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Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 22 November 2025

  1. Environment Responsibility
  2. The new direction for India should be toward Asia


Why is it in News?

  • Several States and industrial regulators are proposing or implementing reductions in mandatory green-cover requirements for industrial estates and individual industries.
  • These relaxations are being promoted as part of ease of doing business” reforms.
  • Ecologists and environmental planners warn that such norms are being diluted without ecological justification, relying on misleading global comparisons that ignore India’s density and ecological stresses.
  • Debate sharpened after recent proposals to shrink green-belt obligations in multiple industrial corridors, raising concerns on sustainability, air quality, and ecological resilience.

Relevance

GS 1 – Geography & Society

  • Land-use change, industrialisation, and ecological vulnerability in densely populated regions.
  • Urban heat islands, habitat fragmentation, and landscape-level degradation.

GS 2 – Governance & Policy

  • Regulatory dilution vs environmental safeguards.
  • Federal role of States in industrial siting norms and green-belt regulation.
  •  Accountability mechanisms: Green Credit Programme, environmental regulators.

GS 3 – Environment, Ecology & Economy

  • Green belts as mitigation tools; limits in ecosystem restoration.
  •  Ecological carrying capacity, pollution buffers, Nature-based Solutions (NbS).
  •  Conflict between ease of doing business and environmental sustainability.
  • Need for landscape-level afforestation, restoration and carbon-offsetting frameworks.

Practice Question

  • The trend of reducing green-cover norms is often justified by misleading global parallels. Critically examine the need for ecological calibration in policy transfers.(250 Words)

What are Green Belts?

  • Vegetated buffers within/around industrial units.
  • Purpose: dust suppression, microclimate regulation, noise reduction, visual greening.
  • Nature: mitigative, not restorative; cannot replicate forests, wetlands or natural ecosystems.

Why Green Belts Matter (Scientific Evidence)?

  • Can reduce TSP levels by up to 65% in industrial/roadside zones.
  • Reduce ambient noise by 10–17 dB.
  • Regulate heat and create microclimate buffers.
    Limitations:
    – Narrow, often mono-specific plantations.
    – Weak long-term ecological value.
    – Cannot replace forest ecosystem services such as hydrological regulation, carbon storage, biodiversity support, habitat connectivity.

Why the Current Relaxation Trend Is Problematic?

  • Industries and industrial estate authorities seeking lower minimum green-cover norms.
  • Policymakers cite international norms, but:
    – Countries with low population density have wider ecological buffers.
    – Lower industrial concentration and greater natural open spaces dilute pollution loads.
    – Ecological carrying capacity varies across regions; copying ratios is unscientific.
    Risk: convenience mistaken for sustainability.

Global Parallels Are Misleading (Ecological Calibration Needed)

  • Population density determines pollution exposure and need for local buffers.
  • Nations with vast landscapes provide natural ecological services externally.
  • India’s ecological stress (high density, fragmented landscapes, industrial growth zones) demands higher on-site buffers, not lower.
  • Numerical targets cannot be transplanted without ecosystem context.

On-site Green Belts vs Natural Ecosystems (Key Distinctions)

  • On-site green belts = localised mitigation.
  • Natural ecosystems = systemic services such as:
    – Climate regulation and carbon storage.
    – Watershed stability.
    – Biodiversity, pollinators, food webs.
    – Landscape resilience.
  • Industrial plantations cannot recreate these functions due to:
    – Shallow root systems.
    – Limited species diversity.
    – Fragmentation and low connectivity.

Ecological Costs of Industrial Land Conversion

  • Permanent habitat fragmentation.
  • Loss of ecological corridors.
  • Increased heat islands.
  • Reduction in soil carbon and hydrological balance.
  • Green belts cannot compensate for these landscape-level losses.

Balanced, Landscape-Level Strategy Proposed

A dual approach:

  • On-site Mitigation (Minimum Mandatory Green Belts)
  • Retain essential internal green cover based on pollution load and density.
  • Uniform norms avoid regulatory confusion across industry types.

B. Off-site Ecological Restoration (Mandatory Commitments)

  • Create/restore State-level green reserves near industrial clusters.
  • Regenerate degraded lands, river basins, buffers around sanctuaries.
  • Integrate industry efforts with:
    – Green Credit Programme
    – Carbon offsetting mechanisms
    – State Compensatory Afforestation Plans
    Track outcomes using measurable ecological indicators.

Why Landscape-Level Greening Works?

  • Strengthens ecological resilience of entire industrial region.
  • Enhances habitat connectivity.
  • Reduces need for new greenfield expansion.
  • Aligns industrial growth with Nature-based Solutions (NbS).
  • Converts industries from compliance-driven actors to ecological partners.

New Model of Industrial Stewardship?

  • Shift from “industry as polluter” to “industry as ecological steward.”
  • Instruments:
    – Biodiversity offsets
    – Circular economy practices
    – Green credits
    – Regional afforestation compacts
  • Citizen oversight increases transparency and long-term ecological gains.

Conclusion

  • Green belts are essential but limited tools; they are local mitigators, not ecosystem restorers.
  • Global benchmarks for green-cover norms are not transferrable to India due to population density and ecological stress.
  • Reducing green-cover norms improves industrial flexibility but risks undermining ecological resilience, especially in dense industrial belts.
  • A two-tier strategy — retain minimum internal green belts + enforce strong off-site restoration — ensures ecological balance.
  • Industrial sustainability hinges on landscape-level regeneration, not decorative greenery inside factory gates.
  • True NbS requires industries to root their operations in the health of surrounding landscapes.


Why is it in News?

  •  The 2025 Tianjin SCO Summit and the Busan G2 Summit produced symbolic images signalling a major geopolitical shift: Asia—represented by India, China, Russia—is now the principal arena of global power.
  •  India faces intensified U.S. pressure (on Russian oil, alignment choices, tech dependencies) even as its ties with China stabilise and relations with Russia deepen.
  •  India is at a foreign policy inflexion point, needing to redefine strategic autonomy amid shifting Asian coalitions (BRICS+, SCO, ASEAN, RCEP).
  •  Debate emerging in India: Should India tilt West, tilt towards Asia, or craft an autonomous Asian-centred strategic pathway?

Relevance

GS 1 – Society & World History

  • Rise of Asia as the global economic centre.
  • Changing power structures and demographic weight in the Asian century.

GS 2 – International Relations, Governance

  • Indias strategic autonomy and foreign policy recalibration.
  • IndiaChina–Russia dynamics vs U.S. strategic pressure.
  • Regional institutions: BRICS+, SCO, ASEAN, RCEP.
  • National security reorientation toward cyber and technology.

GS 3 – Economy, Security, Technology

  • Asian value chains, supply-chain diversification, trade re-entry pathways.
  • AI sovereignty, digital economy geopolitics, innovation ecosystems.
  •  Defence transformation: cyber warfare, drones, space, AI-led military capability.

Practice Question

  • Critically analyse whether Indias strategic future lies more with Asia than with the West.(250 Words)

Broad Context

  •  Asia now holds two-thirds of global population and wealth creation potential.
  •  China, India, Russia now project a visible Asian strategic compact, reshaping post-Cold War alignments.
  •  The U.S. aims to prevent another “China-like rise,” and seeks to pull India away from Russia and China, narrowing India’s policy space.

India’s Strategic Inflection Point

  •  India is emerging as a top global economy, expanding foreign policy bandwidth.
  •  India rejects binary choices (“U.S. or China”), asserting non-negotiable strategic autonomy.
  •  As border negotiations with China in Ladakh progress, and Russia partnership stays stable, India’s Asian calculus becomes more pronounced.

India’s Long-Term Interests: Why Asia Matters More than the West

  •  Asia’s market will exceed U.S. and EU combined.
  •  Asian regionalism is functional, value-chain driven, not rules-based like the West.
  •  India has economic weight, tech capacity and demographics to be a balancing rather than a dependent actor.
  •  Asian blocs—BRICS, SCO, ASEAN—will increasingly interlock, with RCEP remaining open for India.

Reorientation Required: Four Hard Decisions

A. Recasting Strategic Autonomy

  •  India’s dual identity:
    High-growth emerging power;
    Largest Global South constituency (poverty, labour pool, climate vulnerabilities).
  •  India must define “partnerships”: value-chain integration without absorbing othersagendas.
  •  Rebalance commitments without diluting national data sovereignty, local technological capacity or inclusive growth.

B. New Geopolitical Rules: Technology > Diplomacy

  •  Old power hierarchies were built on colonialism, ships, capital flows.
  •  New hierarchy comes from:
    – Technological interdependence,
    – Innovation ecosystems,
    – Military-technological integration (AI, computing, cyber).
  •  Military power increasingly determined by tech ecosystems, not alliances.
  •  India must prioritise endogenous innovation to prevent lock-in by U.S. tech giants or Chinese ecosystems.

C. Cyber Warfare as the Primary Security Doctrine

  •  Land-based threats evolving: China lowering CPEC footprint; Pakistan reliant on ADB loans; U.S.–Saudi pact; U.S. pursuit of Bagram; shifting Afghan dynamics.
  •  India has U.S. sanctions waiver for Chabahar, opening Iran–Central Asia–Russia connectivity.
  •  Argument:
    – Halve the standing Army;
    – Reduce dependence on imported platforms;
    – Pivot defence spending to AI, drones, space, missiles—domains where India has global-level competence.
  •  Innovation-led defence strategy will generate domestic tech spillovers.

D. AI Sovereignty: Crucial for Indias Rise

  •  India’s AI Mission (₹10,372 crore) inadequate at current scale.
  •  Bernstein warns: India risks being peripheral if U.S. companies dominate foundational AI models.
  •  Parliamentary panel calls for domestic foundational model capability.
     Requires:
    – 20x increase in AI funding;
    – National strategic AI collaboration;
    – High-end compute;
    – Proprietary Indian models;
    – Talent ecosystem steered at PMO-level.
  •  Without AI sovereignty, India cannot become a global power by 2047.

India’s Key Partnerships: Realistic Assessment

China: Trust but Verify

  •  Border negotiations in Ladakh advancing; potential to stabilise wider Kashmir landscape.
  •  Investment and economic complementarities remain high.
  •  But China’s strategic footprint remains unpredictable → verification essential.

Russia: Reliable Long-Term Pillar

  •  75-year partnership; crucial technologies (S-400), energy stability, military equipment.
  •  Russia central to Eurasian connectivity and India’s continental strategy.

U.S.: Partner but also Constraint

  •  U.S. pushing India to:
    – Cut Russian oil;
    – Side with Indo-Pacific calculations;
    – Depend on U.S. tech ecosystem.
  •  Reduces India’s strategic space; disrupts multipolarity.
  • U.S. global policy now more transactional, less multilateral.

India’s Emerging Asian Strategy

  •  Engage BRICS+, SCO, ASEAN, RCEP as intertwined regional mechanisms.
  •  Forge Asian value-chain complementarities beyond the WTO system.
  •  Build alternative markets to reduce U.S.-centric dependency.
  •  Promote Asian-led innovations in digital economy, AI, fintech, and cyber security.
  • Strengthen Eurasian connectivity via Iran–Central Asia–Russia.

Conclusion

  •  The Asian century is now marked by intra-Asian great-power conversations, not Western-led platforms.
  •  India is navigating a complex triangular balance: improving China ties, strengthening Russia ties, managing U.S. pressure.
  •  The foreign policy inflexion point demands hard choices on defence, technology, and economic strategy.
  •  India’s rise depends on 3 pillars:
    – Strategic autonomy grounded in national priorities;
    – Tech-led power (AI, cyber, space);
    – Deep integration with Asian economic and security architectures.
  •  India’s goal is not alignment but autonomous Asian leadership in a multipolar world.

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