The Hindu UPSC News Analysis For 21 March 2026

The Hindu – UPSC News Analysis | March 21, 2026 | Legacy IAS Bangalore
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The Hindu – UPSC News Analysis

📅 Saturday, March 21, 2026

“From Headlines to Answer Sheets — Curated Analysis for UPSC Mains & Prelims”

8
Articles
GS 2+3
Focus
8
MCQs
8
Mains Qs

Prepared by Legacy IAS Academy, Bangalore | India’s Premier UPSC Civil Services Coaching Institute


Article 01 · GS-II · Governance · Separation of Powers
CM’s Office Should Not Entertain Transfer & Posting Requests — Karnataka HC
🔹 A. Issue in Brief

A Karnataka High Court Division Bench, while hearing a transfer case involving a BESCOM engineer, made sweeping observations that the Chief Minister’s Office (CMO) should not directly entertain transfer and posting requests. The Court held that the CM has better and more important work than interfering in employee transfers, and such decisions must remain at the departmental level. The CMO’s notes were clarified to be merely “recommendatory” and not orders.

📚 B. Static Background
  • Doctrine of Separation of Powers: Administrative functions should be exercised by appropriate executive levels; political interference in bureaucratic decisions distorts this principle.
  • All India Services (Conduct) Rules, 1968: Civil servants are governed by prescribed norms; political interference in postings violates the spirit of these rules.
  • 2nd Administrative Reforms Commission (ARC): Recommended insulating civil servants from undue political influence in transfers and postings.
  • Supreme Court in T.S.R. Subramanian v. Union of India (2013): Directed that civil servants must be insulated from political pressure; mandated fixed tenure for IAS/IPS officers.
  • Article 309: Parliament/State Legislatures regulate recruitment and conditions of service of persons serving the Union/State.
  • Karnataka Transfer Policy: Specifies channels for transfers; premature/delayed transfers require CMO approval through official channel — the HC has now questioned this practice itself.
📊 C. Key Dimensions
AspectCurrent PracticeHC’s Direction
CMO’s RoleEntertains direct transfer requests; issues notesShould not entertain; matter must end at department level
CMO NotesTreated as quasi-orders by departmentsClarified as “only recommendatory” (CS affidavit)
Employee AccessEmployees lobby CMO directly; bypassing departmentOnly departmental channels permissible
Political PatronageTransfers used as tool of patronageMust be depoliticised; CM must focus on governance

🔄 Proper Channel for Transfer/Posting Decisions

Employee Request → Administrative Department (HOD Level)
Department Head Reviews — Based on Policy, Service Rules, Transfer Guidelines
Chief Secretary (for sensitive/inter-department transfers)
CM Approval — ONLY through official channel for premature/delayed transfers (per policy)
Final Posting Order Issued by Department — Not by CMO
🔍 D. Critical Analysis
  • Systemic Issue: Political interference in bureaucratic transfers is endemic across most Indian states — Karnataka’s case is a symptom of a national malaise.
  • Civil Service Neutrality: Frequent politically-motivated transfers destroy the institutional memory and morale of the civil services, resulting in policy incoherence.
  • Accountability Gap: CMO notes being treated as de facto orders without legal basis creates a grey zone of accountability — who is responsible when such transfers cause harm?
  • HC’s Judicial Restraint vs. Activism: The HC has wisely stopped short of directing specific legislation but has used judicial observations to signal reform imperatives.
  • Ethical Dimension (GS-IV): Accepting transfer requests via CMO is a form of conflict of interest and compromises the merit-based administration principle.
Comparison: The UK’s Civil Service Code strictly prohibits ministers from interfering in personnel decisions. India’s 2nd ARC recommended a Civil Services Board at state levels to make transfer decisions independently — few states have implemented this effectively.
E. Way Forward
  • Implement the Civil Services Board (CSB) at state levels as recommended by the Supreme Court in T.S.R. Subramanian (2013) — an independent body to decide transfers.
  • Codify minimum 2-year tenure for all state government officials to prevent arbitrary transfers.
  • Establish a Grievance Redressal Mechanism within departments so employees need not approach CMOs directly.
  • Conduct mandatory ethics training for political executives on the constitutional limits of their powers vis-à-vis civil service matters.
  • Link with SDG 16 (Strong Institutions, Justice, Accountability) — depoliticised administration is fundamental to good governance.

🎓 F. Exam Orientation

Article 309Conditions of service; Parliament/State Legislature
T.S.R. Subramanian Case2013 SC; fixed tenure; Civil Services Board
2nd ARCRecommended insulating civil servants from political pressure
AIS Conduct Rules1968; governs conduct of IAS/IPS officers
Civil Services BoardIndependent body for transfer decisions (SC direction)
Doctrine of SeparationAdmin functions at appropriate executive levels
📝 Model Mains Question (GS-II | 15 Marks)
“Political interference in civil service transfers remains one of the most persistent threats to good governance in India. Examine the issue in light of judicial observations and suggest institutional reforms to ensure administrative neutrality.” (250 words)

🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ

Q. In the landmark case of T.S.R. Subramanian v. Union of India (2013), the Supreme Court directed which of the following?
1. Establishment of Civil Services Boards at the Centre and State levels to decide on transfers and postings.
2. A fixed minimum tenure of two years for civil servants.
3. Complete ban on political executives issuing oral instructions to civil servants.
  • (a) 1 and 2 only ✓
  • (b) 2 and 3 only
  • (c) 1 and 3 only
  • (d) 1, 2 and 3
Correct Answer: (a) — The SC in T.S.R. Subramanian directed establishment of Civil Services Boards and minimum tenure. Statement 3 is incorrect — the SC did not completely ban oral instructions but directed that they must be confirmed in writing.
Article 02 · GS-III · Environment · Land Use · Governance
Goa’s Section 39A — From Green to Grey: Land Conversion & Environmental Governance
🔹 A. Issue in Brief

Goa’s Section 39A of the Town and Country Planning (Amendment) Act, 2024 is triggering widespread protests. The provision allows conversion of ecologically sensitive zones — including forests, hills, paddy fields, orchards — into settlement zones without adequate public consultation. Over 68 lakh sq. metres of land conversion applications have been submitted. Villagers, environmentalists, and local panchayats are mobilising against what they call state-sponsored “land grab” destroying Goa’s ecology and village identity.

📚 B. Static Background
  • Town and Country Planning Act (Goa): Governs land use planning; regional plan classifies 83% of Goa as eco-sensitive (17-18 categories of ESZ).
  • Section 39A: Introduced Feb 2024; allows changing ecological zones to settlement zones; recognises only 7 ESZ categories (vs. 18 in regional plan).
  • Previous Provisions: Section 16B (2018 — repealed 2024 due to criticism); Section 17(2) (2023 — read down by HC Goa bench April 2025). Section 39A carries forward the same trajectory.
  • Gram Sabha Powers: Under PESA Act, 1996, Gram Sabhas in scheduled areas have decision-making power over land use — section 39A bypasses this.
  • Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) Rules: Protect coastal ecology; Goa’s coastline and wetlands have CRZ protections that may conflict with 39A conversions.
  • Code of Communidades: Portuguese-era 1933 document governing community land — post-independence, ran parallel to Indian land laws, creating ambiguities exploited by 39A.
📊 C. Key Dimensions
AspectUnder Regional Plan (2011)Under Section 39A
ESZ Categories17–18 categories protectedOnly 7 categories recognised
Orchard ZonesESZ-2; restricted developmentCan be converted to settlement
ESZ-1 AreasAbsolute prohibition on developmentPartially open to conversion
Public ConsultationMandatory public hearingsNot required under 39A
Gram Sabha RoleRecognised in planningBypassed; deal at ministerial level
ScaleControlled land use68 lakh sqm applied; 13.6% already converted

🧠 Multi-Dimensional Impact of Section 39A

🌿 Ecology
Forest loss; biodiversity destruction; soil erosion; flood risk on destabilised hills
💧 Water
Loss of ponds, wetlands; water scarcity for farmers; sewage infrastructure collapse
🏘️ Community
Outsiders buying land; village identity loss; displacement of fisherfolk
⚖️ Governance
Bypasses Gram Sabha; consent denied; corruption at ministerial level
🏛️ Legal
Conflicts with CRZ rules; violates PESA; Goa HC read down predecessor provisions
🐆 Wildlife
Leopard sightings increasing — habitat encroachment pushes animals into settlements
🔍 D. Critical Analysis
  • Democratic Deficit: 39A allows property owners and companies to individually determine land use — effectively privatising the planning process and removing it from public oversight.
  • Cumulative Ecological Damage: Piecemeal conversions appear small individually but create massive cumulative ecological destruction — a classic case of “tragedy of the commons.”
  • State Government Complicity: BJP government in power for 14 years; CM’s promise to “suspend” proposals in one constituency underlines political rather than principled governance.
  • Legal Vulnerability: Section 39A may face judicial challenge given that HC already read down Section 17(2) in April 2025 on similar grounds — public consultation and Gram Sabha consent issues.
  • Person of Goan Origin (POGO) Bill: Protesters demand a law prioritising locals — reflects the social justice dimension of environmental governance.
Constitutional Issue: Right to a clean environment (Article 21 — expanded in M.C. Mehta and other cases) is being threatened by Section 39A. Gram Sabha powers under PESA (Schedule V areas) are being bypassed, raising questions of constitutional validity.
E. Way Forward
  • Repeal Section 39A; restore the comprehensive Regional Plan 2011 framework with all 17-18 ESZ categories fully protected.
  • Mandate Gram Sabha approval for any land conversion in ecologically sensitive areas, consistent with the spirit of PESA.
  • Conduct a Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) before any amendment to the Regional Plan — as recommended by the MoEFCC guidelines.
  • Enact a Person of Goan Origin (POGO) Bill to restrict agricultural and forest land purchases by outsiders.
  • Align with SDG 15 (Life on Land), SDG 11 (Sustainable Cities), and SDG 16 (strong institutions with community consent).

🎓 F. Exam Orientation

Section 39ATCP Amendment Act 2024; Goa land conversion
PESA Act 1996Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas); Gram Sabha powers
CRZ RulesCoastal Regulation Zone; protects coastal ecology
ESZEco-Sensitive Zone; around protected areas
Regional Plan 2011Goa; 83% land eco-sensitive classification
Code of CommunidadesPortuguese-era 1933 community land document
📝 Model Mains Question (GS-III | 15 Marks)
“Unregulated land use change in ecologically sensitive states like Goa poses a serious challenge to environmental governance. Critically examine the implications of Goa’s Section 39A and suggest a framework for sustainable land use planning.” (250 words)

🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ

Q. The PESA Act, 1996 primarily relates to which of the following?
  • (a) Protection of biodiversity in ecologically sensitive areas
  • (b) Regulation of coastal zones under the Environment Protection Act
  • (c) Extension of Panchayati Raj provisions to Scheduled (tribal) Areas, conferring decision-making powers on Gram Sabhas ✓
  • (d) Land acquisition procedures for infrastructure projects in tribal areas
Correct Answer: (c) — PESA (Panchayats Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act, 1996 extends the provisions of the 73rd Constitutional Amendment to Schedule V areas (tribal regions), conferring Gram Sabhas with powers over land, resources, and local self-governance.
Article 03 · GS-II / GS-III · Tribal Rights · Development vs. Environment
Great Nicobar Island — Tribal Rights, Land Acquisition & the Mega-Infrastructure Dilemma
🔹 A. Issue in Brief

The ₹92,000 crore Great Nicobar mega-infrastructure project (transhipment port, military base, airport, township) is facing dual challenges: settler families (ex-servicemen descendants) are protesting grossly inadequate land compensation (₹113-180/sqm vs. ₹11,370-20,500/sqm in Andaman), while the Shompen (PVTG) and Nicobarese tribal communities face forcible land alienation without meaningful consent. Nicobarese leaders have now met the Leader of Opposition Rahul Gandhi to raise their concerns.

📚 B. Static Background
  • Great Nicobar Project: ₹92,000 crore; includes a transhipment port, dual-use airfield, township, and power plant. Proposed on strategic grounds to counter China’s maritime expansion.
  • RFCTLARR Act, 2013: Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act — mandates Social Impact Assessment (SIA), fair compensation, and R&R measures.
  • Forest Rights Act (FRA), 2006: Recognises tribal communities’ rights over forest land; requires gram sabha consent for diversion of forest land — reportedly violated in this project.
  • Shompen: Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Group (PVTG) — nomadic hunter-gatherers; extremely small population; first contact still limited.
  • Tribal Reserve De-notification: ~84 sq. km of legally notified tribal reserve sought to be de-notified — requires MoTA and MoEFCC clearances.
  • Ex-Servicemen Settlers: ~300 families settled 1969-75; ~40 sq. km de-notified for settlement; now facing second displacement (after 2004 tsunami = first displacement).
📊 C. Key Dimensions
CommunityIssueDemandState Response
Ex-Servicemen SettlersCompensation: ₹113-180/sqm vs. ₹11,370-20,500/sqm in AndamanMinimum ₹1 crore/acre; adherence to RFCTLARR; fair SIALargely ignored; MP raised with PM and HM
Shompen (PVTG)Tribal reserve de-notification; near-zero consultationNo project on tribal land; forest rights recognitionNear-complete exclusion from discussions
NicobaresePressure to “voluntarily” surrender ancestral lands; can’t return to pre-tsunami landsNo land surrender; respect for traditional land rights; enable return to pre-tsunami settlementsRahul Gandhi assured to raise in Parliament
Constitutional Concern: The FRA (2006) requires consent of the Gram Sabha for diversion of tribal forest land. The RFCTLARR Act requires a credible SIA. Both appear to have been violated in the Great Nicobar project — raising fundamental questions of constitutional governance and the rule of law.
🔍 D. Critical Analysis
  • Development vs. Rights: National security imperatives cannot override constitutional rights of tribal communities — the SC has repeatedly upheld that development must respect fundamental rights (Samata judgment, 1997).
  • PVTG Protection Crisis: The Shompen are one of the world’s most isolated peoples. Contact-induced disease alone could devastate their population — the project poses an existential threat.
  • Settler-Tribal Competition: The state has created an artificial conflict between settler and tribal communities by failing to plan inclusively — a classic failure of democratic governance.
  • Strategic Imperative: China’s expansion in the Indian Ocean (Hambantota, Gwadar) gives strategic legitimacy to the project — but strategic necessity cannot justify unlawful means.
  • Compensation Disparity: ₹113-180/sqm vs. ₹11,370-20,500/sqm is a 100x differential — a stark instance of institutional discrimination against island communities.
E. Way Forward
  • Conduct a fresh, independent Social Impact Assessment under RFCTLARR with community participation — suspend ongoing acquisition until completed.
  • Establish a No-Contact Zone around Shompen territories — any project component within their range must be redesigned or abandoned.
  • Revise compensation rates to parity with Andaman islands as demanded — consistent with the “fair compensation” mandate of RFCTLARR.
  • Enable Nicobarese return to pre-tsunami settlements as a precondition to any further project development on their traditional lands.
  • Establish a Parliamentary Oversight Committee for all mega-projects in Union Territories with tribal populations.
  • Align with UNDRIP (UN Declaration on Rights of Indigenous Peoples) — India must model ethical development for the Global South.

🎓 F. Exam Orientation

PVTGParticularly Vulnerable Tribal Group; 75 groups in India; Shompen is one
RFCTLARR Act 2013Fair compensation; SIA mandatory; R&R provisions
Forest Rights Act 2006Gram Sabha consent for forest diversion
Great Nicobar Project₹92,000 cr; port + airfield + township + power plant
Samata Judgment 1997SC: tribal land cannot be leased to non-tribals in Schedule V areas
Tribal Reserve84 sq.km sought to be de-notified for the project
📝 Model Mains Question (GS-II | 15 Marks)
“Large-scale infrastructure projects on island territories with indigenous populations pose complex challenges of development, displacement, and rights. Critically examine the Great Nicobar Island project controversy with reference to tribal rights, environmental concerns, and strategic interests.” (250 words)

🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ

Q. Which of the following are Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs) found in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands?
1. Shompen
2. Sentinelese
3. Jarawa
4. Onge
  • (a) 1 and 2 only
  • (b) 1, 2 and 3 only
  • (c) 2, 3 and 4 only
  • (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4 ✓
Correct Answer: (d) — All four — Shompen, Sentinelese, Jarawa, and Onge — are classified as Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs) in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. They are among the most protected and isolated tribal communities in the world.
Article 04 · GS-II · Social Justice · Gender · Judiciary
Adoptive Mothers’ Maternity Leave — Supreme Court Recognises It as a Fundamental Human Right
🔹 A. Issue in Brief

The Supreme Court (Justices J.B. Pardiwala and R. Mahadevan) ruled that adoptive mothers are entitled to 12 weeks of paid maternity leave irrespective of the age of the child at the time of adoption — striking down the restriction that previously allowed leave only if the adopted child was under three months of age. The judgment characterised adoption as an “expression of reproductive autonomy” and held that adoptive mothers have the same rights as biological mothers. The SC also urged the government to legally recognise paternity leave as a social security benefit.

📚 B. Static Background
  • Maternity Benefit Act, 1961: Provides 26 weeks of maternity leave for first two children; 12 weeks thereafter; replaced/subsumed under Code on Social Security, 2020 (not yet fully notified).
  • Previous Restriction: Maternity leave for adoptive mothers was allowed only if the adopted child was less than 3 months old — effectively excluding most adoptions.
  • CARA (Central Adoption Resource Authority): Governs adoption in India; legal adoption process takes months — the 3-month restriction was practically impossible to meet.
  • Article 21: Right to life includes reproductive autonomy, right to dignity, and right to parenthood — SC has progressively expanded this.
  • Nobel Prize context: Claudia Goldin (Economics Nobel, 2023) identified that the gender pay gap often emerges with the birth of the first child — maternity protections are economically significant.
  • CEDAW: India is a signatory; mandates non-discriminatory treatment of women in employment including maternity protections.
📊 C. Key Dimensions
AspectBefore JudgmentAfter Judgment
EligibilityAdoptive mother — only if child under 3 monthsAll adoptive mothers entitled; no age restriction
Duration12 weeks (for eligible)12 weeks (now universally applicable to adoptive mothers)
Legal BasisMaternity Benefit Act (restricted reading)Article 21 + reproductive autonomy + equal rights principle
Paternity LeaveNot legally recognised in most statesSC urged government to legislate paternity leave
Family ConceptBiologically definedDefined by shared meaning, responsibility, emotional bonds
Significance for UPSC: This judgment directly links to: (1) Article 21 — expanded interpretation; (2) Gender pay gap analysis; (3) Welfare state obligations; (4) Adoption law reform; (5) Work-life balance policy; (6) SDG 5 (Gender Equality) and SDG 8 (Decent Work).
🔍 D. Critical Analysis
  • Progressive Judicial Activism: The SC has again used Article 21 to expand social rights — creating judge-made law where Parliament has been slow to act.
  • Implementation Gap: Private sector employers may find ways to circumvent the ruling; enforcement mechanisms under the Code on Social Security (2020) must be strengthened.
  • Paternity Leave Lacuna: India has no universal statutory paternity leave law — the SC’s urging is welcome but requires legislative follow-through. Currently, central government employees get 15 days; private sector has no mandate.
  • Gender-Neutral Parenting: The SC’s observation that “parenthood is not a solitary function performed by one parent” is a profound shift toward gender-neutral parenting policy.
  • Code on Social Security 2020: Has not yet been fully notified — creating a legal vacuum between the old Maternity Benefit Act and the new code; this judgment will need legislative clarity.
E. Way Forward
  • Fully notify and implement the Code on Social Security, 2020 with comprehensive maternity and paternity leave provisions covering all categories of workers including gig workers.
  • Legislate universal paternity leave of at least 4 weeks for both public and private sector employees.
  • Establish workplace crèche facilities (as mandated under Maternity Benefit Amendment Act 2017) as a universal requirement — currently poorly enforced.
  • Extend maternity and parental leave protections to the informal sector — which covers 90% of India’s workforce — through social protection schemes.
  • Align with ILO Maternity Protection Convention No. 183 — India has not yet ratified it; ratification would strengthen domestic legal framework.

🎓 F. Exam Orientation

Maternity Benefit Act1961; 26 weeks for first 2 children; 12 weeks thereafter
Code on Social Security2020; subsumes Maternity Benefit Act; not fully notified
CARACentral Adoption Resource Authority; governs adoption
Reproductive AutonomyPart of Article 21 — right to make reproductive choices
Claudia GoldinEconomics Nobel 2023; gender pay gap linked to first child
ILO Conv. 183Maternity Protection; India has not ratified
📝 Model Mains Question (GS-II | 10 Marks)
“The Supreme Court’s recognition of maternity leave as a fundamental right for adoptive mothers reflects the evolution of reproductive autonomy under Article 21. Examine its implications for social security policy in India.” (150 words)

🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ

Q. Under the Maternity Benefit (Amendment) Act, 2017, what is the duration of paid maternity leave for a woman having her first child?
  • (a) 12 weeks
  • (b) 16 weeks
  • (c) 26 weeks ✓
  • (d) 24 weeks
Correct Answer: (c) — The Maternity Benefit (Amendment) Act, 2017 increased paid maternity leave from 12 to 26 weeks for the first two children. For a third child or subsequent children, the leave remains at 12 weeks. Adoptive and commissioning mothers receive 12 weeks.
Article 05 · GS-III · Energy · Governance · Institutional Design
Renewable Energy Ministry Demands Sweeping Powers Under Electricity Act, 2003
🔹 A. Issue in Brief

India’s Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) has sought to be recognised as the “Central Government” for all matters related to renewable energy under the Electricity Act, 2003 — currently the domain of the Ministry of Power. MNRE wants powers over electricity markets for renewables, bidding guidelines, tariff determination principles for CERC, Renewable Purchase Obligations (RPO) monitoring, and transmission planning coordination. India has installed 263.18 GW of renewable energy (out of 520.50 GW total) but generates only 25% actual electricity from non-fossil sources.

📚 B. Static Background
  • Electricity Act, 2003: Consolidated electricity law; covers generation, transmission, distribution, trading, and use of electricity; currently Power Ministry exercises primary authority.
  • CERC (Central Electricity Regulatory Commission): Independent regulatory body under Electricity Act; determines tariffs for inter-state electricity transmission and generation.
  • CEA (Central Electricity Authority): Technical body; coordinates national electricity policy and planning; under Power Ministry.
  • RPO (Renewable Purchase Obligation): Mandates distribution companies and large consumers to source a minimum % of power from renewables; many states are non-compliant.
  • India’s 500 GW Target: Non-fossil fuel capacity by 2030 (MNRE’s stated goal); currently at 271.96 GW installed.
  • National Committee on Transmission: Plans transmission infrastructure; MNRE wants oversight here — traditionally a Power Ministry domain.
📊 C. Key Dimensions
Power Sought by MNRECurrently WithRationaleRisk
Design RE electricity marketsPower Ministry / CERCSector-specific market design neededFragmentation of energy markets
Notify bidding guidelines for REPower MinistryMNRE has domain expertiseDuplication; regulatory arbitrage
Frame tariff principles for CERCPower MinistryMNRE knows RE cost structuresRisk of diluting CERC independence
Monitor RPO complianceCERC/SERCsStates lagging; MNRE can enforceCentre-State tension on electricity (Concurrent List)
Transmission planning oversightCEA/Power MinistryRE integration requires RE ministry guidanceInter-ministry turf battles; delays
Constitutional Context: “Electricity” is in the Concurrent List (Entry 38) of the Seventh Schedule — both Parliament and State Legislatures can legislate. Concentration of power in MNRE over states’ electricity decisions may raise federal concerns, especially on RPO enforcement.
🔍 D. Critical Analysis
  • Institutional Clarity vs. Fragmentation: India’s renewable energy ecosystem suffers from a proliferation of agencies — MNRE, Power Ministry, CERC, CEA, SERCs — with overlapping mandates. MNRE’s demand could either clarify or worsen this.
  • Capacity-Installation Gap: India has 263 GW installed RE capacity but generates only 25% actual electricity from non-fossil sources — the real challenge is grid integration, storage, and transmission, not institutional authority.
  • RPO Non-Compliance: Many states are laggards on RPO — giving MNRE enforcement power may improve compliance but could strain federal relations.
  • CERC Independence at Risk: If MNRE can frame tariff principles for CERC, it undermines the regulator’s independence — a fundamental principle of good regulatory design.
  • 500 GW by 2030 Feasibility: Current pace needs tripling of annual additions — institutional clarity is necessary but not sufficient; financing, grid infrastructure, and land availability are equally critical bottlenecks.
E. Way Forward
  • Amend the Electricity Act, 2003 to clearly delineate MNRE and Power Ministry roles — rather than executive fiat via parliamentary committee submissions.
  • Establish a National Renewable Energy Authority (NREA) — a statutory single-window body for all RE approvals, market design, and grid integration.
  • Strengthen CERC independence — its tariff decisions must remain insulated from executive influence (Ministry of Finance vs CERC precedent).
  • Mandate strict RPO compliance with penalty frameworks — empowering CERC/SERCs rather than MNRE for credibility.
  • Align with SDG 7 (Affordable and Clean Energy) and India’s NDC targets (45% reduction in emission intensity by 2030; 50% non-fossil power by 2030).

🎓 F. Exam Orientation

Electricity Act 2003Consolidated electricity law; CERC; CEA; Power Ministry
CERCCentral Electricity Regulatory Commission; independent tariff body
RPORenewable Purchase Obligation; minimum % from RE sources
500 GW TargetNon-fossil capacity by 2030; currently 271.96 GW installed
Entry 38Concurrent List: Electricity; both Centre and States can legislate
CEACentral Electricity Authority; technical planning body
📝 Model Mains Question (GS-III | 15 Marks)
“India’s renewable energy ambitions require both institutional clarity and regulatory independence. Critically examine the implications of the Renewable Energy Ministry’s demand for sweeping powers under the Electricity Act, 2003.” (250 words)

🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ

Q. Consider the following statements about India’s energy sector:
1. “Electricity” is a subject in the Concurrent List of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution.
2. The Central Electricity Regulatory Commission (CERC) was established under the Electricity Act, 2003.
3. India’s installed renewable energy capacity (as of early 2026) exceeds 50% of its total installed generation capacity.
  • (a) 1 and 2 only
  • (b) 1 and 3 only ✓
  • (c) 2 and 3 only
  • (d) 1, 2 and 3
Correct Answer: (b) — Statement 1 is correct (Entry 38, Concurrent List). Statement 3 is correct (263.18 GW RE out of 520.50 GW total = ~50.6%). Statement 2 is incorrect — CERC was established under the Electricity Regulatory Commissions Act, 1998; the Electricity Act 2003 consolidated and expanded its role.
Article 06 · GS-II · Polity · Internal Security · Service Law
CAPF Bill 2026 — IPS Officers Priority vs. Cadre Officers’ Career Rights
🔹 A. Issue in Brief

The Central Armed Police Forces (General Administration) Bill, 2026 proposes to codify IPS officer deputation quotas in CAPFs (BSF, CRPF, CISF, SSB, ITBP, NSG): 50% IG posts, 67% ADG posts, and 100% Spl. DG and DG posts for IPS officers. The Bill directly negates a May 2025 Supreme Court judgment that had directed the Home Ministry to “progressively reduce” IPS deputation. Retired CAPF officers have strongly opposed the Bill, citing career stagnation — it takes 15-18 years for a direct recruit to get a first promotion.

📚 B. Static Background
  • CAPFs: BSF (Border Security Force), CRPF (Central Reserve Police Force), CISF (Central Industrial Security Force), SSB (Sashastra Seema Bal), ITBP (Indo-Tibetan Border Police), NSG (National Security Guard).
  • IPS Deputation in CAPFs: IPS officers have traditionally been posted to senior CAPF positions (DG, Spl. DG, ADG, IG ranks) on deputation, blocking cadre officers’ promotions.
  • SC Judgment May 2025: Directed MHA to “progressively reduce” IPS deputation in CAPFs up to IG level — based on 10-year litigation by CAPF officers.
  • Article 312: Parliament may create All India Services (AIS); IPS is an AIS.
  • Home Minister’s Rationale: CAPFs function in close coordination with state authorities; IPS officers essential for Centre-State relations.
  • UPSC Recruitment: CAPF officers enter as Assistant Commandants through separate UPSC exam — different from IPS officers who enter via Civil Services Exam.
📊 C. Key Dimensions
PerspectiveGovernment’s ArgumentCAPF Officers’ Counter-Argument
Centre-State RelationsIPS officers bridge Centre-State coordination in security mattersCAPF cadre officers also coordinate with states; no exclusive IPS advantage
Operational ExpertiseIPS brings broader governance perspectiveCAPF officers lead from the front; superior ground-level expertise
Career ProgressionCodification brings clarity and ends litigation15-18 year wait for first promotion; stagnation is discriminatory
Judicial MandateBill supersedes SC order through legislative actionParliament using legislative power to reverse SC order raises rule-of-law concerns
MoraleStability of commandLong stagnation damages operational morale and effectiveness
Constitutional Issue: Using legislative power to effectively reverse a Supreme Court judgment (while technically constitutional since it changes the underlying law) raises ethical and governance concerns about the separation of powers and the rule of law. This has happened before (e.g., Dowry Prohibition Act amendments after SC rulings) but is always controversial.
🔍 D. Critical Analysis
  • Legislative Supersession of SC Order: While Parliament can amend laws to change their basis, doing so specifically to reverse a recent SC judgment in a service matter sets a troubling precedent for judicial independence.
  • Merit vs. Patronage: If IPS officers are parachuted into senior CAPF positions without serving in CAPFs, it creates a system of hierarchical privilege over merit-based promotion.
  • Operational Effectiveness: CAPF leaders who understand field operations from ground level are arguably more effective — the Kargil Review Committee (1999) stressed the importance of operational expertise at leadership levels.
  • Federal Dimension: The Home Minister’s argument about Centre-State relations could equally be addressed by ensuring regular liaison between IPS State cadres and CAPFs, without dominating the chain of command.
E. Way Forward
  • Progressively reduce IPS deputation at IG and below levels as directed by SC — while maintaining IPS presence at DG/Spl. DG for Centre-State coordination.
  • Create a dedicated CAPF cadre with accelerated promotion timelines — benchmarked to IPS promotion timelines for equivalent performance.
  • Establish a Joint Training Framework for IPS and CAPF officers — ensuring mutual understanding without hierarchical domination.
  • Consider an Independent Review Committee to examine the SC’s directive implementation, rather than a blanket legislative reversal.
  • Align with Kargil Review Committee and Shekatkar Committee recommendations on optimising the civil-military/security force leadership interface.

🎓 F. Exam Orientation

CAPFsBSF, CRPF, CISF, SSB, ITBP, NSG — 6 forces
IPSAll India Service; Article 312; Civil Services Exam
CAPF ACAssistant Commandant; separate UPSC exam (CAPF exam)
CAPF Bill 202650% IG, 67% ADG, 100% Spl. DG and DG for IPS
SC Judgment May 2025Directed “progressive reduction” of IPS deputation in CAPFs
Article 312Parliament can create All India Services by Rajya Sabha resolution
📝 Model Mains Question (GS-II | 15 Marks)
“The CAPF (General Administration) Bill, 2026 raises fundamental questions about meritocracy, judicial independence, and career justice in India’s paramilitary forces. Critically examine its implications for internal security governance.” (250 words)

🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ

Q. Which of the following are Central Armed Police Forces (CAPFs) of India?
1. BSF (Border Security Force)
2. CISF (Central Industrial Security Force)
3. Assam Rifles
4. ITBP (Indo-Tibetan Border Police)
  • (a) 1, 2 and 4 only
  • (b) 1 and 4 only
  • (c) 1, 2 and 4 only ✓
  • (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
Correct Answer: (a) / (c) — BSF, CISF, CRPF, SSB, ITBP, NSG are the 6 CAPFs under MHA. Assam Rifles is technically under the Ministry of Home Affairs administratively but operationally controlled by the Army — it is sometimes listed separately. The standard UPSC classification does NOT include Assam Rifles in the 6 main CAPFs.
Article 07 · GS-III · Economy · Energy Security · Industrial Growth
West Asia War — Core Sector Growth Halves; Rupee at ₹93.71; Premium Petrol Hike
🔹 A. Issue in Brief

India’s eight core sector growth halved to 2.3% in February 2026 — a three-month low — even before the West Asia war began on February 28. Crude oil, natural gas, and refinery products were already contracting. Now, the West Asia war has compounded the situation: Brent crude at $108/barrel, rupee at an all-new low of ₹93.71/$, FII outflows of ₹88,180 crore in March, premium petrol prices raised by ₹2-3/litre, and industrial diesel by ₹22/litre. Forex reserves dropped $7 billion. India’s crude oil basket averages $117.09/barrel.

📚 B. Static Background
  • Eight Core Sectors: Coal, Crude Oil, Natural Gas, Refinery Products, Fertilisers, Steel, Cement, and Electricity — account for about 40% of IIP (Index of Industrial Production) weight.
  • India’s Oil Budget: Government budgeted oil at $75/barrel for 2025-26; every $10 increase raises CAD by approximately $1 billion.
  • Current Account Deficit (CAD): Excess of imports over exports; high oil prices are the primary driver for India.
  • Rupee Depreciation: Oil import payments in dollars increase demand for dollars → rupee depreciates; FII equity outflows compound the pressure.
  • Variable Rate Repo (VRR): RBI tool to inject short-term liquidity into banking system; RBI injected ₹25,101 crore on March 21 to ease banking liquidity tightness.
  • India’s Forex Reserves: Dropped from all-time high of $725.7 billion (Feb 13) to $709.7 billion (March 13) — a $16 billion drop in one month.
📊 C. Key Dimensions
IndicatorPre-War (Feb 2026)March 21, 2026
Core Sector Growth4.7% (Jan 2026)2.3% (Feb) — 3-month low
Brent Crude~$80-85/barrel$108-109/barrel
India Crude Basket~$85/barrel$117.09/barrel
Rupee vs Dollar~₹86-87/$₹93.71/$ (all-time low)
Forex Reserves$725.7 bn (all-time high)$709.7 bn (fell $16 bn)
FII Outflows (March)₹88,180 crore in first 20 days
Premium Petrol₹99.87/litre₹101.89/litre (XP-95)
Industrial Diesel₹87.67/litre₹109.59/litre

🔄 Economic Transmission Mechanism: West Asia War → India’s Economy

Strait of Hormuz disruption → Crude oil price surge ($108-117/barrel)
Higher import bill → CAD widens → Dollar demand rises → Rupee depreciates (₹93.71/$)
FII equity outflows (₹88,180 cr in March) → Stock market pressure → Sensex volatility
Rising input costs → Industrial production slows → Core sector growth falls to 2.3%
Premium fuel price hike → Cascading inflation risk → RBI faces difficult MPC decision
GDP growth downside risk for FY27 — every $10 oil increase = $1 bn more CAD
🔍 D. Critical Analysis
  • Pre-existing Structural Weakness: India’s core sector was already slowing before the war — crude oil contracted for 6 consecutive months, natural gas for 20 months — revealing domestic supply-side failures independent of the war.
  • OMC Pricing Asymmetry: Oil Marketing Companies did not reduce petrol prices when oil fell to $64/barrel over the past 2.5 years — but now raise premium prices. This asymmetric pricing erodes public trust.
  • Fiscal Stress: Government budgeted oil at $75/barrel; actual at $117/barrel — a 56% overrun. The Economic Stabilisation Fund (₹57,381 crore) may prove insufficient for a prolonged crisis.
  • Energy Security Failure: India’s 87% oil import dependence and 90% LPG Hormuz-routing represents a fundamental energy security failure — the war has exposed this structural vulnerability dramatically.
E. Way Forward
  • Accelerate domestic crude oil and gas production — ONGC’s declining output trend must be reversed through new exploration policies (HELP — Hydrocarbon Exploration Licensing Policy).
  • Expand the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) from current 3 sites (Visakhapatnam, Mangaluru, Padur) to cover 30 days of imports (currently 9-10 days).
  • Use RBI’s forex reserves strategically to manage rupee volatility — while not defending an unsustainable level.
  • Expedite coal bed methane, shale gas, and biogas development for energy diversification.
  • Fast-track India’s 100 GW nuclear target and domestic solar manufacturing to reduce long-term oil dependence.
  • Link with SDG 7 (Clean Energy) and SDG 8 (Economic Growth) — sustainable energy security is the foundation of resilient growth.

🎓 F. Exam Orientation

Eight Core SectorsCoal, Crude Oil, NG, Refinery, Fertiliser, Steel, Cement, Electricity; ~40% IIP weight
CADCurrent Account Deficit; oil = primary driver; every $10 rise = $1bn more CAD
SPR SitesVisakhapatnam, Mangaluru, Padur; managed by ISPRL
VRR (Variable Rate Repo)RBI tool for short-term liquidity injection
HELP (2016)Hydrocarbon Exploration Licensing Policy; revenue sharing model
India Crude BasketWeighted average price of oil India imports; $117/barrel (March 2026)
📝 Model Mains Question (GS-III | 15 Marks)
“India’s energy import dependence has emerged as a critical vulnerability in the face of geopolitical disruptions. Analyse the economic impact of the West Asia crisis on India and suggest a comprehensive energy security framework.” (250 words)

🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ

Q. India’s eight core industries, which account for approximately 40% weight in the Index of Industrial Production (IIP), include which of the following?
1. Coal
2. Natural Gas
3. Fertilisers
4. Automobiles
5. Electricity
  • (a) 1, 2, 3 and 5 only
  • (b) 1, 2, 3 and 5 only ✓
  • (c) 1, 3, 4 and 5 only
  • (d) 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5
Correct Answer: (a)/(b) — The eight core industries are: Coal, Crude Oil, Natural Gas, Refinery Products, Fertilisers, Steel, Cement, and Electricity. Automobiles are NOT one of the eight core sectors. They are tracked separately under SIAM data and contribute to IIP but not in the “core eight” classification.
Article 08 · GS-I · History · GS-II · International Relations
Iran and the Politics of Martyrdom — Shia Theology, State Resilience & Strategic Implications
🔹 A. Issue in Brief

Despite losing its Supreme Leader (Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, killed Feb 28), top security officials (Ali Larijani, March 17; Intelligence Minister Esmail Khatib), Iran’s state continues to function and fight. This article analyses why — rooted in Shia theology, the politics of martyrdom, and the revolutionary state’s ideological foundations. Iran’s decapitation-resistance reveals the limits of a military strategy focused on killing leaders, and has broader implications for India’s foreign policy positioning and global geopolitical understanding.

📚 B. Static Background — Shia History for UPSC
  • Shia-Sunni Split: After Prophet Mohammed’s death, dispute over succession — Shias backed Ali (Prophet’s cousin/son-in-law) as rightful caliph; Sunnis accepted Abu Bakr as first caliph.
  • Battle of Karbala (680 CE): Hussein (Ali’s son, third Shia Imam) and 72 followers killed by forces of Umayyad Caliph Yazid — the foundational martyrdom event in Shia Islam. Observed as Ashura on 10th Muharram.
  • Safavid Dynasty (1501): Adopted Shia Islam as official religion of the Persian Empire — creating the Iran-Shia identity that persists today.
  • 1979 Islamic Revolution: Ayatollah Khomeini overthrew Shah Pahlavi; established Velayat-e-Faqih (Guardianship of the Islamic Jurist) — Supreme Leader as highest authority above elected President.
  • Iran-Iraq War (1980-88): Saddam’s invasion rallied Iranians; clergy used martyrdom ideology to consolidate power; purged leftists and liberals under cover of war — historical parallel to current crisis.
  • Decapitation Strategy: Military strategy of eliminating enemy leadership to cause state collapse — effective against non-ideological states, but historically less effective against ideologically cohesive movements (e.g., Hamas, Hezbollah, Taliban).
📊 C. Key Dimensions
Historical Parallel1979-882026
External ThreatSaddam’s Iraqi invasion (1980)U.S.-Israel strikes (Feb 28, 2026)
Martyrdom InvocationSaddam = new Yazid; war = KarbalaKilled leaders elevated as martyrs; Mojtaba Khamenei: “blood makes system stronger”
Political EffectRallied Iranians; clergy consolidated power; purged oppositionIRGC warns of crackdown on anti-govt protests; state continues to function
State DurabilityState survived 8-year war despite global isolationState functioning after losing Supreme Leader and top officials
Regional ImpactMobilised Shia movements across Lebanon (Hezbollah born)Drone/missile attacks continuing; Gulf states hit; global oil disruption

🧠 Two Pillars of Iran’s Revolutionary State

⚔️ Political Shiism
Velayat-e-Faqih; Supreme Leader as highest authority; martyrdom as political mobilisation tool
🇮🇷 Iranian Nationalism
Persian civilisational identity; anti-imperialism; Safavid-era Shia-Persian fusion; opposition to US hegemony
🕌 Karbala Legacy
Hussein’s martyrdom = template for sacrifice; killing leaders = elevating them as martyrs in Shia consciousness
🛡️ IRGC
Revolutionary Guards; ideologically committed force; distinct from regular military; controls economy and strategic weapons
🌍 Proxy Network
Hezbollah (Lebanon), Houthis (Yemen), Hashd al-Sha’abi (Iraq), Hamas — Axis of Resistance
⚛️ Nuclear Ambiguity
Netanyahu claims Iran no longer can enrich uranium — but Iran denies; strategic deterrence value remains
🔍 D. Critical Analysis — India’s Foreign Policy Dimension
  • Strategic Autonomy Tested: As the op-ed by former diplomat Chinmaya Gharekhan notes, India’s refusal to condole Khamenei’s assassination (while co-sponsoring UNSC Res. 2817) signals tilt toward US-Israel axis — contradicting India’s claimed “non-alignment” tradition.
  • Selfish Foreign Policy: As Nehru wrote to Einstein — foreign policy is essentially selfish (national interest-driven). Modi’s calculation: US is India’s largest trading partner + technology supplier; Gulf states = 10 million Indians + energy. Iran = smaller stake.
  • BRICS Chair Dilemma: India holds BRICS Presidency 2026; Iran is BRICS+ member; silence on Iranian leader’s killing while chairing this forum is diplomatically awkward.
  • PM’s Israel Visit Timing (Feb 25-26): Just days before the war — widely seen as signal of ideological affinity with Israel; undermined India’s neutral positioning.
  • Decapitation Strategy’s Limits: If the US-Israel objective was rapid state collapse in Iran — it is not working. Iran’s martyrdom ideology makes leadership assassination counter-productive strategically.
UPSC Essay Connection: This article is directly relevant to essays on: “Strategic Autonomy in Indian Foreign Policy”, “Religion and Politics in West Asia”, “India and the Global South”, “Geopolitics of Energy”. The Karbala narrative also connects to GS-I (World History) on Islamic civilisation and Shia-Sunni divide.
E. Way Forward — For India’s Foreign Policy
  • Articulate a consistent West Asia doctrine that aligns with India’s civilisational ties with Iran while not antagonising the US — a true “strategic autonomy” position.
  • Use the BRICS Presidency to call for a ceasefire and negotiate humanitarian corridors — demonstrating independent diplomatic leadership.
  • Maintain back-channel diplomatic communications with Iran even while publicly aligning with UNSC resolutions — as India did during the Cold War era.
  • Learn from history: Iran survived the 8-year Iraq war — premature conclusions about its “decimation” may prove strategically costly for India’s long-term positioning.

🎓 F. Exam Orientation

Battle of Karbala680 CE; Hussein killed; foundational Shia martyrdom event
Ashura10th Muharram; Shia mourning of Hussein’s martyrdom
Velayat-e-FaqihGuardianship of Islamic Jurist; Khomeini’s concept; Supreme Leader above President
Safavid Dynasty1501; made Shia Islam official Persian religion
IRGCIslamic Revolutionary Guard Corps; Iran’s ideological military force
Decapitation StrategyEliminating enemy leadership to collapse state; less effective against ideology-driven states
📝 Model Mains Question (GS-II | 15 Marks)
“India’s response to the West Asia war of 2026 has exposed the tensions between its proclaimed ‘strategic autonomy’ and its practical alignment with Western powers. Critically examine India’s foreign policy dilemmas in the context of the Iran conflict.” (250 words)

🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ

Q. Consider the following about the Shia-Sunni division in Islam:
1. The Battle of Karbala (680 CE) is the foundational martyrdom event in Shia Islam.
2. Shias believe that Ali, the Prophet’s cousin, should have been the first Caliph after Mohammed’s death.
3. Ashura is observed on the 10th of Ramzan to commemorate the martyrdom of Hussein at Karbala.
  • (a) 1 and 2 only ✓
  • (b) 2 and 3 only
  • (c) 1 and 3 only
  • (d) 1, 2 and 3
Correct Answer: (a) — Statements 1 and 2 are correct. Statement 3 is incorrect — Ashura is observed on the 10th of Muharram (the first month of the Islamic calendar), not Ramzan. Ramzan is the 9th month and is associated with fasting.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions (SEO-Optimised)
What is Goa’s Section 39A of the Town and Country Planning Act and why is it controversial?
Section 39A was introduced under the Town and Country Planning (Amendment) Act, 2024 in Goa. It allows conversion of ecologically sensitive zones — including forests, hills, paddy fields, and orchards — into settlement (construction) zones. This is controversial because: (1) It recognises only 7 eco-sensitive zone categories versus the 17-18 categories in the Regional Plan 2011. (2) It does not require mandatory public consultation or Gram Sabha consent. (3) Applications to convert 68 lakh square metres of land have been submitted, of which 13.6% has already been converted. (4) Residents, environmentalists, and former sarpanches argue it enables large real estate companies to bypass local democratic processes and destroy Goa’s ecology. The Goa Bench of the Bombay High Court had already read down a predecessor provision (Section 17(2)) in April 2025 on similar grounds.
What is the Great Nicobar Island mega-project and what are the tribal rights concerns associated with it?
The Great Nicobar mega-infrastructure project is a ₹92,000 crore project that includes a transhipment port, dual-use airfield, township, and power plant on Great Nicobar Island in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The tribal rights concerns are: (1) Nearly 84 sq.km of legally notified tribal reserve is sought to be de-notified for the project, without consent of the Shompen (a PVTG — Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Group) and Nicobarese communities. (2) The Forest Rights Act, 2006 mandates Gram Sabha consent for forest land diversion — this appears to have been bypassed. (3) Settler families (ex-servicemen descendants) are also protesting grossly inadequate compensation of ₹113-180/sq.m versus ₹11,370-20,500/sq.m offered in Andaman for similar land. (4) Nicobarese leaders have said they do not consent to the project on tribal lands, though they support development on government-owned revenue lands.
What did the Supreme Court rule on maternity leave for adoptive mothers in 2026?
The Supreme Court of India (Justices J.B. Pardiwala and R. Mahadevan) ruled in 2026 that adoptive mothers are entitled to 12 weeks of paid maternity leave regardless of the age of the adopted child at the time of adoption. This struck down the previous restriction that allowed maternity leave only if the adopted child was under 3 months of age — a practically impossible condition given that the legal adoption process itself takes more than 3 months. The Court declared adoption as an “expression of reproductive autonomy” and held that adoptive mothers have the same rights and obligations toward the child as biological mothers. The SC also urged the government to legislate paternity leave as a social security benefit, noting that parenthood is not a function performed by one parent alone.
What is the CAPF Bill 2026 and why is it controversial?
The Central Armed Police Forces (General Administration) Bill, 2026 proposes to legally mandate IPS officer deputation quotas in the 6 Central Armed Police Forces (BSF, CRPF, CISF, SSB, ITBP, NSG): 50% of Inspector General (IG) posts, at least 67% of Additional Director General (ADG) posts, and 100% of Special DG and DG posts to be filled by IPS officers on deputation. The Bill is controversial because: (1) It directly negates a May 2025 Supreme Court judgment that had directed MHA to “progressively reduce” IPS deputation in CAPFs up to IG level. (2) CAPF cadre officers — recruited separately through UPSC’s CAPF examination — face career stagnation of 15-18 years for a first promotion due to IPS dominance of senior posts. (3) The use of legislative power to reverse a recent SC judgment raises rule-of-law concerns. The Home Minister argues IPS officers are necessary for effective Centre-State coordination in security matters.
Why is India’s core sector growth slowing in 2026 and how does the West Asia crisis impact India’s economy?
India’s eight core sector growth slowed to 2.3% in February 2026 (from 4.7% in January), a three-month low, even before the West Asia war began on February 28. Domestic crude oil had contracted for 6 consecutive months and natural gas for 20 months — reflecting structural domestic supply problems. The West Asia war (US-Israel attacks on Iran from Feb 28) has compounded this by: (1) Pushing Brent crude to $108/barrel and India’s crude basket to $117/barrel (vs. government’s $75/barrel budget assumption). (2) Depreciating the rupee to an all-time low of ₹93.71/$ — increasing import costs. (3) Triggering FII outflows of ₹88,180 crore in the first 20 days of March. (4) Causing forex reserves to drop $7 billion in a week. (5) Prompting Oil Marketing Companies to raise premium petrol (by ₹2-3/litre) and industrial diesel (by ₹22/litre) prices. Every $10 increase in oil prices adds approximately $1 billion to India’s Current Account Deficit.
Why has Iran’s state not collapsed despite losing its Supreme Leader and top officials in the 2026 war?
Iran’s resistance to collapse despite losing Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei (Feb 28) and other top officials is rooted in deep historical, theological, and institutional factors: (1) Shia martyrdom ideology: The Battle of Karbala (680 CE) — where Hussein and 72 followers were killed by Yazid’s forces — is the foundational template. By assassinating Iran’s leaders, the US and Israel have inadvertently elevated them as martyrs in Shia consciousness, strengthening rather than weakening the state’s ideological legitimacy. (2) Dual pillars of the revolutionary state: Political Shiism (Velayat-e-Faqih — Guardianship of the Islamic Jurist) and Iranian nationalism are deeply intertwined, creating ideological resilience that transcends individual leaders. (3) Historical precedent: The 8-year Iran-Iraq war (1980-88) showed that external threats rally Iranians behind the state. Saddam Hussein’s invasion strengthened the clergy’s grip on power, not weakened it — the same dynamic is operating today. (4) Institutional depth: The IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps) is ideologically committed and operationally independent of the Supreme Leader’s daily decisions.
What are the Renewable Energy Ministry’s demands under the Electricity Act, 2003 and what are the concerns?
India’s Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) has demanded to be recognised as the “Central Government” for all renewable energy matters under the Electricity Act, 2003 — currently the Power Ministry’s domain. Specifically, MNRE wants powers to: design electricity markets for renewables; notify bidding guidelines for RE projects; frame tariff determination principles for CERC; monitor and enforce Renewable Purchase Obligations (RPOs); and guide transmission planning (currently a Power Ministry/CEA domain). The concerns are: (1) It could fragment India’s electricity governance further across overlapping agencies. (2) It risks undermining the independence of CERC (Central Electricity Regulatory Commission) — a key regulatory safeguard. (3) Electricity is in the Concurrent List (Entry 38), so sweeping central ministry powers over RPO enforcement may strain Centre-State relations. (4) The real barriers to India’s 500 GW renewable target by 2030 are grid infrastructure, storage, financing, and land — not institutional authority — so the demand may be misdirected.
What is India’s “strategic autonomy” foreign policy and how has it been tested by the West Asia crisis of 2026?
“Strategic autonomy” refers to India’s foreign policy doctrine of maintaining independent decision-making in international affairs, not aligning fully with any single power bloc, and pursuing national interest pragmatically. The West Asia war of 2026 has tested this doctrine in several ways: (1) India co-sponsored UNSC Resolution 2817 condemning Iran’s attacks on Gulf states, but did not condemn the US-Israel strikes that killed Iran’s Supreme Leader — suggesting tilt toward the Western axis. (2) PM Modi visited Israel (Feb 25-26), just days before the US-Israel strikes on Iran — seen as a signal of ideological affinity rather than strategic neutrality. (3) India did not condole the assassination of Ayatollah Khamenei, the constitutional head of state of Iran — despite Iran being in BRICS+ (India holds BRICS Presidency in 2026). (4) India has allowed safe passage of oil tankers from Iran through diplomatic channels — Iran’s “graciousness” despite India’s unfriendly stance, as noted by former diplomat Chinmaya Gharekhan. Critics argue India has abandoned its traditional “principled soft power” position and is moving toward transactional alignment with the US at the cost of long-term strategic independence.

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