The Hindu — UPSC Analysis
Tuesday, 09 June 2026
Bengaluru City Edition · Curated for Prelims & Mains | GS I · II · III · IV
📋 Today's Topics
- SIR of electoral rolls — the Supreme Court verdictGS2
- India–Oman CEPA: a new gateway for exportsGS2 · GS3
- Great Nicobar Island Development ProjectGS3 · GS2
- SIPRI Yearbook 2026: India's nuclear arsenalGS3 · GS2
- The trust deficit in India–Bangladesh tiesGS2
- Delimitation Bill revival & anti-defectionGS2
- Karnataka's minimum wage notificationGS2 · GS3
- PMUY Ujjwala subsidy cut & LPG under-recoveriesGS3 · GS2
- Zojila Tunnel — all-weather Kashmir–Ladakh linkGS3 · GS1
- Solar ALMM List-II domestic cell mandateGS3
- Houthi Red Sea ban & the Strait of HormuzGS2 · GS1
- Science: quantum randomness & IMI-resistant mustardGS3
- Quick Prelims Revision (MCQ Bank)Prelims
- FAQsRevision
SIR of electoral rolls — the Supreme Court verdict
Context
The Supreme Court's judgment of May 27, 2026 on the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls (arising from Bihar) upheld the Election Commission of India's (ECI) actions, raising — per former Lok Sabha Secretary-General P.D.T. Achary — serious constitutional concerns about the ECI's powers in preparing and revising electoral rolls and the rights of citizens to be on those rolls.
Background & Key Facts
- The verdict: In a 124-page judgment, the Court rejected every point raised by petitioners against the SIR and accepted the ECI's arguments, further elucidating them.
- Constitutional scheme: Article 325 — one general electoral roll per constituency; no exclusion solely on religion, race, caste or sex. Article 326 — elections to Lok Sabha and Assemblies on adult suffrage (every citizen 18+). Article 327 — Parliament makes laws on all aspects of elections including roll preparation. Article 324 — confers power to prepare rolls and conduct elections on the ECI.
- Statutory basis: Roll preparation/revision is governed by the Representation of the People (RP) Act, 1950 and the Registration of Electors Rules, 1960. Section 21 of the RP Act covers preparation and revision.
- Two kinds of revision: Under Section 21(2) read with Rule 25, revision before a general/by-election can be summary or intensive. Section 21(3) allows a special revision of any constituency or part of a constituency at any time, after recording reasons.
- Where SIR was done: SIR was carried out in Bihar, Tamil Nadu, Kerala and West Bengal a few months before Assembly elections, reportedly deleting millions of voters without effective redress.
Wrong provision argument: The author contends an intensive revision is possible only under Section 21(2) — and only when elections are NOT due (because of the time it takes). Section 21(3) permits only a special revision, limited to a constituency or part of one, not a whole State. Doing an intensive revision just before polls under 21(3) deviates from the statutory scheme.
Citizenship determination: The ECI announced a list of documents to prove citizenship and asked voters to produce them — arguably usurping the role of the Ministry of Home Affairs, which administers citizenship law. The ECI's role is to verify documents, not to determine citizenship.
Indictment of the past: The judgment's reference to "cumulative inaccuracies" and "structural deficiencies" that "pervaded the entire roll" casts a shadow over decades of ECI roll preparation — arguably going further than needed.
- Keep citizenship determination with the MHA; confine the ECI to verification, with clear documentary standards and time for redress.
- Conduct intensive revisions only outside the immediate pre-election window, per the statutory scheme.
- Ensure due-process safeguards (notice, hearing, appeal) before any deletion to protect the franchise under Article 326.
Articles 324–327 RP Act 1950 Registration of Electors Rules 1960 Adult suffrage
MCQ: Electoral rolls & constitutional provisions
Consider the following statements regarding electoral rolls in India:
- Article 326 provides that elections to the Lok Sabha and State Legislative Assemblies shall be on the basis of adult suffrage.
- The preparation and revision of electoral rolls is governed by the Representation of the People Act, 1950.
- The power to determine the citizenship of an individual is vested in the Election Commission of India.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
India–Oman CEPA: a new gateway for exports
Context
The India–Oman Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) came into force on June 1, 2026, modernising one of the world's oldest trading relationships and deepening trade, investment and economic cooperation between the two countries.
Background & Key Facts
- Trade volume: Bilateral trade grew from $8.94 billion (FY2023-24) to $11.18 billion (FY2025-26); India is among Oman's top suppliers.
- Market access: Oman offers duty-free access on 98.08% of its tariff lines, covering 99.38% of India's exports by value (up from just 15.33% at zero duty under the earlier MFN regime).
- Sector gains: Textiles/apparel (India already 43% of woven and 31% of knitted apparel imports; removal of 5% tariff aids competitiveness vs China); chemicals (~39% of Oman's inorganic chemical imports); engineering goods (machinery, automotives — India's share only 5% and 2%); pharmaceuticals (~10% share; gains via regulatory facilitation/fast-track approvals).
- Protected sectors: Dairy, cereals, edible oils and several agricultural commodities kept outside concessions to protect domestic producers.
- Trade facilitation: Oman accepts India's Export Inspection Council (EIC) certificates and recognises NPOP (organic) and halal certification; dedicated SPS and TBT provisions; fast-track customs for perishables.
- Services & mobility: Bilateral services trade $863 million in 2024 (India surplus ~$447 million); binding commitments in accounting, engineering, IT, healthcare, education, consulting; higher quotas for intra-corporate transferees; provisions for AYUSH/traditional medicine.
- Strategic location: Oman's ports — Sohar, Duqm and Salalah — at the crossroads of the Gulf, Indian Ocean and East Africa; a gateway to the wider GCC and East African economies. Located near the Strait of Hormuz.
- FTA momentum: Follows agreements with the UAE, Australia, EFTA, UK, New Zealand and the EU.
From tariffs to comprehensive partnerships: The CEPA shows India's trade policy evolving to cover goods, services, investment, mobility and regulatory cooperation.
Energy & strategic value: Oman is central to India's energy security and offers a logistics gateway to the Gulf and East Africa.
Implementation is the test: Benefits depend on businesses actively utilising the agreement — from Tamil Nadu textiles and Gujarat gems to Telangana pharma and AP/Kerala seafood.
- Build exporter awareness and utilisation support to convert preferential access into actual exports.
- Leverage Omani ports as transshipment and re-export hubs into GCC and East Africa.
- Monitor sensitive-sector carve-outs to safeguard domestic farmers and dairy.
CEPA vs CECA vs FTA MFN treatment SPS & TBT (WTO) Duqm / Salalah ports
MCQ: Trade agreements & Oman
Consider the following statements about the India–Oman Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA):
- It came into force in 2026 and provides duty-free access for the bulk of India's exports to Oman.
- Sensitive sectors such as dairy and edible oils have been kept outside tariff concessions.
- Oman lies at the crossroads of the Gulf, the Indian Ocean and East Africa and hosts the ports of Sohar, Duqm and Salalah.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
Great Nicobar Island Development Project
Context
The ballooning Great Nicobar Island development — now estimated at ₹91,000 crore — is under scrutiny: a Hindu editorial questions its thin "strategic" record, even as Defence Ministry officials defend a ~₹13,000 crore dual-use airport as a strategic investment strengthening maritime security and India's Indo-Pacific presence.
Background & Key Facts
- Four components: An International Container Transshipment Port (ICTP) at Galathea Bay, a joint-user greenfield airport & Naval Air Station, a modern township, and a power plant.
- Location: Great Nicobar sits at the southern tip of the Andaman & Nicobar archipelago, ~40 km from the Six Degree Channel — one of the world's busiest sea routes connecting the Gulf of Aden and the Malacca Strait.
- Strategic claim: The government says it would cut dependence on foreign transshipment ports and strengthen monitoring of Sea Lanes of Communication (SLOCs); the airport (to be operated by the Navy) would boost maritime domain awareness, logistics and rapid deployment, plus tourism.
- Funding rebuke: The Public Investment Board (PIB) found in August 2024 that the port "lacked strategic objectives" — the "strategic" label arriving later from the Ministry of Defence. The PPPAC cleared the proposal but refused ₹12,230 crore in Viability Gap Funding, telling the Ports Ministry to fund it from its own budget.
- Ecology: The project would clear vast tracts of (largely primary) tropical rainforest, disturb leatherback turtle nesting beaches and the habitat of the endemic Nicobar megapode; scientists warn the loss would be irreversible and irreplaceable by afforestation elsewhere.
- Tribal rights: Tribal councils say consent was secured without full disclosure and seek protection of ancestral land and post-2004-tsunami resettlement promises.
- Government assurance: Officials say only 166.1 sq km is earmarked for development, with 81%+ remaining under forests, biosphere reserves, national parks and tribal zones; assessments involved the Zoological Survey of India, Wildlife Institute of India and the Salim Ali Centre.
Commercial vs strategic: If the port cannot stand on commercial returns and its real purpose is military, the case for a commercial transshipment hub weakens — the rationale appears "retrofitted to a balance sheet".
Irreversible ecological cost: The exchequer can never reimburse the loss of primary rainforest and unique island biodiversity.
Consent & transparency: The quarrel is with scale, secrecy and sequence — the remedy is to release the High-Powered Committee report in full and account openly for true costs.
- Full transparency: release the High-Powered Committee report and disclose true public costs.
- Genuine Free, Prior and Informed Consent of tribal councils with honouring of resettlement commitments.
- Weigh strategic gains against irreversible ecological loss; consider scale and phasing the island can absorb.
Six Degree Channel Nicobar megapode Leatherback turtle PIB & PPPAC / VGF
MCQ: Great Nicobar & its geography/ecology
Consider the following statements:
- The proposed transshipment port at Great Nicobar is located at Galathea Bay.
- The Six Degree Channel separates Great Nicobar from the Indonesian island of Sumatra.
- The Nicobar megapode is a bird species endemic to the Nicobar Islands.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
- 1 and 2 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
SIPRI Yearbook 2026: India's nuclear arsenal
Context
The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) Yearbook 2026, released on Monday, estimates India modestly expanded its nuclear arsenal in 2025 and continued developing new delivery systems.
Background & Key Facts
- India's stockpile: Increased to ~190 warheads by early 2026 (from ~180 in 2025).
- Modernisation: Increasingly focused on longer-range weapons capable of reaching across China, while addressing the rivalry with Pakistan.
- Operation Sindoor: SIPRI described the May 2025 India–Pakistan confrontation as an "unusually severe military crisis"; India struck Pakistani air and missile bases likely to have nuclear-related roles, though both sides took measures to prevent escalation. The crisis saw cyberoperations integrated into active military conflict for the first time in the region.
- Military spending: India was the world's 5th-largest military spender in 2025 at $92.1 billion (up 8.9% YoY), behind the US, China, Russia and Germany.
- Arms imports: India was the world's 2nd-largest importer of major arms in 2021-25 (8.2% of global imports). The five largest importers (Ukraine, India, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Pakistan) together accounted for 35% of global imports.
- Global picture: All nine nuclear-armed states (US, Russia, UK, France, China, India, Pakistan, North Korea, Israel) continued to modernise. ~12,187 nuclear warheads existed at the start of 2026, of which ~9,745 were in military stockpiles for potential use.
Two-front deterrence: India's shift toward longer-range systems reflects China-centric deterrence even as Pakistan remains a concern.
New domains of warfare: The first integration of cyberoperations into active conflict underscores the evolving nature of deterrence in South Asia.
Global modernisation trend: A worldwide turn back toward nuclear weapons as instruments of national power runs against the disarmament agenda.
- Maintain credible minimum deterrence and No-First-Use posture while modernising delivery systems.
- Strengthen crisis-management and de-escalation channels with both Pakistan and China.
- Build cyber-resilience and norms for new domains of conflict.
SIPRI Nine nuclear-armed states Credible Minimum Deterrence Operation Sindoor
MCQ: SIPRI & global armaments
Consider the following statements:
- SIPRI, which publishes an annual Yearbook on armaments and disarmament, is headquartered in Sweden.
- According to SIPRI 2026, India was the world's largest importer of major arms during 2021–25.
- There are nine states that possess nuclear weapons, including Israel and North Korea.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
- 1 and 2 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
The trust deficit in India–Bangladesh ties
Context
More than 100 days after the Tarique Rahman (BNP) government took charge in Bangladesh, India–Bangladesh relations remain broadly stuck, as analysed by Kallol Bhattacherjee — with Dhaka seeking less rhetoric on illegal immigration and more focus on visa restoration and the renewal of the 1996 Ganga Water Treaty.
Background & Key Facts
- India's outreach: EAM S. Jaishankar visited Dhaka on Dec 31, 2025 to condole the passing of Khaleda Zia; Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri carried PM Modi's invitation, and Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla attended Rahman's Feb 17 swearing-in.
- Dhaka's grievances: The BNP feels India should reverse "retributory" interim-era steps — restart transshipment for Bangladeshi goods, fully restore visa services (business/medical), and end restrictive market access. None implemented so far, per Dhaka.
- "Illegal immigration" rhetoric: Aggressive use of the term in official communication following BJP's wins in West Bengal and Assam has generated "a sense of betrayal" in Dhaka, despite assurances that State-election language would not reflect foreign policy.
- Ganga Water Treaty: The 30-year-old 1996 treaty is up for renewal by December 31, 2026. River expert Ainun Nishat warns a delay would imperil the Ganges–Kobadak irrigation project, hurting western and central Bangladesh's sowing seasons.
- China tilt: Rahman is considering visits to Malaysia and China in late June, sensing the window with India is not opening.
- Domestic stress: Bangladesh faces its worst measles outbreak (600+ infant deaths), rising sexual violence, and an energy crisis worsened by the West Asia war; Sheikh Hasina's Awami League is mobilising despite a ban.
Mutual responsibility: Repairing ties is incumbent on both capitals; Bangladesh's relations with China, the US and others have prospered since August 2024 while ties with India remain broken.
Water as leverage and need: Predictable Padma (Ganga) flows are essential for Bangladesh's agriculture; without assurance, its other plans falter beyond 2026.
Domestic-foreign linkage: Indian electoral rhetoric on immigration directly complicates bilateral diplomacy.
- Decouple State-election rhetoric from foreign policy and tone down divisive framing.
- Prioritise renewal of the 1996 Ganga Water Treaty before the December 31, 2026 deadline.
- Restore visa services and transshipment as confidence-building measures to stabilise ties.
1996 Ganga Water Treaty Farakka Barrage Ganges–Kobadak project BNP / Awami League
MCQ: India–Bangladesh water cooperation
With reference to the 1996 Ganga Water Treaty between India and Bangladesh, consider the following statements:
- It governs the sharing of Ganga waters at the Farakka Barrage.
- It was signed for a period of 30 years.
- It also covers the sharing of the waters of the Teesta river.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
Delimitation Bill revival & anti-defection
Context
The rebellion in the Trinamool Congress's parliamentary party has revived government hopes of bringing the Delimitation Bill as early as the Monsoon Session (likely from mid-July). The Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026 — seeking to redraw electoral boundaries based on the 2011 Census — was defeated in April 2026 after falling short of the required two-thirds majority.
Background & Key Facts
- The defeated Bill: The Delimitation Bill and the bundled Women's Reservation Amendment Bill both lapsed in April after missing the two-thirds majority.
- Amendment threshold: A constitutional amendment of this nature requires a special majority in each House.
- Anti-defection link: Trinamool MP Kakoli Ghosh Dastidar claimed the support of 20 of the party's Lok Sabha MPs — "one more than required to split the party as per the anti-defection law" (i.e., a two-thirds split to claim a merger/exemption under the Tenth Schedule).
- Precedents cited: Splits in the Shiv Sena and NCP, and AAP Rajya Sabha MPs joining the NDA, are seen as templates.
- This time, separate Acts: The government will not bundle the Delimitation Bill with the Women's Reservation amendments and may revise provisions if enough parties come on board (in touch with DMK and SP).
Federalism & representation: Delimitation based on the 2011 Census raises fears among southern States of losing seats relative to populous northern States — a core federal tension.
Anti-defection arithmetic: The Tenth Schedule permits a faction to escape disqualification only if two-thirds of the legislature party agree — driving the "20 MPs" calculus.
Special majority politics: Constitutional amendments depend on cross-party consensus; shifting alliances directly affect their fate.
- Build broad consensus on delimitation to address inter-State equity concerns transparently.
- Strengthen the Tenth Schedule against engineered splits while respecting genuine dissent.
- Delink major reforms so each is debated on its own merits.
Tenth Schedule Delimitation Commission Special majority (Art. 368) Article 82 / freeze on seats
MCQ: Anti-defection & delimitation
Consider the following statements:
- Under the Tenth Schedule, a split in a legislature party is protected from disqualification only if at least two-thirds of its members agree.
- Delimitation of Lok Sabha constituencies based on population requires a constitutional amendment.
- The total number of Lok Sabha seats has been frozen on the basis of the 1971 Census until a specified future date.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
Karnataka's minimum wage notification
Context
In May 2026, the Karnataka government notified minimum wages, equalising wages across 81 sectors of employment with an average wage increase of 60% over existing levels — described as a step toward equitable growth.
Background & Key Facts
- New wage floors: Unskilled workers — ₹23,376/month in Bengaluru and ₹19,318/month in small towns and rural areas (a >₹4,000 gap reflecting urban cost of living).
- Supreme Court direction: The Labour Minister said the revision followed SC directions; the method for minimum-wage determination is elaborately laid out and uniformly applicable nationwide, yet wide inter-State variation reflects employer power and lax labour departments.
- Employer arguments rebutted: Claims that higher wages fuel inflation or drive out industry are contested — wages' share in total cost is declining, and investment depends on infrastructure, skilled workforce and industrial peace, not wages alone.
- Excluded sectors: Four major sectors are left out — garment work, beedi rolling, agarbathi making and plantation work — employing many workers, mostly women, whose wages could fall to roughly half of comparable workers in the 81 covered sectors.
- Beedi rolling concern: Home-based work where children share space with mothers, risking inter-generational poverty traps.
- VDA gap: The Variable Dearness Allowance (meant to protect real wages against inflation between five-yearly revisions) fully protects only the lowest unskilled categories; higher (semi-skilled/skilled) categories get only partial protection, and points need revision with each wage revision.
Wages and dignity: Recent NCR/UP garment-worker protests highlight worker poverty and the role of decent wages in industrial peace.
Gendered exclusion: Leaving out female-dominated, home-based sectors entrenches gender wage gaps; a decent piece-rate for beedi rolling could free children from helping.
Inflation control: Cutting the consumption of the poorest is not the route to control inflation; GST adjustment is an alternative.
- Bring the four excluded sectors under the notification, with decent piece-rates for home-based work.
- Fix the VDA formula so real wages are protected across all skill categories.
- Treat "profits without super-exploitation" as the basis of genuine ease of doing business.
Minimum Wages / Code on Wages Variable Dearness Allowance Floor wage
MCQ: Minimum wages & VDA
Consider the following statements:
- The Variable Dearness Allowance is designed to protect real wages against inflation between successive wage fixations.
- Minimum wage rates in India are uniform across all States as they are fixed solely by the Central government.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
- 1 only
- 2 only
- Both 1 and 2
- Neither 1 nor 2
PMUY Ujjwala subsidy cut & LPG under-recoveries
Context
Amid global LPG supply pressure from the West Asia conflict, the Centre reduced the number of subsidised refills under the Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY) from nine to four cylinders a year. Domestic LPG prices were raised by ₹29 on Sunday (cumulative ₹89 across two revisions since the conflict began).
Background & Key Facts
- Subsidy structure: The government provides a targeted subsidy of ₹300 per cylinder; refills under subsidy cut from nine to four a year.
- Prices: A 14.2-kg domestic cylinder costs ₹942 in Delhi; with the ₹300 PMUY subsidy, beneficiaries pay ₹642.
- "Indirect subsidy" argument: Officials say a cylinder that should cost ~₹1,600 (international pricing) is sold at ₹942 — itself an indirect subsidy; PMUY consumers get ₹300 more (≈₹1,000 effective subsidy). Average PMUY consumption is "about four to five cylinders a year".
- Discounts: PMUY cylinder at ₹642 is at a 60% discount to international prices; non-PMUY at ₹942 a 45% discount.
- Coverage: PMUY has provided ~10.55 crore LPG connections as of May 26, 2026.
- Fuel under-recoveries: Oil marketing companies incur under-recoveries of ₹30/litre on diesel and ₹6/litre on petrol (Delhi diesel at ₹95.2/litre); West Asia conflict has driven oil prices up (~4% on the day; Brent ~$94.38/barrel).
Welfare under fiscal stress: Cutting subsidised refills shifts cost to vulnerable PMUY households just as energy prices rise, risking a return to dirtier fuels.
Energy security: Heavy import dependence and the Strait of Hormuz situation expose India to supply and price shocks.
OMC balance sheets: Large under-recoveries on diesel/petrol/LPG strain public-sector oil firms and may eventually pass through to consumers.
- Protect the poorest through targeted, DBT-based LPG support even under fiscal pressure.
- Diversify crude/LPG sourcing and build strategic reserves to cushion West Asia shocks.
- Accelerate clean-cooking alternatives (PNG, biogas, solar) to reduce import dependence.
PMUY Under-recovery Brent crude / Strait of Hormuz Direct Benefit Transfer
MCQ: PMUY & petroleum pricing
Consider the following statements:
- The Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana provides LPG connections targeted at women from poor households.
- "Under-recovery" refers to the difference between the cost of supplying a fuel and the price at which oil marketing companies sell it.
- Petrol and diesel prices in India are formally fixed by the Petroleum Ministry on a daily basis.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
Zojila Tunnel — all-weather Kashmir–Ladakh link
Context
India's strategic, all-weather Zojila Tunnel — in volatile seismic Zone IV — saw its final breakthrough on June 9, with Union Road Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari overseeing the final blasting from the Kargil side.
Background & Key Facts
- Dimensions: 13.14 km long, cutting through the Himalayas at an altitude of 11,578 feet, connecting the Kashmir valley with Ladakh's Kargil — the world's longest single-tube bi-directional road tunnel at over 11,500 feet.
- Bypasses Zojila Pass: The weather-dependent Zojila Pass is prone to landslides and shooting stones and closes in winter due to snow.
- Travel time: Falls from three hours to 20 minutes between Ganderbal (Kashmir) and Kargil (Ladakh's Drass district).
- Strategic value: Will for the first time allow security forces to ferry goods, machines and stocks to high-altitude Ladakh bases during peak winter (earlier, winter stocks for LAC soldiers had to be built up in autumn).
- Cost & builder: Over ₹6,800 crore; built by Megha Engineering and Infrastructures Ltd. (MEIL), which began work in 2020; a 7.57-metre-high horseshoe-shaped single-tube two-lane tunnel.
Strategic resilience: All-weather connectivity to Ladakh is vital for logistics and rapid deployment along the LAC.
Engineering in a hostile environment: Construction in seismic Zone IV at extreme altitude is among India's most complex transport works.
Economic integration: Year-round access supports mobility, tourism and the economic integration of Ladakh.
- Pair the tunnel with disaster-resilient approach roads and avalanche protection.
- Integrate with the broader Himalayan connectivity grid (Zoji La–Drass–Kargil–Leh).
- Ensure ecological safeguards in fragile high-altitude zones.
Zojila Pass Seismic zones of India Ganderbal & Drass Line of Actual Control
MCQ: Zojila Tunnel & geography
Consider the following statements about the Zojila Tunnel:
- It provides all-weather connectivity between the Kashmir valley and Ladakh, bypassing the Zojila Pass.
- It is located in a low-seismicity zone of the Himalayas.
- It connects Ganderbal district in Kashmir with the Drass area of Ladakh's Kargil.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
- 1 and 2 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
Solar ALMM List-II domestic cell mandate
Context
Solar manufacturers and developers from Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu approached the Karnataka High Court to defer a rule (effective June 1, 2026) requiring most new solar projects to use only domestically made cells, citing a wide gap between Indian and international cell prices.
Background & Key Facts
- The mandate: The Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) enforces ALMM List-II (Approved List of Models and Manufacturers — domestic solar cells) for projects commissioned on or after June 1, 2026.
- Price gap: ALMM List-II cells sell at ~₹13/watt against an imported price of ~₹5/watt.
- ALMM structure: ALMM-1 lists ~130 module manufacturers; ALMM-2 is a smaller group of ~17 companies making the cells. Only six of the 17 carry "high-efficiency" cells (Emmvee, Premier Energies, Mundra Solar PV, Tata Power Renewable, Waaree and Renewsys, etc.).
- Capacity gap: Installed solar capacity has crossed 144 GW (growing ~40% a year) and module-assembly capacity ~210 GW, but upstream cell manufacturing was only ~27 GW at end-2025 (Mercom). Domestic cells meet just 25–30% of demand (CareEdge), leaving India reliant on imports, mainly from China.
- Force majeure parallel: The petitioners note the Finance Ministry classified the West Asia conflict as force majeure (allowing deadline extensions to cell makers) and argue the same relief should apply to developers.
- MNRE response: Refused a blanket extension (May 25 order), citing "policy stability" for investor confidence; offered case-by-case relief and constituted a four-member expert committee to vet time-extension applications.
Atmanirbharta vs cost: Domestic-content rules build manufacturing resilience and reduce China dependence but raise project costs in the short run.
Structural bottleneck: The mismatch between large module-assembly capacity and small cell capacity is the core constraint; premiums may concentrate gains in a few manufacturers, several of whom also received PLI support.
Energy-transition pace: Enforcing the rule before adequate domestic cell supply risks slowing solar deployment and missing renewable targets.
- Phase the ALMM List-II mandate to match the ramp-up of domestic cell capacity.
- Use PLI and incentives to expand high-efficiency cell manufacturing and competition.
- Provide transparent, time-bound transitional relief to developers facing genuine supply gaps.
ALMM (MNRE) Production-Linked Incentive Solar cell vs module Force majeure
MCQ: Solar manufacturing & ALMM
Consider the following statements:
- The Approved List of Models and Manufacturers (ALMM) is maintained by the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy.
- In the solar value chain, cells are assembled into modules (panels).
- India's solar cell manufacturing capacity currently exceeds its module-assembly capacity.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
Houthi Red Sea ban & the Strait of Hormuz
Context
Iran-aligned Houthi rebels in Yemen announced a missile attack on Israel and declared a "complete and total ban" on Israeli maritime navigation in the Red Sea — raising the spectre of major disruption on a key shipping route — as Israel and Iran traded fire and the Strait of Hormuz remained blockaded by Iran.
Background & Key Facts
- Red Sea ban: The Houthis declared all "enemy movements" legitimate military targets; during the earlier Israel–Hamas war their attacks forced many companies into a long detour around southern Africa.
- Trade significance: About $1 trillion of goods passed through the Red Sea each year before the war.
- Two chokepoints: The Red Sea route (via Bab-el-Mandeb and the Suez Canal) and the Strait of Hormuz (gateway to the Gulf's energy exporters) — the latter remains blockaded by Iran.
- Axis of Resistance: The Houthis and Lebanon-based Hezbollah are part of the pro-Iran grouping opposed to Israel and the US. The Houthis joined the war in March.
- Wider conflict: Israel and Iran traded strikes (first since the April ceasefire); Iran said it was halting offensive operations while warning of "crushing" measures; oil prices rose ~4%, with Brent at ~$94.38/barrel.
Double chokepoint squeeze: Simultaneous disruption at the Red Sea and Strait of Hormuz threatens both trade and energy security for import-dependent economies like India.
Shipping & inflation: Detours around Africa raise freight costs and delivery times, feeding into global inflation and India's import bill.
Energy vulnerability: A large share of India's crude and LPG transits these waters — directly linking the conflict to domestic fuel prices and under-recoveries.
- Diversify energy sourcing and sea routes; build strategic petroleum and LPG reserves.
- Support multilateral efforts to keep sea lanes open and de-escalate the conflict.
- Strengthen the Indian Navy's maritime domain awareness and convoy/escort capability in the region.
Bab-el-Mandeb Strait of Hormuz Suez Canal Axis of Resistance
MCQ: Maritime chokepoints
Consider the following pairs of strait/channel and the water bodies they connect:
- Strait of Hormuz — Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman
- Bab-el-Mandeb — Red Sea and Gulf of Aden
- Strait of Malacca — Andaman Sea and South China Sea
How many of the above pairs are correctly matched?
- Only one
- Only two
- All three
- None
Science: quantum randomness & IMI-resistant mustard
Context
Two science explainers: ETH Zürich researchers demonstrating "certified perfect randomness" using quantum physics (published in Nature), and India's wide-scale rollout of imidazolinone-resistant (IMI-resistant) mustard hybrids in the 2026-27 rabi season.
Quantum randomness amplification
- The problem: Digital security relies on random numbers for cryptographic keys; most random-number generators (RNGs) carry a small bias, making keys partly predictable to attackers.
- Santha–Vazirani limit (1986): A classical computer cannot turn a weakly random (biased) source into a perfectly random one through post-processing alone.
- Quantum solution: ETH Zürich used a Bell test on entangled particles placed 30 m apart. The act of quantum measurement creates genuinely new information unknowable in advance — an additional source of randomness. A Bell-violation score of 2.271 (above the classical limit of 2; quantum maximum ~2.82) proved quantum behaviour.
- Two-source extractor: Combined 5.3 billion biased bits with 2.6 billion measurement bits across 1.3 billion trials (50,000/sec over nine hours), outputting 45 million certified-random bits.
- Device-independent: The output's randomness can be trusted even without trusting the hardware (failure probability ~one in a trillion). Output is modest (~1,400 bits/sec vs ~1 billion for commercial RNGs).
- Application & caveat: A public "randomness beacon" (like the US NIST's 512 random bits every 60 seconds) for finance, blockchain and encryption. Caveat: better randomness does not protect against future quantum computers — migrating to post-quantum algorithms does.
IMI-resistant mustard hybrids
- The problem: India faces an edible-oil deficit (imported ~16 million tonnes for ~₹1.6 lakh crore in 2024-25); mustard is the most vital oilseed, but yields are suppressed by the parasitic weed Orobanche (recently called Phelipanche).
- Not GM — mutation breeding: The hybrids were developed via mutation breeding (preserving natural mutations), not genetic modification. A single DNA change makes the enzyme acetolactate synthase (ALS) resistant to IMI herbicides, so farmers can spray IMI directly — killing weeds (including soil-borne Orobanche) while sparing the crop.
- Benefit: Reduces labour demand at the narrow weeding window and protects oilseed yields.
- Caution (Prof. Deepak Pental, Current Science): Relying on one herbicide year after year creates "strong directional selection" leading to resistant weeds and eventual failure; a "single herbicide mode of action cannot be the foundation of a sustainable weed-management strategy."
Quantum advantage, real-world: A clean instance of a task quantum physics can do but classical physics provably cannot — though current throughput is far below commercial RNGs.
Edible-oil security: IMI-resistant mustard can cut import dependence, but durable gains require integrated weed management (crop rotation, varied herbicides, manual weeding).
Quantum entanglement / Bell test Post-quantum cryptography Mutation breeding vs GM Orobanche / oilseed import
MCQ: Quantum randomness & herbicide-tolerant crops
Consider the following statements:
- A Bell test is used to demonstrate quantum entanglement between particles.
- IMI-resistant mustard hybrids in India were developed through genetic modification (GM).
- Orobanche is a parasitic weed that attaches to the roots of crops such as mustard.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
- 1 and 2 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
📝 Quick Prelims Revision — MCQ Bank
Q1 — Electoral rolls & the Constitution
Which Article of the Constitution provides that there shall be one general electoral roll for every territorial constituency?
- Article 324
- Article 325
- Article 326
- Article 327
Q2 — India–Oman CEPA
The ports of Sohar, Duqm and Salalah, in the news, are located in which country?
- UAE
- Oman
- Qatar
- Saudi Arabia
Q3 — Nuclear-armed states
How many states are recognised by SIPRI as possessing nuclear weapons?
- Seven
- Eight
- Nine
- Ten
Q4 — Ganga Water Treaty
The 1996 Ganga Water Treaty between India and Bangladesh governs water sharing at which structure?
- Tipaimukh Dam
- Farakka Barrage
- Teesta Barrage
- Tehri Dam
Q5 — Solar value chain
The ALMM List-II mandate, in the news, requires new solar projects to use domestically made:
- Solar modules only
- Solar cells
- Inverters
- Batteries
Q6 — Maritime chokepoint
The Strait of Hormuz connects the Persian Gulf with which water body?
- Red Sea
- Gulf of Aden
- Gulf of Oman
- Arabian Sea directly
❓ FAQs
Frequently asked exam-oriented questions — 09 June 2026 edition
What is the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls?
How is a CEPA different from a regular FTA?
Why is the Great Nicobar project controversial?
Why does the 1996 Ganga Water Treaty matter now?
What did the ETH Zürich quantum randomness study achieve?
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Analysis based on The Hindu, Bengaluru City Edition, 09 June 2026. Prepared for academic use. Static background and frameworks added for exam preparation; original article text has been paraphrased, not reproduced.


