Content
- Poshan Maah
- Drone Economy Takes Flight
Poshan Maah
Why in News?
- The Government of India launched the 8th Poshan Maah (17 Sept–30 Sept 2025) along with the Swasth Nari Sashakt Parivar Abhiyan (SNSPA).
- Focus areas include obesity awareness, early childhood care & education (Poshan Bhi Padhai Bhi), infant & young child feeding (IYCF), and men’s involvement in nutrition.
Relevance
- GS2 (Governance, Welfare Schemes): Poshan Abhiyaan, PM POSHAN, ICDS, WCD Ministry.
- GS2 (Health & Social Justice): Malnutrition, anaemia, obesity.
- GS3 (Environment): EK Ped Maa Ke Naam, Poshan Vatikas.
Basics
- What is Poshan Abhiyaan?
- Launched: March 8, 2018, Jhunjhunu, Rajasthan.
- Full form: Prime Minister’s Overarching Scheme for Holistic Nourishment (POSHAN).
- Objective: Convergence-based mission targeting malnutrition in children (0–6 yrs), adolescent girls, pregnant & lactating women.
- Strategy: Jan Andolan (people’s movement) + technology-driven monitoring.
- Tools: Poshan Tracker App (since 2021), Anganwadi-led service delivery, awareness campaigns.
- What is Poshan Maah?
- Observed: September (annually).
- Purpose: Mass awareness + community mobilization on nutrition.
- Coincides with PM Modi’s birthday month, reflecting political symbolism and personal commitment.
- Complementary events: Poshan Pakhwada (March/April).
- 2025 Update (8th Poshan Maah)
- Launched: September 17, 2025, along with Swasth Nari Sashakt Parivar Abhiyan (SNSPA).
- Coverage: 14,02,248 Anganwadi Centres, 9.14 crore beneficiaries registered on Poshan Tracker.
- Financial Outlay: ₹1,30,794.90 crore (2021-26) for PM POSHAN Scheme.
Achievements & Data Insights
- NFHS-5 (2019–21):
- Stunting (U-5): ↓ from 38.4% → 35.5%.
- Underweight: ↓ from 35.8% → 32.1%.
- Wasting: ↓ from 21.0% → 19.3%.
- Iron & Folic Acid Supplementation (Q2 FY 2024-25): 15.4 crore children/adolescents covered.
- Institutional Coverage: Over 13 lakh Anganwadi Centres functioning, integrated with ICDS, NHM, SBM.
- Community engagement: Events like Poshan Vatika, nutrition literacy rallies, annaprashan ceremonies.

Objectives of POSHAN Abhiyaan
- Reduce stunting, undernutrition, and low birth weight (0–6 yrs).
- Reduce anaemia in children (6–59 months), adolescent girls, and women (15–49 yrs).
- Focus on first 1000 days (conception to 2 yrs) to break intergenerational malnutrition.
- Integrate nutrition + health + WASH (water, sanitation, hygiene) + early education.
- Promote exclusive breastfeeding, dietary diversity, complementary feeding.
Themes of 8th Poshan Maah (2025)
- Obesity Awareness: Reduce sugar & oil consumption.
- PM’s call: “Use 10% less oil in cooking.”
- Context: Rising obesity epidemic (1 in 3 projected to be obese in future).
- Early Childhood Care & Education (ECCE) / Poshan Bhi Padhai Bhi:
- Linked to NEP 2020.
- Anganwadi Centres → preschool hubs integrating nutrition + learning.
- EK Ped Maa Ke Naam:
- Tree plantation drive linking environmental sustainability with nutrition.
- Infant & Young Child Feeding (IYCF):
- Promotion of breastfeeding & optimal feeding practices in 0–2 yrs.
- Men’s Involvement in Nutrition:
- Encourage male caregiving roles → breaking stereotype of nutrition as only women’s duty.
Technology: Poshan Tracker App
- Launched: March 1, 2021, Ministry of Women & Child Development.
- Functions:
- Real-time monitoring of growth (stunting, wasting, underweight).
- Beneficiary-focused data for pregnant women, children, lactating mothers.
- Performance tracking of Anganwadi workers.
- Scale: 14 lakh Anganwadis + 9.14 crore beneficiaries registered.
- Role: Strengthens e-governance in nutrition delivery.
PM POSHAN Scheme
- Successor of Mid-Day Meal Scheme (under NFSA, 2013).
- Coverage: Classes I–VIII, Government & aided schools.
- Beneficiaries: 11.80 crore children, across 11.20 lakh schools.
- Financials:
- ₹1.3 lakh crore outlay (2021–26).
- 9.5% hike in material cost (2025) → additional ₹954 crore burden.
- Provisions:
- Food grains @ NFSA rates (100g/child/day for primary, 150g for upper primary).
- Cooking cost (₹4.97 primary, ₹7.45 upper primary per child/day).
- Coverage extended to Balvatika (pre-primary).
- Summer meals in drought/disaster zones.
Innovative Awareness Tools
- Children Nutrition Park (Ekta Nagar, Gujarat):
- Edutainment model → Nutri Train, interactive stations, nutrition-themed games.
- Focus: Linking play, fun, and healthy habits.
- Poshan Pakhwada (April 2025):
- Focused on first 1000 days, maternal nutrition, breastfeeding, and indigenous diets.
Significance & Relevance
- Public Health: Tackles India’s “triple burden of malnutrition” – undernutrition, micronutrient deficiencies, and obesity.
- Women Empowerment: Nutrition linked to Swasth Nari, Sashakt Parivar → healthier women = empowered families.
- Economic Impact: Improved nutrition = better learning outcomes, higher productivity, reduced health burden.
- Global Alignment: Supports SDG 2 (Zero Hunger) & SDG 3 (Good Health & Well-being).
- Governance Innovation: Combines community mobilization + digital monitoring + inter-ministerial convergence.
Challenges
- Persisting regional disparities (e.g., high stunting in Bihar, Jharkhand, UP).
- Implementation gaps in Anganwadi services (infrastructure, training, workloads).
- Gender & social factors: Early marriage, poverty, intra-household food distribution bias.
- Obesity transition: While tackling undernutrition, India faces rising lifestyle-related obesity.
- Data quality: Poshan Tracker needs robust validation; NFHS periodicity limits timely tracking.
Way Forward
- Strengthen Anganwadi infrastructure (Saksham Anganwadi model).
- Scale-up Poshan Vatikas & kitchen gardens for local nutrition security.
- Focus on tribal & high-burden districts with tailored interventions.
- Deepen male participation in nutrition & caregiving.
- Regular mid-course evaluations using real-time Poshan Tracker data.
- Link nutrition with climate resilience (millets, local crops).
Drone Economy Takes Flight
Why in News?
- 56th GST Council Meeting (3rd Sept 2025):
- GST on drones (with/without cameras) cut from 18% / 28% → uniform 5%.
- Objective: Encourage domestic drone manufacturing, reduce classification disputes, boost adoption across agriculture, defence, logistics, mining, and disaster management.
- Significance: Key push towards Make in India, Atmanirbhar Bharat, and India’s Drone Hub 2030 vision.
Relevance
- GS2 (Governance): Policy reforms, DigitalSky platform, Drone Rules 2021.
- GS3 (Economy, Tech, Defence): GST reform, Make in India, PLI scheme, defence modernisation.
- GS1 (Society): Women empowerment via Namo Drone Didi.

From Basics
- What are drones?
- Drones = Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) controlled remotely or autonomously.
- Used in surveillance, agriculture, mapping, logistics, defence, disaster relief.
- Drone Policy Ecosystem in India:
- Drone Rules, 2021: Liberalised norms, eased permissions.
- DigitalSky Platform: Single-window online approvals for flying, registration, tracking.
- PLI Scheme (2021): ₹120 crore outlay for drones/components (boost indigenous manufacturing).
- Drone Shakti (Budget 2022-23): Promotes Drone-as-a-Service (DrAAS) startups.
- Skill Development: DGCA-approved training institutes for drone pilots/operators.
- Awareness: Events like Bharat Drone Mahotsav showcase innovations.
- Flagship Government Schemes Using Drones:
- Namo Drone Didi (2023): Women SHGs trained to provide agri-drone services.
- SVAMITVA Scheme: Drone-based land mapping in rural India.
- Defence Uses: Terrier Cyber Quest 2025, Army and DRDO initiatives for ISR & combat drones.

Overview
GST Reform: Uniform 5%
- Before: 18% (normal drones) / 28% (camera-fitted drones).
- Now: 5% for all drones – eliminates classification disputes.
- Policy Certainty: Reduces litigation, creates a predictable tax regime.
- Affordability: Makes drones cheaper → accelerates adoption.
Sectoral Impact
- Agriculture
- Precision farming, crop monitoring, pesticide/fertilizer spraying.
- Reduces input costs, boosts productivity.
- Namo Drone Didi → gender empowerment + agri-tech penetration.
- Petroleum & Mining
- Inspection of pipelines, rigs, mining sites.
- Enhances safety + efficiency, reduces human risk.
- Infrastructure & Urban Planning
- Land surveying, GIS mapping, smart city projects.
- Faster, accurate project execution.
- Logistics & E-commerce
- Last-mile delivery (medicine, essential goods).
- Potential to revolutionize rural connectivity.
- Defence & Security
- Border surveillance, intelligence gathering, counter-terror ops.
- Strategic edge in modern warfare.
- Disaster Management
- Search & rescue, flood mapping, relief supply drops.
- Crucial for climate-related emergencies.
Economic & Employment Impact
- Domestic Drone Market Growth: GST cut boosts affordability → larger customer base.
- Job Creation:
- Manufacturing/Assembly (hardware components, electronics).
- Software/Data Analytics (AI, image processing, GIS).
- Field Operations/Maintenance (pilots, technicians).
- Startup Ecosystem: Drone-as-a-Service (DaaS) and agri-tech startups to benefit.
Strategic Significance
- Global Drone Hub by 2030: Policy shift aligns with India’s ambition to rival US/China in drone economy.
- Make in India push: Reduced GST complements PLI scheme for domestic manufacturing.
- Defence Preparedness: Enhances indigenous ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance) capabilities.
- Social Empowerment: Drones for SHGs and rural entrepreneurs bridge digital & gender divides.
Challenges Ahead
- Regulatory Issues: Ensuring safe airspace integration with civil aviation.
- Cybersecurity Risks: Potential misuse for espionage/terror.
- Skilling Gap: Need for trained drone pilots, technicians, data analysts.
- Infrastructure: Charging, repair, and maintenance hubs lacking in rural areas.
- Market Penetration: High initial costs despite tax cut may deter small farmers/SHGs.
Way Forward
- Strengthen Drone Testing & Certification ecosystem (National Test House role).
- Scale-up Drone Didi program nationwide.
- Promote Drone-as-a-Service to lower upfront costs for farmers/MSMEs.
- Integrate drones with AI, IoT, and GIS for smart applications.
- Develop drone corridors & dedicated airspace management systems.
- Incentivize export-oriented manufacturing to tap global markets.