The Hindu UPSC News Analysis For 19 May 2026

The Hindu – UPSC News Analysis | May 19, 2026 | Legacy IAS
Prepared by Legacy IAS · Bengaluru

The Hindu – UPSC News Analysis

Daily Mains & Prelims Orientation | GS I · II · III · IV · Essay
7Articles Analysed
GS II & IIIPrimary Focus
7Probable MCQs
Legacy IASUPSC Coaching, Bengaluru
SC Voices ‘Reservations’ on Its Own UAPA Bail Decision – Umar Khalid & Sharjeel Imam Case
A. Issue in Brief
  • The Supreme Court, while granting bail to a J&K man under a narco-terrorism case, expressed rare self-criticism of its January 2025 judgment that denied bail to Umar Khalid and Sharjeel Imam in the Delhi riots ‘larger conspiracy’ case.
  • The Bench stated that ‘bail is the rule, jail is the exception’ is not merely a slogan but a constitutional principle under Articles 21 and 22.
  • The court held that Section 43-D(5) of UAPA cannot override fundamental rights to life and personal liberty.
B. Static Background
  • UAPA (Unlawful Activities Prevention Act), 1967 – Anti-terror law; amended 2019 to designate individuals as terrorists.
  • Section 43-D(5) UAPA: Bail can be refused if the court is “satisfied” that the accusations are prima facie true. Sets an extremely low threshold for denial.
  • Article 21: Right to life and personal liberty – no person shall be deprived except by procedure established by law.
  • Article 22: Protection against arbitrary arrest and detention.
  • K.A. Najeeb case (2021): SC held constitutional courts can grant bail in UAPA cases if prolonged incarceration violates fundamental rights.
  • Citizenship Amendment Act protests (2019–20): Context for arrests of Khalid and Imam under UAPA.
C. Key Dimensions
UAPA & Bail – Key Issues
Low Threshold to deny bail under Sec 43-D(5)
Prolonged undertrial imprisonment = Punitive
SC: Article 21 always trumps UAPA provisions
Right to speedy trial – Constitutional guarantee
Presumption of innocence – cornerstone of rule of law
Self-reproach: Rare SC introspection
AspectPosition of StateSC’s Latest Stand
Bail under UAPAPrima facie satisfaction enough to denyCannot be denied indefinitely despite Sec 43-D(5)
Personal LibertySubordinate to national securityArticle 21 always supreme; cannot be hollowed out
Prolonged incarcerationJustified till trial endsBecomes punitive; courts must intervene
Bail principleException in terror casesRule even in UAPA cases
D. Critical Analysis
  • Systemic abuse risk: UAPA’s low bail threshold can be used to keep dissidents incarcerated for years without trial — turning preventive detention into punishment.
  • Chilling effect on free speech: Activists, journalists, and students face arrest under UAPA for political speech, creating a deterrence culture.
  • Delayed trials: India’s overburdened courts mean undertrial detention under UAPA can extend to 5–10 years — a de facto sentence without conviction.
  • SC self-contradiction: The Court acknowledging its own error is rare but raises questions about institutional consistency and precedent reliability.
  • Global comparison: In most democracies (UK, USA), anti-terror laws do not override the presumption of innocence or right to bail during prolonged trials.
E. Way Forward
  • Amend Section 43-D(5): Introduce a mandatory bail review after 1–2 years of undertrial detention in UAPA cases.
  • Fast-track UAPA courts: Special designated courts with time-bound trial mandates (e.g., 180 days to frame charges).
  • Independent review mechanism: Periodic review of all UAPA detentions by a judicial oversight committee.
  • Law Commission recommendations: The 268th Law Commission Report recommended safeguards against misuse of anti-terror laws.
  • Uphold constitutional values of substantive due process over procedural shortcuts.
F. Exam Orientation
Key TermSection 43-D(5) UAPA – bail denial provision when accusations are prima facie true
Key CaseK.A. Najeeb (2021) – SC upheld bail in UAPA if prolonged detention violates Art. 21
Article 21Right to life and personal liberty; applies to undertrial prisoners
Key Principle“Bail is the rule, jail is the exception” – constitutional principle, not mere slogan
🎯 Probable Mains Question (GS II – 15 Marks)

“Anti-terror legislation, while necessary for national security, must not become an instrument to deny fundamental rights indefinitely.” Critically examine this in the context of UAPA’s bail provisions and recent Supreme Court observations.

🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Which of the following is correct about Section 43-D(5) of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act?
  • (A) It allows bail if the accused proves innocence beyond doubt
  • (B) Bail shall be denied if the court is satisfied that the accusations against the accused are prima facie true
  • (C) It mandates release of accused after 1 year of detention
  • (D) It applies only to foreign nationals accused of terrorism
✅ Answer: (B) | Explanation: Sec 43-D(5) sets a low threshold — mere prima facie satisfaction is enough to deny bail, which the SC has now said cannot override Art. 21 if incarceration becomes prolonged.
India–Norway Upgrade Ties to ‘Green Strategic Partnership’ – Modi’s Oslo Visit
A. Issue in Brief
  • PM Modi met Norwegian PM Jonas Gahr Støre in Oslo, upgrading bilateral ties to a Green Strategic Partnership.
  • Both leaders called for unity against countries that “weaponise” diplomacy, trade, and technology — an implicit reference to Russia, the U.S., China, and Iran’s Hormuz blockade.
  • The partnership leverages Norway’s technology and capital with India’s scale, talent, and market, especially in green energy and blue economy.
B. Static Background
  • EFTA (European Free Trade Association): Norway, Switzerland, Iceland, Liechtenstein — India signed a Trade & Economic Partnership Agreement with EFTA in 2024, targeting $100 billion investment and 1 million jobs.
  • Norway’s global role: World’s largest sovereign wealth fund (Government Pension Fund Global); major oil and gas exporter; leader in offshore wind energy.
  • India-Norway ties: Significant investment in India through Norges Bank; collaboration in maritime, fisheries, and clean energy sectors.
  • Blue Economy: Sustainable use of ocean resources — fisheries, shipping, offshore energy. India’s Sagarmala programme is a related domestic initiative.
C. Key Dimensions
India–Norway Green Strategic Partnership – Key Pillars
Green Energy & Offshore Wind
Blue Economy & Maritime
Technology & Digital Public Infra
Health & Space MoUs
EFTA Trade & Investment
Triangular Development (Global South)
AreaIndia’s ContributionNorway’s Contribution
EnergyRenewable energy market, solar scaleOffshore wind tech, green shipping
MaritimeIndo-Pacific sea lanes, SagarmalaShipbuilding, maritime expertise
FinanceInvestment destination, $100B targetSovereign wealth fund capital
GeopoliticsGlobal South voice, strategic autonomyRules-based order, NATO perspective
DevelopmentDigital public infrastructure modelGovernance and aid experience
D. Critical Analysis
  • India–Norway divergence on Russia: Norway has urged India to condemn Russian aggression in Ukraine; India maintains strategic autonomy and buys Russian oil — a potential friction point.
  • Trade vs Investment gap: The EU chief simultaneously pushed for an India-EU Investment Pact — disputes over dispute resolution mechanisms remain unresolved, indicating structural barriers to Western investment.
  • Press freedom optics: Both Nordic visits saw criticism over lack of press conferences — highlighting democratic norms divergence.
  • Weaponisation of trade: Støre’s reference to “weaponising trade” is also relevant to India, which faces U.S. tariff pressure and dependency on China for electronics.
E. Way Forward
  • Leverage EFTA deal to attract high-quality FDI in green hydrogen, offshore wind, and deep-sea technology.
  • Expand the Triangular Development Cooperation to channel Norway’s development aid to Global South through India’s implementation capacity.
  • Use Norway’s oil and gas export capacity as alternative to Russian energy — reducing India’s dependence on sanctioned sources.
  • Align with SDG 14 (Life Below Water) through joint blue economy initiatives.
F. Exam Orientation
EFTA MembersNorway, Switzerland, Iceland, Liechtenstein — NOT EU members
Green Strategic PartnershipNew bilateral framework between India & Norway (May 2026)
SagarmalaIndia’s port-led development & blue economy programme
Norges BankNorway’s central bank managing the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund
🎯 Probable Mains Question (GS II – 10 Marks)

What is the significance of India upgrading its ties with Norway to a ‘Green Strategic Partnership’? How does it complement India’s energy transition and Indo-Pacific goals?

🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Which of the following countries are members of the European Free Trade Association (EFTA)?
  • (A) Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Finland
  • (B) Norway, Switzerland, Iceland, Liechtenstein
  • (C) Norway, Austria, Luxembourg, Belgium
  • (D) Switzerland, Netherlands, Portugal, Ireland
✅ Answer: (B) | Explanation: EFTA has 4 members — Norway, Switzerland, Iceland, Liechtenstein. They are not part of the EU but have trade agreements with it. India signed the TEPA with EFTA in 2024.
West Asia Crisis: Diesel Shortage, Rupee Fall, OMC Losses & India’s Strategic Petroleum Vulnerability
A. Issue in Brief
  • The ongoing U.S.–Israel war on Iran has shut the Strait of Hormuz, pushing crude oil prices to $110–113 per barrel, triggering a cascading crisis in India.
  • India faces diesel shortages in pockets, petrol pump queues, rupee depreciation to ₹96.2/$, and OMC losses of ₹750 crore/day even after fuel price hikes.
  • Editorial commentary highlights India’s inadequate Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) — only ~36.7 million barrels (7 days of consumption) vs. the IEA-recommended 90 days.
B. Static Background
  • Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR): Underground storage of crude oil for emergency use. India’s SPR covers ~7 days vs. US ~20 days and China ~30+ days.
  • OMCs: IOCL, BPCL, HPCL — public sector oil marketing companies; retail fuel prices regulated by government.
  • Strait of Hormuz: Chokepoint through which ~20% of global oil and LNG passes; Iran controls one side.
  • OFAC: U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control — issues sanctions on Iran. U.S. proposed temporary OFAC waiver during negotiations.
  • Under-recovery: When OMCs sell fuel below cost price; government either compensates or allows price hike.
  • Finance Ministry Circular: Directed PSU banks and insurers to adopt austerity — video-conferencing over travel, electric vehicles for fleet.
C. Key Dimensions
Cause–Effect Chain: West Asia Crisis → India
U.S.–Israel war on Iran (Feb 2026)
Strait of Hormuz closed by Iran
Global crude price surge ($110+/barrel)
India’s import bill rises sharply
Rupee depreciates (₹96.2/$)
OMC losses, fuel price hike
Diesel shortage, supply chain disruption
Inflation, FII outflows
Fertilizer subsidy rise (₹2.41L cr)
CountrySPR (million barrels)Coverage (approx.)
USA~400 (peak 714)~20 days consumption
China~900~30+ days
IEA Recommendation90 days
India36.7–39 million~7 days
D. Critical Analysis
  • SPR inadequacy: India’s 7-day SPR is grossly insufficient against a prolonged Hormuz closure. This vulnerability was foreseeable but unaddressed for decades.
  • LPG & LNG exposure: India’s LPG storage (1.4L tonnes) covers barely 1.75 days of consumption (80,000 tonnes/day). No underground LNG storage exists — unlike USA and China.
  • Rupee vulnerability: India’s import-dependent oil economy makes the rupee structurally vulnerable to external energy shocks.
  • U.S. waiver expiry: The Russian oil waiver expired May 16 — India may face secondary sanctions if it continues buying Russian crude, adding to supply risk.
  • Fertilizer trap: Higher crude → higher gas prices → higher urea costs → subsidies balloon to ₹2.41 lakh crore, straining fiscal space.
  • Moral hazard: Government hid fuel price hikes until elections — raises public trust and fiscal transparency concerns.
E. Way Forward
  • Expand SPR: Phase-wise expansion of underground oil storage to achieve 30-day coverage by 2030 — as recommended by the Kirit Parikh Committee.
  • LNG underground storage: Build underground strategic LNG reserves, especially for fertilizer security.
  • Diversify supply: Leverage Norway’s new energy partnership; sign long-term LNG contracts with EFTA, USA, Australia.
  • Accelerate renewable transition: Reduce oil dependency through aggressive EV adoption, green hydrogen, and solar capacity (India’s target: 500 GW by 2030).
  • Transparent fuel pricing: Move to a market-linked pricing mechanism that avoids political manipulation of fuel prices (like before elections).
  • Align with SDG 7 (Affordable and Clean Energy) and SDG 13 (Climate Action).
F. Exam Orientation
Strait of Hormuz~20% of global oil & LNG transits here; Iran controls access from one side
India’s SPR~36.7–39 million barrels; located in Visakhapatnam, Mangaluru, Padur
OFACU.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control — administers economic sanctions
OMCOil Marketing Companies: IOCL, BPCL, HPCL — face under-recovery when sell below cost
🎯 Probable Mains Question (GS III – 15 Marks)

India’s inadequate strategic petroleum and gas reserves have been exposed by the West Asia crisis. Critically analyse India’s energy security vulnerabilities and suggest a comprehensive framework to address them.

🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Consider the following statements about India’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR):
1. India’s SPR is stored at Visakhapatnam, Mangaluru, and Padur.
2. India’s SPR covers approximately 90 days of crude oil consumption as per IEA norms.
3. India’s daily crude oil consumption is approximately 5.5 million barrels per day.
Which of the above statements is/are correct?
  • (A) 1 only
  • (B) 2 and 3 only
  • (C) 1 and 3 only
  • (D) 1, 2 and 3
✅ Answer: (C) | Explanation: India’s SPR locations are correct (Statement 1). India’s SPR covers only ~7 days, NOT 90 days (Statement 2 is WRONG). India’s consumption is ~5.5 mbpd (Statement 3 is correct).
NEET-UG 2026 Paper Leak – CBI Arrests Coaching Institute Owner; NTA Under Scrutiny
A. Issue in Brief
  • CBI arrested Shivraj Motegaonkar, owner of a Latur-based coaching institute, for alleged role in NEET-UG 2026 paper leak — the second consecutive year the exam has been compromised.
  • A chemistry question bank with questions identical to those in the exam was recovered. The accused is linked to a chemistry lecturer associated with the NTA.
  • A Parliamentary Standing Committee is set to review NTA reforms and the K. Radhakrishnan Committee report on May 21.
B. Static Background
  • NTA (National Testing Agency): Established in 2017 under the Department of Higher Education; conducts NEET, JEE, CUET, and other centralized tests for ~23 lakh candidates.
  • NEET-UG: National Eligibility cum Entrance Test for MBBS/BDS admissions; governed by the NMC Act, 2019.
  • K. Radhakrishnan Committee: Formed post-2025 NEET leak to recommend NTA reforms — report submitted but implementation under review.
  • Prevention of Unfair Means Act: 2024 – provides for up to 10 years imprisonment for paper leaks in public examinations.
  • CBI registered the NEET-UG 2026 case on May 12, 2026 on a complaint from the Department of Higher Education.
C. Key Dimensions
NEET Paper Leak Ecosystem – Stakeholders & Failure Points
NEET Leak 2026
NTA insiders with access to question papers
Coaching institutes as distribution hubs
Middlemen mobilising students for paid coaching
Technology gap — no paper randomisation
Weak pre-exam security protocols
Socioeconomic desperation of aspirants
DimensionIssueReform Needed
Paper securityNTA insiders leaking papersDecentralised, encrypted question banks; AI proctoring
Exam integrityCoaching-nexus collusionSeparate exam from coaching institute ecosystem
Legal deterrenceArrests happen post-examPre-exam intelligence, whistleblower protection
GovernanceNTA lacks autonomy and accountabilityIndependent NTA board with civil society representation
D. Critical Analysis
  • Repeat offence: NEET was compromised in 2025 and again in 2026 — indicating systemic failure, not isolated incidents. NTA reforms post-2025 appear ineffective.
  • Trust deficit: 23 lakh aspirants, who spent years preparing, face uncertainty — exposing the human cost of institutional failure.
  • Education Ministry accountability: The minister’s dismissive remarks about Parliamentary Standing Committee recommendations drew a privilege notice — pointing to executive contempt for legislative oversight.
  • Coaching industry complicity: The nexus between NTA officials and coaching centers is a structural problem, not merely individual misconduct.
  • Global comparison: Countries like Japan (Centre Test) and South Korea (CSAT) use multiple randomised question sets and strict paper printing protocols — India lags behind.
E. Way Forward
  • Implement K. Radhakrishnan Committee recommendations in full — including separation of exam design, printing, and logistics functions.
  • Introduce Computer-Based Testing (CBT) with randomised question sets for NEET, eliminating paper-based vulnerabilities.
  • Enact strict Prevention of Unfair Means Act, 2024 provisions; fast-track prosecution of accused.
  • Establish independent NTA oversight board with representation from academia, civil society, and judiciary.
  • Compensate affected students fairly — re-examination with full transparency and judicial oversight.
F. Exam Orientation
NTANational Testing Agency — established 2017; conducts NEET, JEE, CUET, etc.
K. Radhakrishnan CommitteeHigh-level expert committee on NTA reforms (post-2025 NEET controversy)
Prevention of Unfair MeansPublic Examinations Act, 2024 — up to 10 years imprisonment for paper leaks
NEET-UG 2026~23 lakh registered; chemistry & biology papers allegedly leaked before May 3 exam
🎯 Probable Mains Question (GS II – 15 Marks)

Repeated NEET paper leaks reflect deep structural failures in India’s examination governance system. Critically examine the causes and suggest comprehensive reforms to ensure integrity of centralised entrance examinations.

🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
With reference to the National Testing Agency (NTA), consider the following statements:
1. NTA was established in 2017 under the Department of Higher Education.
2. NTA conducts NEET-UG, JEE (Main), CUET, and UGC-NET.
3. The Public Examinations (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act was enacted in 2024.
How many of the above statements are correct?
  • (A) Only one
  • (B) Only two
  • (C) All three
  • (D) None
✅ Answer: (C) | All three statements are correct. NTA was set up in 2017, conducts all major centralised tests, and the 2024 Act provides up to 10 years imprisonment for paper leak offences.
India Declared ‘Naxal-Free’ by Home Minister Amit Shah – Significance & Way Ahead
A. Issue in Brief
  • Home Minister Amit Shah declared India “Naxal-free” at Bastar, Chhattisgarh — the historical epicentre of Left-Wing Extremism (LWE).
  • This declaration comes after the government set March 31, 2026 as the deadline for eliminating LWE; Shah was on his first visit to Bastar since then.
  • He announced 70 of 196 security camps in formerly Maoist-affected areas will be converted into public service centres named after freedom fighter Veer Gundadhur.
B. Static Background
  • Left-Wing Extremism (LWE): Armed Maoist/Naxalite insurgency operating since the 1960s Naxalbari movement (West Bengal) — spread across the “Red Corridor” spanning Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Odisha, Bihar, AP, Telangana.
  • Red Corridor: At peak (2010), LWE was active in 200+ districts; now reduced significantly.
  • SAMADHAN Strategy: Government’s comprehensive approach — Smart leadership, Aggressive strategy, Motivation, Actionable intelligence, Dashboard monitoring, Harnessing technology, Action on financing, No access to supply chain.
  • National Policy and Action Plan (2015): Multi-pronged approach — security, development, and public perception.
  • Aspirational Districts Programme: Many LWE-affected districts fall under this — focused development intervention.
  • From 1971 to 2026 — over 55 years of LWE conflict with thousands of lives lost on both sides.
C. Key Dimensions
LWE Decline – Key Factors
Naxal-Free India 2026
Improved intelligence & multi-force coordination (CoBRA, CRPF)
Road connectivity in Bastar & tribal areas
SAMADHAN strategy – integrated approach
Surrender & rehabilitation policy
Aspirational Districts development
Elimination of top Maoist leadership
D. Critical Analysis
  • Premature declaration risk: Historical experience shows LWE has revived in the past after apparent lulls. The 2009 declaration of Lalgarh success was followed by renewed Maoist activity.
  • Root causes unaddressed: Forest rights, land alienation, PESA implementation gaps, and tribal exclusion from development continue to create grievance.
  • Telangana contradiction: Shah also honoured Telangana police for making the state Naxal-free — yet sporadic incidents in Telangana-Maharashtra border persist.
  • Economic gap: Economists note Bihar and Bastar economies remain structurally weak — development without economic opportunity may not prevent re-emergence.
  • Human rights concerns: Security operations have sometimes been accompanied by encounters and allegations of civilian casualties — credibility of “Naxal-free” needs civil society verification.
E. Way Forward
  • Post-conflict development: Convert security camps to public service centres as announced — accelerate delivery of education, health, and banking services in tribal areas.
  • PESA implementation: Full implementation of Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act, 1996 to empower gram sabhas in tribal districts.
  • Forest Rights Act: Expedite pending FRA claims — land security is the most effective long-term LWE deterrent.
  • Rehabilitation: Robust rehabilitation and skill-building programmes for surrendered Naxalites and affected youth.
  • Align with SDG 16 (Peace, Justice, Strong Institutions) and SDG 10 (Reduced Inequalities).
F. Exam Orientation
SAMADHANGovt strategy against LWE: Smart leadership, Aggressive strategy, Motivation, etc.
Veer GundadhurTribal freedom fighter of Bastar — after whom new public service centres are named
PESA Act 1996Extends Panchayati Raj to Scheduled Areas; empowers tribal gram sabhas
CoBRACommando Battalion for Resolute Action — CRPF’s elite anti-Naxal force
🎯 Probable Mains Question (GS III – 15 Marks)

“Declaring India Naxal-free is a security milestone, but sustained peace requires addressing the socio-economic and political grievances that gave rise to the movement.” Critically evaluate this statement in the context of India’s Left-Wing Extremism challenge.

🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Which of the following is/are correctly matched regarding India’s SAMADHAN strategy against Left-Wing Extremism?
1. S – Smart leadership
2. A – Aspirational Districts development
3. H – Harnessing technology
4. N – No access to supply chain
Select the correct answer:
  • (A) 1 and 3 only
  • (B) 2 and 4 only
  • (C) 1, 3 and 4 only
  • (D) 1, 3 and 4 only (Note: ‘A’ stands for Aggressive strategy, not Aspirational Districts)
✅ Answer: (D) 1, 3, and 4 are correct elements of SAMADHAN. ‘A’ stands for Aggressive strategy (not Aspirational Districts). ‘D’ = Dashboard-based KPIs, ‘M’ = Motivation of forces.
Improving Fertilizer Use Efficiency in India – The Fertilizer Trap & Policy Gaps
A. Issue in Brief
  • India’s fertilizer subsidy bill may surge to ₹2.41 lakh crore in FY27 — ₹70,000 crore above budget — driven by rising import costs amid the West Asia crisis.
  • The article argues India must move beyond supply-side fertilizer management to boost fertilizer use efficiency — producing more crop per kg of fertilizer.
  • The “fertilizer trap”: excessive fertilizer use depletes soil organic matter → reduces water/nutrient retention → forces farmers to use even more fertilizer — a vicious cycle.
B. Static Background
  • India’s urea dependency: Produces 80% domestically (natural gas-based); imports rest. No underground strategic gas storage.
  • Phosphatic fertilizers: India lacks mineral rock phosphate — imports nearly 100% of phosphatic fertilizers.
  • Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS): Applicable to P&K fertilizers; urea excluded — this distorted incentives in favour of urea overuse.
  • Neem-Coated Urea: Introduced to slow nitrogen release, reduce misuse in industry — but hasn’t fully curbed ammonia loss.
  • Dalhan Aatmanirbharta Mission (Oct 2025): ₹11,440 crore for pulses self-reliance in 5 years — but area under pulses grew only 1.26% in 2026 vs target of ~10%.
  • Interministerial National Nitrogen Steering Committee: Expired before implementing any recommendations — needs revival.
C. Key Dimensions
The Fertilizer Trap – Vicious Cycle
Excessive fertilizer use
Soil organic matter depletes
Water & nutrient retention falls
Crop yields threatened
Farmers add MORE fertilizer
Demand never saturates
Fertilizer TypeIndia’s PositionKey Risk
Urea (Nitrogen)80% domestic; 20% importedGas price spike; ammonia loss to air
Phosphatic (DAP)~100% importedRock phosphate import disruption
LPG (cooking gas)Storage ~1.4L tonnes; daily use 80,000TOnly 1.75 days coverage
LNG (gas)No underground storageExtreme vulnerability
D. Critical Analysis
  • Policy incoherence: Government announces MSP for 20+ crops but procures only rice, wheat, sugarcane — pushing farmers toward these three urea-intensive crops, destroying traditional pulse rotations.
  • PM’s unfulfilled promise: In Nov 2017, PM Modi called for halving fertilizer use in 5 years; consumption has only risen since due to lack of inter-ministerial coordination.
  • Subsidy misdirection: Over ₹2 lakh crore annual subsidy — two-thirds lost to pollution (soil, air, water), not converted to food.
  • Dalhan Mission underperformance: Only 1.26% increase in pulse area vs 10% needed — massive gap between policy intent and ground reality.
  • Green ammonia potential underutilised: Solar-powered green ammonia could replace imported urea, but water stress in many regions limits scalability.
E. Way Forward
  • Pulse-cereal crop rotations: Incentivise through MSP guarantee + procurement for Tur, Urad, Masoor — reduces urea need by 90% in those seasons.
  • Organic basal dose: Make manure/compost/biochar the baseline dose; use chemical fertilizers only as top-up.
  • Revive Nitrogen Steering Committee: Inter-ministerial coordination is essential for coherent nitrogen management.
  • Soil health cards: Implement soil health card scheme more rigorously — tailor fertilizer recommendations to local soil conditions.
  • Rice germplasm improvement: India’s own research shows potential to double nitrogen use efficiency through improved rice varieties.
  • Align with SDG 2 (Zero Hunger), SDG 12 (Responsible Consumption), SDG 15 (Life on Land).
F. Exam Orientation
NBS SchemeNutrient-Based Subsidy — covers P&K fertilizers; urea excluded (a key distortion)
Neem-Coated UreaSlows nitrogen release; reduces misuse; mandated for all domestic urea since 2015
Dalhan MissionOct 2025 — ₹11,440 cr; 100% MSP procurement of Tur, Urad, Masoor for 4 years
Green AmmoniaAmmonia produced via electrolysis of water using renewable energy; potential urea substitute
🎯 Probable Mains Question (GS III – 15 Marks)

India’s fertilizer policy has created a structural ‘fertilizer trap’ that threatens both food security and fiscal sustainability. Critically examine the issue and suggest demand-side reforms to break this cycle.

🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Which of the following statements about India’s fertilizer policy is/are correct?
1. The Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS) scheme covers urea, DAP, and MOP.
2. Neem-Coated Urea was introduced to reduce nitrogen loss and industrial misuse of urea.
3. India imports nearly all of its requirement of phosphatic fertilizers as it lacks rock phosphate reserves.
  • (A) 1 and 2 only
  • (B) 2 and 3 only
  • (C) 1 and 3 only
  • (D) 1, 2 and 3
✅ Answer: (B) | Statement 1 is WRONG — urea is NOT covered under NBS; it has a separate fixed subsidy. Statements 2 and 3 are correct.
India Still Short on Expertise & Tools to Manage Fungal Health Burden
A. Issue in Brief
  • A detailed analysis reveals India has one of the world’s highest fungal disease burdens — over 5 crore people estimated to suffer from mycoses — yet the country lacks specialist expertise, diagnostic infrastructure, and focused research.
  • The WHO declared fungal diseases a global public health concern (2022 Priority List), but India lacks the institutional response comparable to its infrastructure for TB or viral diseases.
  • Challenges span: diagnostic gaps (slow culture methods, costly MALDI-TOF), treatment gaps (limited antifungals, rising resistance), and research gaps (focus on yeast/baker’s yeast, not filamentous fungi causing most Indian infections).
B. Static Background
  • Mycoses: Fungal infections affecting eyes, skin, lungs, brain, blood; range from superficial (ringworm) to life-threatening (mucormycosis, aspergillosis).
  • Mucormycosis (‘Black Fungus’): Prevalence in India is 80 times higher than economically developed countries — pandemic link (COVID + steroid use) brought it to national attention in 2021.
  • WHO 2022 Priority Fungal Pathogen List: First-ever list; includes Candida auris, Aspergillus fumigatus, Cryptococcus neoformans as critical priority pathogens.
  • MALDI-TOF: Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionisation Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry — can identify fungi in ~30 minutes; costs ₹1.5 crore+ per unit.
  • Antimicrobial resistance (AMR): Fungi developing resistance to antifungal drugs — linked to rampant OTC sales and use in plant agriculture.
  • Lancet Infectious Diseases (2024): 3.8 million deaths globally per year attributed to fungal diseases.
C. Key Dimensions
India’s Fungal Disease Challenge – Key Gaps
5 Crore Indians with Fungal Disease
Diagnostic gap: Slow culture, costly MALDI-TOF
Treatment gap: Limited antifungals, resistance rising
Research gap: Focus on yeast, not molds/filamentous fungi
Clinical gap: Doctors prescribe antibiotics first, delay antifungals
Data gap: No national burden surveillance system
Wildlife impact: Chytrid fungus threatening amphibians
D. Critical Analysis
  • Neglected disease category: Despite 5 crore sufferers, fungal diseases receive a fraction of the research and policy attention given to TB or malaria — a systemic blind spot.
  • Hot and humid tropical vulnerability: India’s climate is ideal for fungal growth, yet this epidemiological reality is not reflected in medical training or diagnostic investment.
  • Antifungal resistance: OTC sale of antifungal creams and agricultural use of azole fungicides are creating resistance in environmental fungi — a preventable crisis.
  • COVID-19 legacy: Mucormycosis during COVID-19 showed India’s healthcare system is unprepared for opportunistic fungal infections during immunosuppressive treatments.
  • Equity concern: Most advanced diagnostics (MALDI-TOF, PCR) are only available in large urban hospitals — rural and tribal populations are most exposed but least served.
E. Way Forward
  • National Fungal Disease Surveillance Programme: Establish systematic data collection on fungal disease burden — similar to TB surveillance under NTEP.
  • Integrate mycology in medical education: Make fungal diagnostics a mandatory component of microbiology training.
  • Regulate antifungal OTC sales: Prescription-only regime for antifungal drugs to contain resistance development.
  • Subsidise MALDI-TOF: Central government support for procuring advanced diagnostic equipment for district hospitals under NHM.
  • Research investment: Fund dedicated mycology research centres — India has CSIR-CCMB and LVPEI doing strong work but need scale.
  • Align with SDG 3 (Good Health and Well-Being) and SDG 9 (Innovation and Infrastructure).
F. Exam Orientation
MucormycosisBlack fungus; prevalence 80x higher in India vs developed nations; linked to COVID+steroids
WHO Priority Pathogens2022 list includes Candida auris, Aspergillus, Cryptococcus as critical priority fungal pathogens
MALDI-TOFAdvanced fungal diagnostic tool; identifies pathogens in 30 min; costs ₹1.5 cr+
Antifungal ResistanceDriven by OTC use, agricultural azoles; emerging as major AMR threat globally
🎯 Probable Mains Question (GS III – 10 Marks)

India’s fungal disease burden is among the highest globally, yet it remains a neglected public health concern. Analyse the challenges in fungal disease management in India and suggest measures to address the diagnostic and research gaps.

🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Which of the following statements about fungal diseases in India is/are correct?
1. India has one of the highest national burdens of fungal disease globally, with an estimated 5 crore people affected.
2. Mucormycosis (Black Fungus) prevalence in India is approximately 80 times higher than in economically developed countries.
3. The WHO released its first-ever priority fungal pathogen list in 2022.
Select the correct answer:
  • (A) 1 and 2 only
  • (B) 2 and 3 only
  • (C) 1 and 3 only
  • (D) 1, 2 and 3
✅ Answer: (D) | All three statements are correct based on published research and WHO data. India’s fungal burden, mucormycosis prevalence, and the 2022 WHO list are all well-documented facts.
UPSC-Focused FAQs – May 19, 2026
Section 43-D(5) of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act provides that bail shall not be granted to a person accused under UAPA if the court is satisfied that the accusations are prima facie true. This sets an extremely low threshold for denying bail. It is controversial because it effectively reverses the fundamental principle of “bail is the rule, jail is the exception” — a constitutional principle flowing from Article 21 (right to life and personal liberty). The Supreme Court in May 2026 observed that this provision cannot be used to keep accused persons in indefinite incarceration, and that constitutional courts can always grant bail if prolonged detention becomes punitive.
India’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) comprises underground rock caverns storing approximately 36.7–39 million barrels of crude oil. The three existing storage sites are Visakhapatnam (Andhra Pradesh), Mangaluru (Karnataka), and Padur (Karnataka). This covers approximately 7 days of India’s crude oil consumption at 5.5 million barrels per day — far below the 90-day reserve recommended by the International Energy Agency (IEA). By comparison, the USA holds about 400 million barrels (~20 days) and China holds approximately 900 million barrels. The West Asia crisis of 2026 has exposed India’s energy vulnerability acutely.
The European Free Trade Association (EFTA) consists of four countries: Norway, Switzerland, Iceland, and Liechtenstein. Unlike EU members, EFTA countries are not part of the European Union’s customs union. India signed a Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement (TEPA) with EFTA in 2024, targeting $100 billion in investment and 1 million jobs in India over the next 15 years. In May 2026, India and Norway upgraded their bilateral relationship to a “Green Strategic Partnership” focusing on green energy, maritime technology, blue economy, digital public infrastructure, and health cooperation.
SAMADHAN is India’s comprehensive strategy to combat Left-Wing Extremism, where each letter represents a pillar: S – Smart leadership; A – Aggressive strategy; M – Motivation and training of forces; A – Actionable intelligence; D – Dashboard-based key performance indicators; H – Harnessing technology; A – Action on financing of LWE; N – No access to supply chain. The strategy was adopted by the Ministry of Home Affairs and combined security operations with development initiatives in Aspirational Districts, improved road and mobile connectivity, surrender-rehabilitation policies, and elimination of top Maoist leadership. India declared itself “Naxal-free” in May 2026.
India’s fertilizer use efficiency is low because of policy distortions, crop pattern concentration, and poor coordination. The “fertilizer trap” refers to the vicious cycle where excessive fertilizer use depletes soil organic matter, which in turn reduces the soil’s capacity to hold water and nutrients, threatening crop yields and forcing farmers to apply even more fertilizer. Over two-thirds of India’s ₹2 lakh crore annual fertilizer subsidy is not converted to food — it is lost to air, soil, and water pollution. Key causes include: urea being excluded from the Nutrient-Based Subsidy scheme; government procurement limited to rice, wheat, and sugarcane; lack of MSP implementation for pulses; and no inter-ministerial coordination on nitrogen management.
Following the NEET-UG paper leaks of 2025 and 2026, the K. Radhakrishnan Committee was constituted to recommend NTA reforms. Key recommendations include: separation of question paper design, printing, and logistics functions; introduction of Computer-Based Testing (CBT) with randomised question sets; strengthening of pre-exam intelligence and security protocols; independent oversight board for NTA with civil society and judicial representation; and strict enforcement of the Public Examinations (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act, 2024, which provides up to 10 years imprisonment for paper leak offences. A Parliamentary Standing Committee is reviewing implementation status as of May 2026.
Mucormycosis, commonly called “Black Fungus,” is an opportunistic fungal infection caused by a group of moulds called Mucorales. It affects the sinuses, lungs, skin, and brain, and has high mortality. India’s prevalence is approximately 80 times higher than in economically developed countries. The reasons include: hot and humid climate ideal for fungal growth; high rates of uncontrolled diabetes (which weakens immunity); widespread use of corticosteroids (which suppress immune response); poor air quality and occupational exposures; and lack of specialist mycological diagnosis leading to delayed treatment. The COVID-19 pandemic brought it to national attention when steroid-treated COVID patients developed mucormycosis.

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