the High Seas” (UNCLOS principle) and “Common Heritage of Humankind” (BBNJ principle).
    • Freedom = unrestricted navigation, fishing, and research.
    • Common heritage = shared ownership and regulated benefit-sharing.
  • Treaty adopts a compromise, not full resolution — causing potential disputes over MGR access.

Governance of MGRs

  • Lack of clarity on patent rights, data access, and benefit distribution.
  • Risk of biopiracy by corporations collecting genetic samples for commercial use.
  • Developing nations fear exclusion from profits due to technological asymmetry.

Implementation Capacity

  • Enforcement and monitoring require massive data, funding, and scientific capability.
  • No dedicated enforcement body — relies on voluntary compliance and existing UNCLOS institutions.

Financial Mechanisms

  • Disagreements over who funds conservation and capacity building.
  • Unclear structure for royalties or benefit-sharing from marine genetic discoveries.

India’s Relevance & Stand

  • India, a party to UNCLOS, supports equitable benefit-sharing and sustainable use of MGRs.
  • Seeks technology access and capacity support for deep-sea biodiversity research.
  • Aligns with India’s Deep Ocean Mission (2021–26) and Blue Economy Policy (2021) for sustainable ocean resource use.

Way Forward

  • Develop transparent frameworks for data sharing and benefit distribution.
  • Strengthen monitoring via satellite and AI-based ocean surveillance.
  • Encourage South–South cooperation for marine research.
  • Establish global fund under UN auspices for BBNJ implementation.
  • Promote regional marine biodiversity networks (e.g., IORA cooperation).


Why in News ?

  • Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched the₹1 lakh crore RDI Scheme (2025) during the Emerging Science, Technology and Innovation Conclave (ESTIC).
  • Objective: To fund high-risk, high-impact research projects, promote deep-tech innovation, and accelerate India’s transition from “ease of doing business” to “ease of doing research.”

Relevance:

  • GS-2 (Governance):
    Institutional reform — role of Anusandhan NRF and ESTIC.
    • Policy design for science, technology, and innovation governance.
  • GS-3 (Science & Technology):
    • Promotion of deep tech, AI, clean energy, and biotech.
    • Bridging R&D–industry gap; fostering innovation ecosystems.
    • Ethical technology and AI governance.

Background

  • Replaces the Indian Science Congress (last held in 2023) with a modern, outcome-based platform — ESTIC.
  • The Anusandhan National Research Foundation (NRF), with a corpus of ₹1 lakh crore, provides the institutional backbone for this new R&D push.
  • Part of India’s vision of “Jai Jawan, Jai Kisan, Jai Vigyan, Jai Anusandhan.”

Key Announcements

1 Lakh Crore RDI Scheme

  • Provides capital support for high-risk, high-impact scientific projects with commercial and societal potential.
  • Focus: Deep tech, clean energy, biotechnology, advanced materials, and AI.
  • Aims to bridge the gap between laboratory research and market-ready innovation.

Regulatory & Financial Reforms

  • Eased procurement and financial rules to facilitate faster R&D execution.
  • New incentives and supply-chain support to enable quicker prototype-to-market transitions.
  • Encouragement of private sector investment in R&D — public-private innovation model.

Expansion of Atal Tinkering Labs

  • 10,000 existing labs benefiting over 1 crore school students.
  • Target: 25,000 more labs to be set up nationwide — expanding grassroots innovation and STEM learning.

Prime Minister’s Research Fellowship (PMRF) Expansion

  • 10,000 new fellowships to be awarded in the next five years.
  • Goal: Nurture young researchers, especially in frontier sciences and applied research.

India AI Mission

  • Over ₹10,000 crore allocated to ensure AI for public good.
  • Focus on ethical AI applications in education, healthcare, logistics, and governance.

India’s R&D Progress (Data Points)

  • R&D expenditure: Doubled in the last decade.
  • Registered patents: Increased 17-fold.
  • Startups: World’s 3rd largest startup ecosystem.
  • Deep-tech startups: 6,000+ in clean energy, semiconductors, advanced materials, etc.
  • Bio-economy growth: $10 billion (2014) → $140 billion (2025).

About ESTIC

  • Organizer: Office of the Principal Scientific Adviser to the Government of India.
  • Replaces: Indian Science Congress (in decline due to credibility and management issues).
  • Focus Areas:
    • Quantum science and computing
    • Bioengineering and biotechnology
    • Clean energy and environment
    • Climate technology and resilience
  • Objective: Foster inter-ministerial synergy and promote science-policy integration for “Viksit Bharat 2047”.

Context & Significance

  • Shift from Output to Impact: From academic conferences to policy-oriented innovation conclaves.
  • India’s Global Standing:
    • 3rd largest startup ecosystem globally.
    • 40th rank in Global Innovation Index (2024).
    • Target to reach top 25 by 2030.
  • Strategic Alignment:
    • National Deep Tech Startup Policy 2024
    • National Quantum Mission
    • Green Hydrogen Mission
    • National Research Foundation (NRF) Act, 2023
  • Anusandhan National Research Foundation (NRF):
    • Funds university-based research and innovation.
    • Encourages academia–industry collaboration.
    • Integrates R&D priorities with national missions (AI, semiconductors, bioeconomy).

Ethical and Inclusive Innovation

  • Emphasis on “Ethical Tech” — ensuring technology aligns with human values and public good.
  • Ensures inclusion of rural innovators, women scientists, and regional universities in the innovation network.

Strategic Objectives

  • Transition from food security to nutrition security through biofortified crops.
  • Develop low-cost, sustainable fertilizers.
  • Map India’s genomic biodiversity for personalised medicine.
  • Accelerate clean battery storage innovations for energy security.

Significance

  • Economic: Strengthens India’s position in the global innovation economy; boosts exports of high-tech goods.
  • Social: Democratizes access to scientific opportunities; builds STEM capacity among youth.
  • Geopolitical: Positions India as a R&D hub of the Global South and an innovation partner for emerging economies.
  • Strategic: Reduces technological dependence on imports; builds indigenous capacities in AI, semiconductors, and biotech.

Challenges Ahead

  • Bridging R&D–industry linkages and commercialisation gaps.
  • Ensuring ethical AI and data governance.
  • Balancing basic research funding with applied/market-oriented research.
  • Strengthening institutional coordination across ministries and research councils.

Way Forward

  • Create National Deep-Tech Mission linking RDI, NRF, and AI initiatives.
  • Foster industry–academia clusters in Tier-II cities.
  • Build AI ethics and cybersecurity frameworks.
  • Introduce outcome-based funding models tied to innovation impact metrics.
  • Enhance international R&D partnerships (e.g., BRICS, QUAD Science Cooperation).


Why in News ?

  • The Supreme Court (SC) revealed that over ₹3,000 crore was scammed from victims — mostly elderly citizens — through digital arrests.
  • SC described it as a “very big challenge” and promised stringent judicial action to aid government and investigative agencies.

Relevance:

  • GS-2 (Governance & Polity):
    • Role of judiciary in cybercrime regulation.
    • Legal response to AI-based digital frauds.
  • GS-3 (Internal Security):
    • Cybercrime networks and cross-border digital extortion.
    • Deepfakes, AI misuse, and national security threats.

What are “Digital Arrests”?

  • Fraudsters impersonate police officers, judges, or probe agencies using AI-morphed videos, fake documents, and forged court orders.
  • Victims are threatened with immediate arrest unless they transfer money.
  • Common targets: senior citizens, professionals, and NRIs.

Key Developments

  • Bench: Led by Justice Surya Kant (CJI-designate).
  • Report Findings:
    • ₹3,000 crore defrauded in India alone.
    • Cases now spreading globally.
  • Solicitor-General (Tushar Mehta): Scams originate from “scam compounds” run by organized cybercrime gangs abroad.
  • SC Action:
    • Considering CBI probe into cross-border syndicates.
    • To issue harsh, supportive orders strengthening agencies’ hands.
    • Emphasized the human cost — victims manipulated, trafficked, or enslaved under fake employment promises.

Pattern of Crime

  • Technology misuse: AI, deepfakes, spoofed calls, and fake video backdrops of courtrooms/police stations.
  • Psychological tactics: Fear, urgency, authority mimicry.
  • International linkages: Cyber hubs in Southeast Asia targeting Indians.
  • Financial trail: Routed through hawala networks and crypto transfers.

Wider Implications

  • National security: Cross-border cyber extortion with intelligence risks.
  • Digital governance challenge: Rising misuse of AI and identity-morphing tools.
  • Judicial credibility: Fake court impersonations threaten public trust in institutions.
  • Elderly vulnerability: Lack of cyber awareness and emotional manipulation.

Way Forward

  • Centralised Cyber Fraud Response Platform under MHA.
  • Enhanced coordination between CBI, ED, CERT-In, and Interpol.
  • Public awareness campaigns for senior citizens and banks.
  • Mandatory verification protocols for video/call-based government communications.
  • Use of AI-counter tools to detect deepfakes and spoofed visuals.


Why in News ?

  • A 2025 study by Bharathidasan University (Tiruchirappalli), published in Environmental Earth Sciences (Aug 2025), found high levels of heavy metals (notably cadmium and lead) in Cauvery River sediments and fish.
  • The study warns that regular fish consumption from the river may pose serious non-carcinogenic and carcinogenic health risks.
  • Supported by earlier studies (2024, Frontiers in Public Health), confirming bioaccumulation of toxic metals in multiple fish organs.

Relevance:

  • GS-3 (Environment & Ecology):
    • River pollution, bioaccumulation, and ecological risk analysis.
    • Implementation gaps in Water Act and environmental regulation.
    • Sustainable river management and public health implications.
  • GS-2 (Governance):
    • Institutional coordination between CPCB, TNPCB, and local bodies.
    • Policy enforcement and community awareness mechanisms.

Background: Cauvery River & Its Socio-Ecological Importance

  • Lifeline of Karnataka and Tamil Nadu; supports drinking water, irrigation, and fisheries.
  • Flows through industrial hubs like Erode and Tiruchirappalli, which discharge effluents directly into the river.
  • Increasing urbanisation, agriculture runoff, and industrialisation have aggravated pollution.

Study Overview

  • Scope:
    • Sediment samples: 18 sites along the river.
    • Fish samples: 10 sites, multiple species.
    • Methods: Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy; multivariate statistical analysis; EPA-based health risk assessment.
  • Indices Used:
    • Igeo (Geoaccumulation Index) – metal buildup in sediments.
    • Contamination Factor (CF) – element enrichment relative to background.
    • Pollution Load Index (PLI) – overall contamination intensity.
    • Potential Ecological Risk (PERI) – ecological toxicity measure.

Key Findings

  • Metals studied: Chromium (Cr), Cadmium (Cd), Copper (Cu), Lead (Pb), Zinc (Zn).
  • Major contaminants: Cadmium and Lead – exceeded safety thresholds.
  • Variation: Spatially uneven contamination — highest near industrial stretches (Erode belt).
  • Bioaccumulation pattern (across organs):
    • Liver & gills: Highest metal concentration (filtering organs).
    • Muscle tissue: Detected levels unsafe in some species — critical as it is the edible part.
  • Target Hazard Quotient (THQ): Exceeded 1 for several metals → potential health concern.
  • Primary Sources:
    • Industrial effluents (textile dyeing, electroplating).
    • Agricultural runoff (fertilisers, pesticides).
    • Untreated sewage.
    • Minor natural input from mineralised zones (Fe, Mn).

Human Health Implications

  • Cadmium (Cd):
    • Chronic exposure → kidney dysfunction, bone fragility, cancer risk.
  • Lead (Pb):
    • Neurological and developmental damage, especially in children.
  • Chromium (Cr):
    • Carcinogenic (Cr⁶⁺), causes liver/kidney damage.
  • Cumulative Risk:
    • Regular fish consumption may cause bioaccumulation and biomagnification in humans.
    • Safe Limit: 250 g per serving, twice a week (as per Dr. Rajendran).

Ecological Implications

  • Food Chain Contamination: Metals move from sediments → plankton → fish → humans.
  • Biodiversity Impact:
    • Sublethal toxicity → reproductive, growth, and metabolic issues in aquatic life.
    • Alters trophic dynamics and benthic organism survival.
  • Sediment Pollution: Acts as a long-term pollutant reservoir, continuously leaching toxins.

Distinguishing Human vs Natural Sources

  • Using Igeo and Ecological Risk Index (ERI) with multivariate statistics, the study found:
    • Cd, Pb, Cr: Largely anthropogenic (industrial origin).
    • Fe, Zn: Natural/mineral sources.
  • Confirms urban-industrial pollution dominance over natural background levels.

Regional Context

  • Similar contamination patterns found in Noyyal River (SRM Institute study, 2024) — linking Tamil Nadu’s industrial belts with systemic water pollution.
  • Indicates state-wide challenge of managing industrial effluents and weak enforcement of Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board (TNPCB) norms.

Policy and Governance Dimensions

  • Environmental Regulation Gaps:
    • Ineffective enforcement of Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974.
    • Lack of real-time effluent monitoring for small/medium industries.
  • Needed Actions:
    • Establish continuous river-monitoring stations.
    • Strengthen CPCB–TNPCB coordination.
    • Implement Zero Liquid Discharge (ZLD) norms strictly in textile hubs.
    • Promote bio-remediation and constructed wetlands for effluent filtration.
  • Public Health Strategy:
    • Issue fish consumption advisories.
    • Conduct biomonitoring of local populations (Cd & Pb exposure).
    • Enhance community awareness in riparian districts.

Scientific and Policy Significance

  • First multi-metal, multi-organ study on fish in the Cauvery Basin.
  • Provides quantitative baseline data for future environmental risk models.
  • Offers scientific evidence for regulatory design and ecological restoration planning.
  • Strengthens argument for integrated river basin management (IRBM) in India.

Broader Environmental Lessons

  • Symbol of India’s urban-industrial river crisis (like Yamuna, Sabarmati).
  • Highlights disconnect between economic growth and ecological health.
  • Calls for science-led, locally adapted pollution control frameworks.

Cauvery River: Physical Geography Basics

Origin

  • Source: Talakaveri, Brahmagiri Hills, Western Ghats (Kodagu district, Karnataka)
  • Elevation: ~1,341 m above mean sea level
  • Mythological significance: Considered sacred; mentioned in Skanda Purana as Dakshina Ganga.

Course

  • Total length: ~805 km
    • Karnataka: ~320 km
    • Tamil Nadu: ~416 km
    • Kerala & Puducherry (minor stretches): ~69 km combined
  • Flow direction: Initially east-southeast → enters Tamil Nadu near Dharmapuri → forms delta near Thanjavur → drains into Bay of Bengal.

Drainage Basin

  • Total Basin Area: ~81,155 sq. km
    • Karnataka: ~34,300 sq. km
    • Tamil Nadu: ~43,900 sq. km
    • Kerala: ~2,800 sq. km
    • Puducherry: ~155 sq. km

Major Tributaries

Right Bank Tributaries

  • Harangi (Kodagu district)
  • Hemavati (origin – Ballala Hills)
  • Shimsha (Maddur)
  • Arkavathi (joins near Kanakapura)
  • Suhavathi (Suvarnavathi)
  • Noyyal (joins in Tamil Nadu near Karur)
  • Amaravati (major tributary in Tamil Nadu)

Left Bank Tributaries

  • Kabini (origin – Wayanad plateau, Kerala)
  • Bhavani (joins near Erode, Tamil Nadu)
  • Lokapavani
  • Palar (minor)

Major Dams & Reservoirs

  • Krishna Raja Sagar (KRS) – Karnataka (near Mysuru)
  • Mettur Dam (Stanley Reservoir) – Tamil Nadu
  • Kabini Dam, Harangi Dam, Hemavathi Reservoir


Why in News ?

  • COP30 (Nov 2025, Belém, Brazil) marks 10 years since the Paris Agreement (2015) — first COP hosted in the Amazon region.
  • Brazil reports its sharpest GHG emissions drop in 16 years (–17% in 2024) due to reduced deforestation, while proposing the “Tropical Forest Forever Fund.”
  • India to focus on equity, finance delivery, technology transfer, and adaptation — opposing new emission-cutting obligations on developing nations.

Relevance:

  • GS-2 (International Relations):
    India’s climate diplomacy and role in COP30 negotiations.
    • North–South divide on climate finance and equity.
  • GS-3 (Environment):
    • Global climate finance mechanisms and forest conservation funds.
    • Adaptation, mitigation, and sustainable development balance.

Background: Evolution of COP & Climate Politics

  • UNFCCC (1992): Framework to stabilize GHG concentrations.
  • Paris Agreement (2015): Shifted focus to Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs).
  • Post-Paris Phase (COP26–29): From pledges to implementation; gaps in finance and adaptation persist.
  • COP30 (2025): Positioned as the COP of Implementation — accountability on finance, technology, and adaptation.

Brazil’s Climate Dualism

  • Emission Decline (2024):
    • Total emissions: 2.145 billion tonnes CO₂e (–17% YoY).
    • Land-use emissions: Down 32.5% via deforestation control in Amazon & Cerrado.
    • Net emissions: Down 22%, aided by reforestation & law enforcement.
  • Contradictions:
    • Oil exports: Record 85 million tonnes in 2024 — externalized emissions not counted domestically.
    • Forest fires: Doubled unrecorded emissions from land-use change.
  • Civil Society Critique: “Climate policy isn’t a buffet — can’t cut forests and expand oil simultaneously.” (Claudio Angelo, Observatório do Clima)

Tropical Forest Forever Fund (Brazil’s Proposal)

  • Aim: Permanent, multilateral fund rewarding tropical forest conservation — beyond carbon-offset models.
  • Structure: Predictable, long-term financing for forest-rich developing nations.
  • Vision: Anchor COP30 as the COP of Implementation through tangible funding.
  • India’s Support: Conditional — must uphold equity, sovereignty, and access-based financing.

India’s Strategic Priorities at COP30

(a) Adaptation over Mitigation

  • Focus on Global Goal on Adaptation (GGA) indicators — must be country-specific, not globally imposed.
  • India stresses data sovereignty and contextual flexibility in measuring adaptation progress.

(b) Finance Delivery

  • Push on New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG) — successor to the unfulfilled $100 billion/year promise (post-2025 target).
  • India’s stance:
    • Finance must be non-debt-creating, transparent, predictable, and additional.
    • Developed nations must shift from pledge to performance.

(c) Technology & Capacity Building

  • Emphasis on Technology Implementation Programme — beyond transfer to institutional capacity building.
  • Calls for affordable access to low-carbon technologies and knowledge sharing.

Equity & Ethics in Climate Action

  • India–Brazil Convergence:
    • Brazil’s “Global Ethical Stocktake” complements India’s Mission LiFE (Lifestyle for Environment).
    • Focus on behavioral and moral transformation, not just technological compliance.
    • Encourages ethical responsibility of developed nations in consumption patterns.

10 Years Since Paris: The Implementation Reckoning

Indicator India Brazil
Renewable Capacity 81 GW (2014) → 236 GW (2025) Focus on deforestation control
Emission Trend On track with NDCs Still 9% above 2025 NDC ceiling
Finance Access <20% of required flow realized Forest fund proposal to bridge gap
Approach Equity & Adaptation Forest Finance & Ethics

India’s Red Lines for COP30

  • No new mitigation obligations without finance and tech support.
  • Adaptation indicators must respect national circumstances.
  • NCQG must prioritize grant-based finance.
  • Forest fund mechanisms must ensure non-market, non-offset financing.
  • Implementation ≠ burden-shifting — fairness is central.

Key Issues at COP30 (At a Glance)

Agenda Item Lead/Focus India’s Position
Tropical Forest Forever Fund Brazil Support with equity & sovereignty safeguards
Adaptation Indicators (GGA) UAE-led Country-driven, finance-backed
New Climate Finance Goal (NCQG) Developed nations Transparent, non-debt, predictable
Technology Implementation Programme Global South Capacity + tech access
Global Ethical Stocktake Brazil Aligned with Mission LiFE

Broader Implications

  • Geopolitical Axis: India–Brazil–South Africa shaping South-led climate diplomacy.
  • Equity Lens: Reinforces “Common But Differentiated Responsibilities (CBDR-RC)”.
  • Ethical Diplomacy: Moves debate from emission cutsclimate fairness.
  • Implementation COP: May define climate politics for the next decade of accountability (2025–2035).

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