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PIB Summaries 11 August 2025

  1. Integrated Disaster Preparedness Drill
  2. World Lion Day 2025


Context & Significance

  • Why important?
    • India is among the world’s most disaster-prone countries due to its geo-climatic diversity and population density.
    • Frequent natural and man-made disasters threaten lives, livelihoods, infrastructure,

 and development gains.

  • Drills like Exercise Suraksha Chakra operationalize preparedness, test coordination, and build community awareness before actual disasters occur.
  • Policy Alignment:
    • Supports the Sendai Framework (2015–2030) goal of reducing disaster risk and losses in lives, livelihoods, and health.
    • Fulfills the DM Act 2005 mandate for continuous preparedness and capacity building.

Relevance : GS 3(Disaster Management)

Hazard Profile of India

  • Seismic Risk:
    • 58.6% landmass prone to earthquakes (Zones IV & V).
  • Hydro-meteorological Risks:
    • 12% land prone to floods; 5,700 km of 7,516 km coastline prone to cyclones & tsunamis.
    • 68% cultivable land vulnerable to drought.
  • Geological Risks:
    • 15% landmass prone to landslides; Himalayan belt faces GLOFs & avalanches.
  • Urban & Industrial Risks:
    • 5,161 ULBs prone to urban flooding; high vulnerability to industrial, chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear hazards.

Legal & Institutional Framework

  • Disaster Management Act, 2005
    • Provides legal mandate, defines disaster & disaster management.
    • Establishes NDMA (PM as Chairperson), SDMAs, and DDMAs.
    • Creates NDRF & National Institute of Disaster Management (NIDM).
    • Mandates preparation of DM Plans at all levels.
    • Ensures funds: NDRMF, SDRMF, DDRMF for response & mitigation.
    • Empowers authorities for emergency resource requisition & SOP enforcement.
  • National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA)
    • Apex policy-making & coordination body.
    • Approves National DM Plan, issues guidelines for hazards, ensures inter-agency coordination.
    • Oversees DMEx (Disaster Management Exercises) and EOC activation.
  • National Disaster Response Force (NDRF)
    • 16 battalions (drawn from CAPFs) with specialized SAR, CBRN response, medical & engineering units.
    • International humanitarian missions: Japan (2011), Turkey-Syria (2023).
    • Works in synergy with SDRFs, local authorities, and armed forces.

Policy Evolution

  • National Policy on Disaster Management (2009): Shift from relief-centric to prevention, mitigation, and preparedness.
  • National DM Plan (2019): Aligned with Sendai Framework; focuses on dynamic, actionable, multi-hazard approach.
  • NDMA Guidelines: Hazard-specific and sector-specific SOPs for earthquakes, floods, cyclones, landslides, droughts, CBRN events, urban safety, mass-casualty incidents, etc.

Disaster Management Exercises (DMEx)

  • Purpose:
    • Validate DM plans, identify capability gaps, improve coordination, train responders, and raise public awareness.
  • Types:
    • Discussion-based (tabletop exercises, workshops).
    • Action-based (mock drills, field exercises).
  • Four-Phase Methodology:
    • Planning → Preparation → Conduct → Post-exercise review & integration into DM plans.
  • Stakeholder Guidelines:
    • Authorities: Regular, coordinated drills aligned with DM plans.
    • First Responders: Operational readiness & SOP compliance.
    • Local Bodies: Community mobilisation & logistical support.
    • NGOs/Volunteers: Awareness, victim simulation, communication link.
    • Media: Timely, factual dissemination; avoid panic.

Key Drills in 2025

  • UP Flood Mock Exercise (June 2025): Covered all 118 tehsils in 44 flood-prone districts.
  • Amarnath Yatra Mock Drill (June 2025): Tested pilgrim safety and emergency response on Pahalgam Axis.
  • Exercise Suraksha Chakra (Aug 2025):
    • First integrated multi-state, multi-agency earthquake drill in Delhi-NCR.
    • Covered 55 locations in 18 districts (Delhi, Haryana, UP).
    • Involved NDMA, Indian Army, SDMAs, DDMAs.
    • Tested SOPs in schools, hospitals, metros, residential complexes.
    • Activities: Evacuation sirens, medical simulations, structural safety checks.

International Linkages

  • Sendai Framework Priority Areas:
    • Understand disaster risk.
    • Strengthen governance to manage risk.
    • Invest in resilience.
    • Enhance preparedness for effective response.
  • India’s DMEx approach directly supports these priorities.

Challenges in Disaster Preparedness

  • Inconsistent frequency & quality of drills across states.
  • Limited community participation in urban areas.
  • Resource constraints at district/local levels.
  • Technology integration gaps in early warning & real-time coordination.
  • Over-reliance on post-disaster relief instead of sustained pre-disaster investments.

Way Forward

  • Regularization & Standardization: Annual multi-hazard drills at all governance levels.
  • Technology Use: GIS, AI-based risk mapping, real-time incident monitoring.
  • Capacity Building: Expand NDRF training to more local forces & community volunteers.
  • Integration into Development Plans: Mainstream DRR in urban planning, infrastructure, and education.
  • Inclusive Approach: Ensure participation of women, elderly, disabled, and children in drills.
  • Cross-Border Coordination: Joint exercises with neighbouring countries for shared hazards.


Context & Significance

  • World Lion Day:
    • Celebrated annually on 10th August to raise awareness about lion conservation globally.
    • Focuses on threats faced by lions (habitat loss, human-wildlife conflict, poaching) and efforts for their protection.
  • Gujarats special relevance:
    • Home to the Asiatic Lion (Panthera leo persica) – found nowhere else in the wild except the Saurashtra region.
    • Holds ecological, cultural, and tourism value; symbol of India’s successful single-species conservation.

Relevance : GS 3(Environment and Ecology)

Asiatic Lion – Ecological & Historical Background

  • Historical range: Once spread across SW Asia, Middle East, and parts of India; now restricted to Gujarat’s Gir and surrounding landscapes.
  • Ecological role: Apex predator; maintains prey population balance, indirectly sustaining grassland and forest ecosystems.
  • Legal protection:
    • Listed in Schedule I of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972.
    • IUCN Red List: Endangered.
    • CITES Appendix I – strictest trade prohibition.
  • Conservation milestones:
    • Project Lion launched to replicate the success of Project Tiger for Asiatic lions.
    • Population recovery from ~180 in 1974 to 891 in 2025.

2025 Lion Population Update

  • Population growth:
    • 2020: 674 lions.
    • 2025: 891 lions – 32% increase in 5 years.
  • Habitat range: 35,000 sq. km across 11 districts in Saurashtra (Greater Gir Landscape).
  • Key conservation success factors:
    • Community engagement.
    • Anti-poaching patrols & technology (GPS collars, drones).
    • Habitat restoration & water availability during summer.

Barda Wildlife Sanctuary – Emerging Second Home

  • Location & area: 192.31 sq. km, spans Porbandar & Devbhumi Dwarka districts.
  • Lion presence:
    • Natural migration in 2023.
    • Current count: 17 (6 adults, 11 cubs).
  • Biodiversity significance:
    • Habitat for leopards, hyenas, chinkara, migratory birds.
    • Potential to reduce over-dependence on Gir forest and disperse lion population.
  • Tourism potential:
    • Near the Dwarka–Porbandar–Somnath religious & heritage circuit.
    • Planned 248 Ha safari park – State Government has already allocated land.

2025 World Lion Day Celebration – Key Highlights

  • Venue: Barda Wildlife Sanctuary, Gujarat.
  • Simultaneous celebrations: Across 11 districts of Saurashtra.
  • Mass awareness initiative: Lakhs of students (school & college) joining virtually via satellite communication.
    • 2024 participation: 18.63 lakh students.
  • Major launches:
    • ₹180 crore wildlife conservation works.
    • Initiatives for habitat development, water points, prey base enhancement, anti-poaching infrastructure.

Conservation Challenges

  • Habitat pressure: Increasing lion population causing territorial spillover into human-dominated areas.
  • Human–wildlife conflict: Livestock predation, rare but occasional human attacks.
  • Genetic bottleneck: All wild Asiatic lions descend from a very small founder population – risk of inbreeding.
  • Single-site vulnerability: Entire global wild population in one state – vulnerable to disease outbreaks or natural disasters (e.g., canine distemper virus outbreak in 2018 killed ~23 lions).

Asiatic Lion

 

Taxonomy & Identification

  • Scientific name: Panthera leo persica.
  • Subspecies: Distinct from the African lion (Panthera leo leo).
  • Physical traits:
    • Slightly smaller than African lions.
    • Males have shorter, darker manes, with ears often visible.
    • Prominent belly fold (skin fold along belly).
    • Less developed tufts at tail tip compared to African lions.

Historical Range & Decline

  • Past distribution: Across SW Asia, Middle East, and India.
  • 19th century decline: Overhunting by royals and British officers; habitat loss due to agriculture.
  • By early 20th century: Confined to Gir Forest, Gujarat; only ~20 individuals survived by 1913.

Current Distribution

  • Wild population: Entirely in Gujarat’s Saurashtra region (Greater Gir Landscape).
  • Protected areas:
    • Gir National Park & Wildlife Sanctuary.
    • Girnar Wildlife Sanctuary.
    • Mitiyala Wildlife Sanctuary.
    • Pania Sanctuary.
    • Barda Wildlife Sanctuary (emerging second home).
  • Habitat range: ~35,000 sq. km across 11 districts.

Conservation Status

  • IUCN Red List: Endangered.
  • CITES: Appendix I (highest level of protection).
  • Wildlife Protection Act, 1972: Schedule I species.
  • Population:
    • 2020: 674 lions.
    • 2025: 891 lions (32% increase in 5 years).

Ecological Role

  • Apex predator of the Saurashtra ecosystem.
  • Regulates herbivore populations (chital, nilgai, sambar).
  • Helps maintain grassland–forest ecological balance.

Key Conservation Initiatives

  • Project Lion: Focus on habitat management, prey base augmentation, health monitoring.
  • Community participation: Maldhari pastoralists coexist with lions inside Gir.
  • Technology: GPS collars, camera traps, drones for monitoring.
  • Relocation efforts: Plans to establish second viable population to reduce single-site risk.

Threats

  • Single-site vulnerability: All wild lions in one geographical area – susceptible to epidemics/natural disasters.
  • Genetic bottleneck: Small founder population – risk of inbreeding depression.
  • Human–wildlife conflict: Livestock depredation, occasional attacks.
  • Habitat fragmentation: Roads, railways, industrial expansion in lion range.

August 2025
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