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Current Affairs 20 December 2025

  1. Bureau of Port Security (BoPS): Strengthening India’s Maritime Security Architecture
  2. Antariksh Prayogshala (Space Labs): Building India’s Future Space Talent
  3. Agniveers & CAPFs: Enhanced Reservation to 50%
  4. Forest Rights Services Go Digital: National FRA Portal (TARANG)
  5. Winter Session of Parliament 2025:
  6. Year of Extremes: India’s Near-Permanent Disaster Cycle in 2025


Why is it in News?

  • Government announced the constitution of the Bureau of Port Security.
  • The Bureau will be:
    • A statutory body under the Merchant Shipping Act, 2025.
    • Modelled on the Bureau of Civil Aviation Security.
  • Triggered by:
    • Rising maritime trade volumes.
    • Cybersecurity threats to port infrastructure.
    • Strategic vulnerabilities in coastal and port security.

Relevance

GS III – Internal Security & Infrastructure

  • Coastal and port security architecture.
  • Cybersecurity of critical infrastructure.
  • Maritime security and supply-chain resilience.

Why Port Security Matters

  • Ports are critical infrastructure:
    • Handle ~95% of India’s trade by volume.
    • Backbone of energy imports, exports, and supply chains.
  • Threat spectrum:
    • Terrorism and sabotage.
    • Smuggling and organised crime.
    • Cyberattacks on port IT and logistics systems.
    • Geopolitical disruptions in Indo-Pacific.

What is the Bureau of Port Security (BoPS)?

  • A dedicated national-level authority for:
    • Security of ships.
    • Security of port facilities.
  • Administrative control:
    • Under Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways.
  • Leadership:
    • Headed by a Director General (IPS, Pay Level-15).
    • Transitional arrangement: DG Shipping to act as DG, BoPS for one year.

Key Functions of BoPS

1. Regulatory & Oversight Role

  • Frame security regulations for:
    • Ports.
    • Vessels.
    • Port facilities.
  • Ensure compliance with national and international security norms.

2. Intelligence & Information Management

  • Timely:
    • Collection.
    • Analysis.
    • Exchange of security-related information.
  • Coordination with:
    • Intelligence agencies.
    • Port authorities.
    • Maritime enforcement bodies.

3. Cybersecurity Focus

  • Dedicated division for:
    • Protecting port IT infrastructure.
    • Safeguarding logistics, cargo handling, navigation systems.
  • Addresses:
    • Ransomware risks.
    • Supply-chain cyber sabotage.
    • Data breaches.

4. Risk-based Security Framework

  • Security measures to be:
    • Graded and vulnerability-based.
    • Tailored to:
      • Trade volume.
      • Strategic location.
      • Port-specific risk profile.

How is BoPS Different from Earlier Arrangements?

  • Earlier:
    • Central Industrial Security Force acted as a Recognised Security Organisation (RSO).
    • CISF handled:
      • Security assessments.
      • Port security plans.
  • Now:
    • BoPS becomes the nodal regulator and overseer.
    • CISF and other forces remain operational arms.
  • Key shift:
    • From fragmented arrangements → centralised, professional regulation.

Why Model BoPS on BCAS?

  • BCAS transformed aviation security by:
    • Clear regulatory authority.
    • Uniform standards.
    • Risk-based screening.
  • Replicating this model aims to:
    • Standardise port security.
    • Improve accountability.
    • Reduce ad-hoc security responses.

Strategic Significance

1. National Security

  • Ports are potential entry points for:
    • Terrorists.
    • Arms and narcotics.
  • Dedicated oversight reduces systemic vulnerabilities.

2. Economic Security

  • Disruption of ports can:
    • Paralyse supply chains.
    • Impact inflation and exports.
  • BoPS enhances:
    • Trade reliability.
    • Investor confidence.

3. Maritime & Indo-Pacific Context

  • India’s growing role in:
    • Global supply chains.
    • Indo-Pacific maritime security.
  • Aligns with:
    • Sagarmala.
    • Blue Economy.
    • Maritime Domain Awareness.

Governance & Institutional Analysis

  • Positive aspects:
    • Statutory backing ensures authority.
    • Cybersecurity integration reflects modern threat perception.
    • Risk-based approach avoids one-size-fits-all security.
  • Challenges:
    • Coordination with multiple agencies.
    • Capacity building for cyber and maritime specialists.
    • Avoiding regulatory overlap.

Way Forward

  • Clear SOPs defining roles of:
    • BoPS.
    • CISF.
    • State maritime police.
  • Invest in:
    • Cybersecurity skills.
    • Port security audits.
  • Integrate BoPS with:
    • Coastal security architecture.
    • Maritime intelligence grid.


Why is it in News?

  •  The Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre (IN-SPACe) issued a Request for Proposal (RfP).
  • Objective:
    • Establish Antariksh Prayogshala (Space Labs) in select Indian academic institutions.
  • Part of India’s broader push to:
    • Strengthen the space technology ecosystem.
    • Create future-ready skilled manpower.
    • Deepen academia–industry–government collaboration.

Relevance

GS III – Science & Technology

  • Space technology ecosystem.
  • R&D, innovation, and skill development.
  • Academia–industry–startup collaboration.

What is IN-SPACe?

  • IN-SPACe:
    • Autonomous body under the Department of Space.
    • Acts as:
      • Regulator.
      • Promoter.
      • Facilitator for non-government entities (NGEs) in space.
  • Role:
    • Enable private sector and academia participation.
    • Provide authorisation, infrastructure access, and funding.

What is Antariksh Prayogshala?

  • A first-of-its-kind initiative to create:
    • State-of-the-art space laboratories within academic institutions.
  • Focus:
    • Applied research.
    • Early-stage innovation.
    • Hands-on skill development in space technologies.
  • Target users:
    • Students.
    • Researchers.
    • Startups.
    • Industry partners.

Key Features of the Scheme

1. Financial Support

  • IN-SPACe funding:
    • Up to 75% of total project cost.
    • Cap: 5 crore per institution.
  • Reduces entry barriers for advanced infrastructure creation.

2. Phased & Region-Balanced Approach

  • Up to 7 academic institutions selected.
  • One lab proposed in each geographical zone.
  • Ensures:
    • Balanced regional representation.
    • Pan-India talent development.

3. Two-Stage Selection Process

  • Stage 1:
    • Screening based on eligibility criteria in the RfP.
  • Stage 2:
    • Detailed proposal evaluation.
  • Ensures:
    • Institutional readiness.
    • Long-term sustainability.

What Will These Space Labs Do?

  • Provide:
    • Hands-on training in space systems.
    • Access to advanced testing and simulation tools.
  • Enable:
    • Satellite subsystems development.
    • Launch vehicle technologies.
    • Space applications (navigation, EO, communication).
  • Function as shared innovation spaces:
    • Academia + industry + startups.

Why This Initiative Matters ?

1. Bridging Academia–Industry Gap

  • Traditional issue:
    • Strong theory, weak applied exposure.
  • Antariksh Prayogshala:
    • Aligns curriculum and research with real industry needs.

2. Supporting India’s New Space Ecosystem

  • Complements:
    • Opening of space sector to private players.
    • Growth of space startups.
  • Creates:
    • Skilled workforce for NewSpace companies.

3. Long-Term Strategic Capacity

  • Space is a dual-use domain:
    • Civil + strategic.
  • Skilled manpower is critical for:
    • Space security.
    • Technological sovereignty.
    • Global competitiveness.

Link with India’s Space Reforms

  • Post-2020 reforms:
    • Separation of roles:
      • ISRO (R&D).
      • IN-SPACe (promotion & regulation).
  • Antariksh Prayogshala fits into:
    • Space as a knowledge-intensive sector.
    • Transition from mission-centric to ecosystem-centric growth.

Challenges & Considerations

  • Ensuring:
    • Faculty capacity and retention.
    • Long-term funding beyond initial grant.
  • Avoiding:
    • Infrastructure without outcomes.
  • Need for:
    • Strong industry mentoring.
    • Outcome-based performance metrics.

Way Forward

  • Integrate labs with:
    • National Space Innovation programmes.
    • Startup incubation frameworks.
  • Promote:
    • International academic collaborations.
  • Use labs as feeders for:
    • Space startups.
    • ISRO and private sector R&D pipelines.


Why is it in News?

  • Union Home Ministry decided to increase reservation for ex-Agniveers in CAPFs from 10% to 50% in Group C (constable-level) posts.
  • Immediate notification issued for Border Security Force, with similar amendments planned across all CAPFs.
  • Comes months before the first batch of Agniveers completes 4-year tenure (2026).
  • Marks a policy reversal from the earlier 10% quota announced in 2022.
  • Addresses:
    • Employment concerns post-Agnipath.
    • Political and social backlash seen during 2022 protests and 2024 Lok Sabha elections.

Relevance

GS III – Internal Security

  • CAPF manpower planning.
  • Defence reforms and internal security linkage.
  • Border management and force readiness.

GS II – Governance & Public Policy

  • Public employment policy.
  • Adaptive policymaking in response to social feedback.

What is the Agnipath / Agniveer Scheme?

  • Introduced in 2022.
  • Short-term military recruitment:
    • Tenure: 4 years.
    • Retention: ~25% absorbed into regular armed forces.
  • Objective:
    • Reduce pension burden.
    • Maintain youthful armed forces.
    • Create a disciplined, skilled civilian workforce.
  • Core challenge:
    • Post-service employment for 75% exiting Agniveers.

What are CAPFs?

  • Central Armed Police Forces under Ministry of Home Affairs.
  • Include:
    • Border Security Force
    • Central Reserve Police Force
    • Central Industrial Security Force
    • Indo-Tibetan Border Police
    • Sashastra Seema Bal
    • Assam Rifles
  • Roles:
    • Border management.
    • Internal security.
    • Infrastructure and industrial security.

What Has Changed? 

Earlier Policy (2022)

  • 10% reservation for ex-Agniveers in CAPFs.
  • Limited age relaxation.
  • Covered only select forces initially.

New Policy (2025)

  • 50% reservation for ex-Agniveers in Group C posts.
  • First implemented in BSF constable (GD) cadre.
  • Gradual extension to all CAPFs via amended recruitment rules.
  • Age relaxation:
    • Up to 5 years for ex-Agniveers.
    • BSF tradesmen absorption age raised from 30 → 35 years.

Recruitment Mechanics Under New Rules

  • Eligibility:
    • Ex-Agniveers exempted from PST/PET.
    • Must clear written examination like other candidates.
  • Two-phase recruitment:
    • Phase 1: Nodal CAPF recruits 50% ex-Agniveers.
    • Phase 2: Staff Selection Commission (SSC) recruits remaining vacancies (including 10% ex-servicemen).
  • Unfilled Agniveer vacancies carried forward.

Rationale Behind the Enhanced Reservation

1. Employment Security

  • Prevents sudden demobilisation of trained youth.
  • Reduces risk of unemployment-driven unrest.

2. Internal Security Needs

  • CAPFs gain:
    • Trained manpower.
    • Disciplined recruits.
    • Reduced training costs.

3. Political & Social Stabilisation

  • Responds to:
    • Violent protests of 2022.
    • Electoral sensitivities highlighted in 2024.
  • Improves acceptability of Agnipath scheme.

4. Continuum of Military Skills

  • Creates a seamless security manpower pipeline:
    • Armed Forces → CAPFs → Civil security ecosystem.

Implications & Concerns

Positives

  • Improves credibility of Agnipath.
  • Strengthens CAPF manpower quality.
  • Enhances youth confidence in short-term military service.

Concerns

  • Reduced open competition for civilians.
  • Potential morale issues among non-Agniveer aspirants.
  • Need for:
    • Transparent implementation.
    • Uniform standards across CAPFs.

Governance & Federal Angle

  • Recruitment rules amended under statutory powers of MHA.
  • Highlights:
    • Centre’s role in balancing defence reforms with social stability.
    • Adaptive policymaking based on feedback loops.

Conclusion

Enhancing CAPF reservation for ex-Agniveers to 50% reflects a strategic correction in the Agnipath scheme, balancing defence manpower reforms with employment security and internal stability.



 Why is it in News?

  • The Union Government announced plans to develop a national web portal to take all Forest Rights Act (FRA) processes online.
  • Proposal presented by the Ministry of Tribal Affairs at a national consultative workshop.
  • A beta version, named TARANG, has already been developed.
  • The portal will be part of a comprehensive FRA Roadmap, targeted for finalisation by first half of 2026.
  • Objective:
    • Address persistent delays, opacity, and uneven implementation of the Forest Rights Act, 2006.

Relevance

GS II – Governance & Social Justice

  • Tribal rights and inclusive governance.
  • Role of Gram Sabha.
  • Welfare delivery and institutional reforms.

GS III – Environment & Sustainable Development

  • Forest governance.
  • Community-based conservation.
  • Balancing ecology and livelihoods.

What is the Forest Rights Act (FRA), 2006?

  • Official name:
    Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006.
  • Purpose:
    • Correct historical injustice faced by forest-dwelling communities.
  • Beneficiaries:
    • Scheduled Tribes (STs).
    • Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (OTFDs).

Rights Recognised under FRA

  • Individual Forest Rights (IFR): Cultivation and habitation.
  • Community Forest Rights (CFR):
    • Grazing.
    • Minor forest produce.
    • Community forest resource management.
  • Habitat & resource-use rights.

Existing FRA Implementation Process (Problematic)

  • Multi-layered claim process:
    • Gram Sabha → Sub-Divisional Level Committee → District Level Committee → State Level Monitoring Committee.
  • Key issues:
    • Manual records.
    • Missing legacy data.
    • Delays in claim disposal.
    • High rejection rates.
    • Poor inter-departmental coordination.
  • Result:
    • Uneven recognition of rights across States.
    • Weak livelihood security for forest dwellers.

What is the Proposed FRA Portal (TARANG)?

A single-window national digital platform for all FRA-related services.

Key Components

  1. Online Filing & Processing of Claims
    1. End-to-end digitisation from Gram Sabha to State level.
  2. Digital Title Deeds
    1. Secure, tamper-proof records of recognised rights.
  3. Legacy Data Repository
    1. Central storage of already granted FRA titles.
  4. FRA Atlas
    1. GIS-based mapping of:
      1. Existing recognised forest rights.
      1. Potential areas where FRA claims may arise.
  5. Geotagging of Forest Rights
    1. Accurate spatial demarcation to reduce disputes.

Objectives Behind Digitisation

1. Transparency & Accountability

  • Reduces discretionary rejection of claims.
  • Enables real-time tracking.

2. Faster Recognition of Rights

  • Minimises procedural delays.
  • Standardises timelines across States.

3. Livelihood & Welfare Integration

  • FRA records to be used for:
    • Saturation of welfare schemes.
    • Targeted delivery of benefits to forest dwellers.

4. Sustainable Forest Governance

  • Supports community-led forest management.
  • Aligns conservation with livelihood security.

Governance & Policy Significance

  • Reinforces Gram Sabha centrality while improving administrative efficiency.
  • Helps reconcile:
    • Forest conservation.
    • Tribal rights.
    • Developmental needs.
  • Enables evidence-based policymaking using spatial data.

Concerns & Challenges

  • Digital Divide:
    • Limited internet access in forest regions.
  • Capacity Gaps:
    • Gram Sabhas and local officials need training.
  • Risk of Centralisation:
    • Over-digitisation must not dilute community decision-making.
  • Data Accuracy:
    • Errors in mapping could trigger fresh disputes.

Way Forward

  • Hybrid model:
    • Digital backend + offline facilitation at Gram Sabha level.
  • Capacity building:
    • Training for local institutions.
  • Legal safeguards:
    • Ensure digital records do not override community consent.
  • Continuous audit:
    • Independent monitoring of claim acceptance and rejection trends.

Conclusion

The proposed national FRA portal marks a shift from paper-based recognition to data-driven forest governance, aiming to improve transparency, livelihood security, and sustainable management while safeguarding tribal rights.



 Why is it in News?

  • Winter Session of Parliament (2025) concluded with:
    • Passage of 8 Bills (Lok Sabha).
    • Key structural reforms including:
      • Repeal of MGNREGA Act.
      • Opening of civil nuclear sector.
      • 100% FDI in insurance.
  • Official productivity data released by Om Birla highlighted high legislative productivity, despite concerns over disruptions.

Relevance

GS II – Polity & Governance

  • Parliamentary functioning and legislative scrutiny.
  • Role of Speaker, Opposition, and debate.

What is the Winter Session?

  • One of the three parliamentary sessions (Budget, Monsoon, Winter).
  • Typically held November–December.
  • Functions:
    • Law-making.
    • Executive accountability.
    • Policy debates.
  • Duration and productivity vary based on consensus and disruptions.

Legislative Productivity

  • Lok Sabha:
    • Productivity: 111%.
    • Passed 8 Bills.
  • Rajya Sabha:
    • Productivity: 82%.
    • Passed 8 Bills.
  • Interpretation:
    • High throughput, but productivity ≠ quality of debate.


Why is it in News?

  • Report by Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) and Down To Earth revealed that:
    • 331 of 334 days (Jan–Nov 2025) witnessed extreme weather events.
    • Up from 295 days in 2024 and 292 days in 2022.
  • Impact in 2025
    • 4,419 deaths.
    • 17.4 million hectares of crops damaged.
    • 1.8 lakh+ houses destroyed.
  • Signals a new climate normal marked by persistence, not seasonality.

Relevance

  • GS III:
    • Climate change.
    • Disaster management.
    • Agriculture and food security.

What Are Extreme Weather Events?

  • Definition: Weather events significantly deviating from historical averages.
  • Types observed in India:
    • Heatwaves, coldwaves.
    • Heavy rainfall, floods, cloudbursts.
    • Cyclones, storms, lightning.
    • Landslides.
  • Drivers:
    • Global warming (higher atmospheric moisture, energy).
    • Changing monsoon dynamics.
    • Local factors: deforestation, urbanisation, land-use change.

What Makes 2025 Different?

1. Near-Permanent Extremes

  • Extreme events on >99% of days.
  • 9 out of 11 months saw extreme weather every single day.
  • “Normal weather window” is shrinking rapidly.

2. All-Season Extremes

  • Earlier: extremes concentrated in monsoon/summer.
  • Now:
    • Winter floods.
    • February heatwaves.
    • Heatwaves in Himalayan regions.
    • Post-monsoon floods and early coldwaves.

Scale of Loss & Damage

Human & Economic Impact

  • Deaths increased 47% since 2022.
  • Crop damage rose nearly (2022 → 2025).
  • Lightning & thunderstorms:
    • 1,538 deaths.
  • Floods, landslides, cloudbursts:
    • 2,707 deaths.

Agriculture & Livelihoods

  • Monsoon alone damaged:
    • ~11 million hectares (65% of total loss).
  • Erratic rainfall:
    • Simultaneous floods + rainfall deficits.
    • ~20% districts had deficient rainfall despite daily extremes.

Regional Patterns: Uneven Burden

States

  • Himachal Pradesh: Extreme weather on ~80% days.
  • Highest deaths:
    • Andhra Pradesh (608).
    • Madhya Pradesh (537).
    • Jharkhand (478).
  • Highest crop loss:
    • Maharashtra (8.4 mha).
    • Gujarat (4.4 mha).
    • Karnataka (2.75 mha).

Regions

  • North-West India:
    • Highest extreme days (311).
    • Highest deaths (1,459).
  • Central India:
    • 1,120 deaths.
  • Shows mountain + agrarian vulnerability.

Records Shattered: Climate Signals

  • February 2025:
    • Warmest in 124 years.
    • First-ever winter heatwave (Goa, Maharashtra).
  • March:
    • Mean max temperature +1.02°C above normal.
  • September–October:
    • Among warmest on record (min temperatures).
  • IMD baseline shift (1991–2020):
    • Even “normal” is now hotter than the past.

Seasonal Breakdown: Collapse of Boundaries

Winter

  • Extremes on 97% of days.
  • Heavy rain/floods on 51 of 59 days (earlier: ~6 days).

Pre-Monsoon

  • Extremes on 99% of days.
  • Heatwaves reached:
    • Himalayan states (HP, J&K, Ladakh).
  • Deaths tripled vs 2022.

Monsoon

  • All 122 days saw extremes.
  • Daily floods + lightning.
  • Rainfall paradox:
    • Excess rain + district-level deficits.

Post-Monsoon

  • Extremes on all 61 days.
  • Early coldwaves (from Nov 7).
  • Spread across 13 states (vs 2 earlier).

Overview

1. From Episodic to Structural Crisis

  • Disasters are no longer “events”.
  • They are systemic features of India’s climate.

2. Regressive Impact

  • Poor, farmers, hill communities:
    • Least contributors.
    • Highest sufferers.
  • Climate risk is now a development risk.

3. Governance Stress Test

  • Disaster response systems face:
    • Overload.
    • Fiscal stress.
    • Data gaps.
  • Relief-centric model is inadequate.

Way Forward: From Reaction to Resilience

Mitigation

  • Rapid emissions reduction.
  • Align with global ambition (CoP30 and beyond).

Adaptation

  • Climate-resilient agriculture.
  • Urban flood management.
  • Heat action plans beyond cities.

Governance Reforms

  • Integrate climate risk into:
    • Planning.
    • Infrastructure.
    • Fiscal transfers.
  • Strengthen climate data & attribution science.

Equity Lens

  • Protect:
    • Small farmers.
    • Informal workers.
    • Mountain & coastal communities.

Conclusion

India’s experience of extreme weather on almost every day of 2025 marks a shift from seasonal disasters to a permanent climate emergency, demanding systemic adaptation, climate justice, and resilient development rather than episodic relief.


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