Content
- Gyan Bharatam Initiative
- STEPS TO CHECK GROUND LEVEL OZONE
Gyan Bharatam Initiative
Why in News?
- Written reply in Lok Sabha by Gajendra Singh Shekhawat
- Update on:
- Progress of digitisation (3.5 lakh manuscripts)
- Funding approval of ₹491.66 crore
- MoUs with 31 institutions
- Launch of Gyan Bharatam Digital Web Portal
- Adoption of Delhi Declaration (Gyan Bharatam Sankalp Patra)
Relevance
GS I – Indian Culture & Heritage
- Conservation of ancient manuscripts as tangible heritage
- Transmission of:
- Vedic knowledge
- Ayurveda
- Philosophy
- Astronomy & mathematics
- Integration of tangible + intangible heritage (manuscripts + performing arts like Odissi, Sambalpuri)
What is the Gyan Bharatam Initiative?
- Flagship mission of the Ministry of Culture
- Announced in Union Budget 2025 (Para 84)
- Objective:
- Survey
- Document
- Conserve
- Digitize
- Disseminate India’s manuscript heritage
- Target Coverage:
- Over 1 crore manuscripts
- Core Output:
- Creation of a National Digital Repository
- Powered by AI and advanced digital technologies
Financial & Administrative Framework
- Approved Outlay: ₹491.66 crore
- Time Period: 2025–2031
- Approved by Standing Finance Committee (SFC)
- Pan-India implementation model
Institutional Structure & Implementation Architecture
- Total MoUs Signed: 31 institutions
- 19 Cluster Centres
- 12 Independent Centres
- Technology partners finalized nationwide
- Example:
- MoU with Dr. Harisingh Gour University, Sagar (MP)
Five Core Verticals of Gyan Bharatam
- Survey & Cataloguing
- Identification and metadata mapping of manuscripts
- Conservation & Capacity Building
- Physical preservation + training of conservators
- Technology & Digitization
- High-resolution scanning + AI tagging
- Linguistics & Translation
- Multi-script deciphering and translations
- Research, Publication & Outreach
- Academic integration and public dissemination
Progress Achieved
- Manuscripts digitized so far: ~3.5 lakh
- National Digital Web Portal launched by the Prime Minister
- Technology deployment underway across all centres
Delhi Declaration (Gyan Bharatam Sankalp Patra )
- Recognizes manuscripts as:
- “Living memory of Indian civilization”
- Key Commitments:
- Large-scale digital public access
- Modern conservation practices
- Revival of traditional knowledge systems
- People-centric approach:
- Converts heritage preservation into a Jan Andolan
- Global ambition:
- Positions India as a global hub for manuscript-based learning
Cultural Ecosystem Linkages (Odisha Example)
- Sangeet Natak Akademi
- Promotes Odissi Dance, Odissi Music, Sambalpuri Dance
- Confers:
- Sangeet Natak Akademi Award
- Ustad Bismillah Khan Yuva Puraskar
- Eastern Zonal Cultural Centre (EZCC), Kolkata
- Promotes folk traditions of eastern India
- Regular showcasing of Sambalpuri Dance
This highlights integration of tangible (manuscripts) and intangible (performing arts) heritage under MoC’s broader cultural strategy.
Significance of Gyan Bharatam
Civilizational & Knowledge Impact
- Preserves:
- Vedas, Smritis, medical texts (Ayurveda), astronomy, mathematics, philosophy
- Counters:
- Knowledge erosion due to decay, neglect, and private hoarding
Digital India & AI Synergy
- AI-based:
- Script recognition
- Translation
- Metadata tagging
- Aligns with:
- Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) vision
Soft Power & Global Scholarship
- Strengthens:
- India’s civilizational diplomacy
- Global Indology and Indic studies ecosystem
Employment & Skill Building
- Creates demand for:
- Archivists
- Linguists
- Conservators
- Digital curators
Challenges & Limitations
- Fragmented private ownership of manuscripts
- Multilingual script complexity (Sharada, Grantha, Bhojpuri, Modi, etc.)
- Shortage of trained conservators
- Risk of digitisation without contextual interpretation
- Cybersecurity of heritage data
Way Forward
- Standardized national manuscript metadata framework
- AI + Human expert hybrid translation models
- Stronger:
- Copyright safeguards
- Community participation
- Integration with:
- National Education Policy (NEP 2020)
- Indian Knowledge Systems (IKS) mission
Prelims Facts
- Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Culture
- Launch Year: 2025
- Budget: ₹491.66 crore
- Target: 1+ crore manuscripts
- Digitised so far: ~3.5 lakh
- Centres: 31 (19 Cluster + 12 Independent)
- Portal: Gyan Bharatam Digital Web Portal
- Vision Document: Delhi Declaration (Sankalp Patra)
STEPS TO CHECK GROUND LEVEL OZONE
Why in News?
- Written reply in Lok Sabha by Kirti Vardhan Singh
- Issue addressed:
- Control of Ground-Level Ozone (O₃) pollution
- Compliance with National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS)
- Data source:
- Real-time air quality monitoring from Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) Portal
Relevance
GS I – Human Geography & Environment
- Impact of:
- Urbanisation
- Heat waves
- Industrial clusters
- Link between:
- Climate change and ozone intensification
- Crop damage and public health vulnerability
GS III – Environment, Technology & Internal Policy
- Emission control through:
- BS VI norms
- Thermal power plant NOx standards
- Vapour Recovery Systems (VRS)
- Electric mobility push:
- PM E-DRIVE
- PM e-Bus Sewa
- Waste management as air pollution control
- VOC regulation in:
- Paint, pharma, fertilizer industries
What is Ground-Level Ozone?
- Type: Secondary air pollutant
- Not emitted directly
- Formed by photochemical reaction between:
- NOx (Nitrogen Oxides)
- VOCs (Volatile Organic Compounds)
- In the presence of sunlight
Health & Environmental Impact
- Triggers:
- Asthma, bronchitis, lung inflammation
- Damages:
- Crops, forests, and materials
- Unlike stratospheric ozone:
- Ground-level ozone is harmful
Sources of Ozone Precursors
(A) NOx Sources
- Coal, petrol, diesel combustion
- Power plants
- Motor vehicles
- Industrial furnaces & boilers
(B) VOC Sources
- Fuel evaporation
- Solvents, paints
- Oil & gas production
- Biomass and wood burning
Regulatory Framework
- NAAQS covers 12 pollutants including O₃
- Monitoring through:
- CPCB’s Central Control Room Portal
- Ozone precursor control under:
- Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change
Key Government Measures to Control Ground-Level Ozone
Vehicle Emission Control – BS VI Norms (Since April 2020)
| Vehicle Type | NOx Reduction |
| 2-wheelers | 70–85% |
| 4-wheelers | 25–68% |
| Heavy vehicles | ~87% |
- Transition from BS-IV to BS-VI is one of the most decisive ozone-control interventions
Electric Mobility Push
- PM Electric Drive Revolution (PM E-DRIVE)
- PM e-Bus Sewa
- Impact:
- Zero tailpipe NOx & VOC emissions
- Direct reduction in urban ozone formation
National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) – 2019
- Target: 130 non-attainment & million-plus cities
- Coverage:
- 24 States/UTs
- Each city has:
- City-Specific Clean Air Action Plan
- Sources targeted:
- Road dust
- Vehicle emissions
- Waste burning
- Construction & demolition
- Industrial pollution
Industrial Emission Standards for NOx & VOCs
Revised/introduced for:
- Man-made fibre
- Fertiliser industry
- Pharmaceuticals
- Paints & coatings
Special focus on:
- Coal/lignite-based thermal power plants
- Cement plants
- Industrial boilers & furnaces
- Standalone clinker grinding units
Vapour Recovery System (VRS) at Petrol Pumps
- 100% coverage in Delhi-NCR
- Other cities:
- 100 KL/month sales → million-plus cities
- 300 KL/month sales → cities above 1 lakh population
- 100 KL/month sales → million-plus cities
- Prevents:
- Fuel evaporation = VOC reduction
Transport & Urban Measures
- Promotion of:
- Public transport
- Road infrastructure
- Strengthening of:
- Pollution Under Control (PUC) certification regime
Waste & Biomass Burning Control
- Complete ban on:
- Biomass burning
- Garbage burning
- Enforcement of:
- Solid waste rules
- Bio-medical waste rules
- Hazardous waste management rules
Ozone-Depleting Substances (ODS) Control (Global Link)
- ODS Rules, 2000 notified by MoEF&CC
- Controls:
- Use
- Import
- Export of ODS
- Aligns India with:
- Montreal Protocol obligations
Though ODS affects stratospheric ozone, it strengthens India’s overall ozone governance framework.
Why Ground-Level Ozone is a Rising Policy Challenge ?
- Climate change increases:
- Heat waves → faster ozone formation
- Urbanization:
- Vehicle density → NOx surge
- Industrial VOC overload in:
- Paint, pharma, chemical clusters
- Poor compliance in:
- Smaller non-attainment cities
Effectiveness Assessment (Critical Analysis)
Strengths
- BS VI norms → Structural emission shift
- NCAP → National coordination for cities
- VRS → Direct VOC leakage control
- Power plant NOx standards → Base-load emission control
Gaps
- Poor VOC emission inventory at city level
- Limited real-time ozone forecasting
- Weak enforcement in Tier-2 & Tier-3 cities
- Inadequate public awareness of ozone as a pollutant
Way Forward
- City-level:
- Ozone Action Plans
- Expand:
- Continuous O₃ monitoring stations
- Strengthen:
- VOC-specific compliance audits
- Integrate:
- Urban heat mitigation with ozone control
- Promote:
- Low-VOC industrial materials
Prelims Facts
- Ground-level ozone → Secondary pollutant
- Precursors → NOx + VOC + Sunlight
- BS VI rollout → April 2020
- NOx cut:
- Heavy vehicles → ~87%
- NCAP launch → 2019
- NCAP cities → 130
- VRS → Petrol vapor VOC control
- ODS Rules → 2000


