The Hindu – UPSC News Analysis
- The India-Africa Forum Summit-IV (IAFS-IV), planned for May 28–31 in New Delhi after a gap of nearly 11 years, has been postponed due to the Ebola public health emergency (Bundibugyo strain) in DRC and Uganda.
- India and the African Union jointly announced the postponement — citing “evolving health situation in parts of Africa.” India pledged solidarity and vowed an “Africa-led” approach to the crisis.
- The International Big Cat Alliance (IBCA) Summit, scheduled alongside IAFS-IV (several African nations host big cats), was also postponed — indicating cascading diplomatic costs of the Ebola outbreak.
- IAFS Timeline: IAFS-I (2008 New Delhi), IAFS-II (2011 Addis Ababa), IAFS-III (2015 New Delhi — also postponed once due to 2014 West Africa Ebola). IAFS-IV was first in 11 years.
- IAFS-III Outcomes: ₹600M grants + $10 billion lines of credit to Africa; 54 African nations participated.
- African Union: Pan-African body of 55 member states. India-AU partnership is central to India’s “Africa First” foreign policy.
- IBCA: India-led alliance launched 2023 — 7 species (tiger, lion, leopard, snow leopard, cheetah, puma, jaguar); $100 million, 5-year commitment from India.
- Ebola PHEIC: WHO declared PHEIC for Bundibugyo strain Ebola in DRC/Uganda (May 2026). India’s DGHS issued travel advisory for DRC, Uganda, South Sudan as “high-risk countries.”
- India’s Africa strategy: ITEC (Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation), lines of credit, DPI sharing, defence cooperation, and South-South development partnership.
| IAFS Edition | Year | Key Outcome | Nations |
|---|---|---|---|
| IAFS-I | 2008 | Framework for partnership; $5.4B LoC | 14 heads of state |
| IAFS-II | 2011 | Expanded India-Africa cooperation | 15 |
| IAFS-III | 2015 | $600M grants + $10B LoC; 54 nations | 54 |
| IAFS-IV | 2026 (Postponed) | DPI, AI, defence, minerals, climate planned | 55+ planned |
- 11-year engagement gap: China holds FOCAC every 3 years; India’s 11-year gap and second postponement signals reduced strategic priority — at a time when Africa’s importance (critical minerals, UN votes, markets) is growing rapidly.
- Diplomatic resilience gap: No contingency protocol for infectious disease disruptions exists for IAFS — India should have hybrid (physical + virtual) options built into all major summit frameworks post-COVID.
- IBCA momentum loss: Postponing both IAFS and IBCA simultaneously loses synergy. African lion and leopard conservation partners were key IBCA expansion opportunities.
- Health advisory operationalisation: Issuing a travel advisory for DRC/Uganda is the minimum — India must activate thermal screening at all airports with Africa connections, not merely issue paper advisories.
- Early rescheduling: Fix IAFS-IV for September-October 2026 with firm commitment — prevent another multi-year gap.
- Health solidarity now: Offer vaccine manufacturing support, diagnostics, and ITEC medical training to Ebola-affected nations — turn the crisis into a health diplomacy opportunity demonstrating India’s commitment.
- Standalone IBCA Summit: Host separately in July-August 2026 — decouple from IAFS to avoid cascading cancellations.
- Align with SDG 3 (Good Health) and SDG 17 (Partnerships for Goals — South-South cooperation).
The repeated postponement of India-Africa Forum Summit reflects structural challenges in India’s Africa engagement strategy. Critically analyse India’s Africa policy and suggest a framework to sustain momentum independent of diplomatic disruptions.
1. IAFS-III (2015) saw participation of 54 African nations and committed $10 billion in lines of credit to Africa.
2. The International Big Cat Alliance (IBCA) was launched by India in 2023 and covers seven big cat species.
3. India’s FOCAC equivalent with Africa is held every three years, similar to China’s engagement.
- (A) 1 only
- (B) 1 and 2 only
- (C) 2 and 3 only
- (D) 1, 2 and 3
- The Supreme Court clarified that sedition trials under Section 124A IPC can proceed if the accused has no objection — partially lifting the stay on all sedition cases imposed in May 2022.
- The clarification came through a plea by a man jailed for 17 years on charges including sedition under IPC, UAPA, and the Arms Act — who himself wanted his appeal heard on merits, not stalled.
- The Court directed the MP High Court to hear his appeal forthwith — signalling urgency when Article 21 (personal liberty) is at stake due to prolonged incarceration.
- Section 124A IPC: Colonial law (1870) — defines sedition as bringing hatred, contempt, or disaffection towards the Government. Punishment: life imprisonment or 3 years + fine.
- May 2022 SC Order: CJI N.V. Ramana-led Bench stayed all sedition cases — directed Centre to “re-examine and reconsider” Section 124A. No new FIRs, investigations, or coercive action under 124A.
- Kedar Nath Singh vs State of Bihar (1962): SC Constitution Bench upheld 124A but confined its application to speech that incites violence or causes public disorder — mere criticism of government is protected speech under Article 19(1)(a).
- BNS 2023: Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita replaced IPC from July 1, 2024. Section 124A (sedition) was NOT retained — replaced by Section 152 BNS: “Acts endangering sovereignty, unity and integrity of India” — broader scope, higher punishment (7 years vs 3 years).
- May 2026 SC clarity: If the accused has no objection, trial/appeal involving Section 124A IPC can proceed on merits. Courts are no longer blocked from deciding pending cases where the accused wants resolution.
| Aspect | Section 124A IPC | Section 152 BNS (2024) |
|---|---|---|
| Offence | Contempt/hatred/disaffection against government | Acts endangering sovereignty, unity and integrity of India |
| Max. Punishment | Life imprisonment or 3 years + fine | Life imprisonment or 7 years + fine |
| Judicial limits | Kedar Nath (1962): only if speech incites violence | Interpretation still evolving — broader scope |
| Civil liberties concern | Misused against activists, journalists, students | Potentially greater misuse risk — “sovereignty” is vague |
- Perverse effect of 2022 stay: The May 2022 stay — intended to protect civil liberties — paradoxically prolonged the 17-year petitioner’s imprisonment by blocking his appeal. The SC’s 2026 clarification corrects this unintended harm.
- Section 152 BNS — expansion, not reform: Presenting Section 152 BNS as a “deletion of sedition” misleads. The new provision is BROADER in scope (sovereignty, unity, integrity — not merely government contempt) and HIGHER in punishment (7 years vs 3 years). Civil liberties groups call it “sedition on steroids.”
- Chilling effect continues: Even without formal sedition charges, the fear of Section 152 BNS prosecution creates a chilling effect on political speech, journalism, and dissent — especially for activists from minority communities.
- Article 19(1)(a) tension: Both Section 124A IPC (historically) and Section 152 BNS (currently) create tension with the fundamental right to free speech — a Constitution Bench must settle the proportionality question for Section 152.
- Constitution Bench on Section 152 BNS: SC must examine whether Section 152 BNS meets the proportionality test under Article 19(2) — and apply Kedar Nath principles to the new provision.
- Fast-track for long-term undertrials: Mandatory bail review for persons incarcerated 5+ years under sedition/Section 152 charges — consistent with Article 21 on prolonged detention.
- Pre-charge judicial review: Introduce mandatory magistrate review before FIR registration under Section 152 BNS — to prevent SLAPP (Strategic Litigation Against Public Participation) use by state or private parties.
- Uphold Article 19(1)(a) (free speech), Article 21 (personal liberty), and SDG 16 (access to justice).
The replacement of Section 124A IPC (Sedition) with Section 152 BNS has been described as a reform. However, critics argue it represents an expansion of state power over free speech. Critically examine this contention in the light of constitutional provisions and judicial precedents.
1. In Kedar Nath Singh v. State of Bihar (1962), the SC upheld Section 124A IPC but confined it to acts inciting violence or causing public disorder.
2. The Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) 2023 completely abolished sedition as an offence in India with no replacement provision.
3. Section 152 of the BNS covers “acts endangering sovereignty, unity and integrity of India” with a maximum punishment of 7 years.
Which are correct?
- (A) 1 only
- (B) 2 and 3 only
- (C) 1 and 3 only
- (D) 1, 2 and 3
- The Hindu editorial argues that while the caste census (part of Census 2027) is constitutionally valid and policy-necessary, people must have the option to classify themselves as casteless — respecting individual agency and the constitutional goal of eradicating caste.
- A fundamental paradox runs through India’s constitutional design: Article 17 seeks to abolish caste-based discrimination, while Articles 15(4), 16(4) and 340 use caste as the basis for affirmative action. The caste census is the latest manifestation of this unresolved tension.
- The SECC 2011 failure — 46 lakh distinct caste names, 8 crore data errors, data never published — warns about methodology; a better-designed 2027 enumeration is essential.
- Constitutional paradox on caste: Art. 14, 15(1), 17 prohibit caste discrimination; Art. 15(4), 16(4), 340 permit affirmative action using caste. Preamble commits to fraternity and dignity.
- Mandal Commission (1980): Used 1931 caste data to estimate OBC population at 52% — no accurate post-Independence data has existed since.
- Indra Sawhney (1992): 9-judge SC Bench upheld 27% OBC reservation; imposed 50% ceiling on total reservations. Accurate caste census data could fuel demands to breach this ceiling.
- Bihar Caste Survey (2023): Found OBCs+EBCs = 63% of Bihar population — immediately used as basis for demand to breach 50% ceiling.
- SECC 2011: Open-ended caste identification produced 46 lakh distinct caste names; 8 crore data errors; most findings remain unpublished. Warning lesson for Census 2027 methodology.
- Caste ≠ backwardness uniformly: Every caste has wealthy and poor members — caste alone is an imprecise proxy for welfare need. Combining caste with income, education, and geography gives more accurate targeting.
- Political timing concern: Caste census announcement (April 2025) came just before multiple State elections — raises legitimate concern that data will be weaponised for political mobilisation rather than policy design.
- 50% ceiling challenge: Accurate national caste data showing OBCs above 50% will intensify demands to breach the Indra Sawhney (1992) ceiling — setting up a constitutional confrontation.
- Methodology risk: Open-ended enumeration (SECC 2011 model) failed. Closed enumeration with a government-prescribed caste list has its own problems — communities that don’t fit the list will be misclassified.
- Casteless option mandatory: Allow self-identification as “no caste” — respects Art. 17 and individual dignity; captures reality of inter-caste marriages and social evolution.
- Multi-dimensional backwardness index: Combine caste with income, education, geography, and occupation — composite index for welfare targeting more precise than caste alone.
- Independent methodology committee: Sociologists, civil society, SC/ST/OBC representatives, and statisticians must design the enumeration protocol — prevent political interference in caste categorisation.
- Data use legislation: Parliament must enact law specifying permitted and prohibited uses of caste data — prevent electoral misuse.
- Align with Article 17 (caste eradication), SDG 10 (reduced inequalities), and SDG 16 (strong institutions with data integrity).
The caste census reflects the unresolved paradox at the heart of India’s constitutional design — eradicating caste while using it for affirmative action. Critically analyse this paradox and suggest a framework reconciling data needs with the goal of a casteless society.
1. A 9-judge Constitutional Bench upheld 27% OBC reservation in central government jobs.
2. The judgment imposed a 50% ceiling on total reservations as a general rule.
3. The judgment held that the “creamy layer” must be excluded from OBC reservation benefits.
4. The judgment declared all caste-based reservations unconstitutional beyond 10 years.
- (A) 1 and 2 only
- (B) 1, 2 and 3 only
- (C) 2 and 4 only
- (D) 1, 2, 3 and 4
- Civil society leaders from Ladakh — including Sonam Wangchuk (Leh Apex Body) and Kargil Democratic Alliance (KDA) — met Home Ministry officials on May 22, 2026 demanding Sixth Schedule inclusion, Statehood, and constitutional safeguards.
- The Centre has so far offered only Article 371-type provisions and strengthening of Hill Councils — and announced 5 new administrative districts — instead of a legislature or Sixth Schedule protection.
- The editorial argues powerfully: “Districts are instruments of administration; Legislatures are instruments of representation.” The offer of districts instead of a legislature reflects an “impoverished understanding of democracy.”
- Article 370 abrogation (August 5, 2019): J&K bifurcated into two UTs — J&K (with legislature) and Ladakh (without legislature). Ladakh is the only UT in India without a legislature.
- Sixth Schedule (Articles 244(2) & 275(1)): Provides Autonomous District Councils (ADCs) with legislative, executive and judicial powers for tribal areas in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram. Not yet extended to Ladakh.
- Article 371: “Temporary, Transitional and Special Provisions” for 12 States (371A for Nagaland, 371G for Mizoram). Centre offering 371-type safeguards — seen as less protective than Sixth Schedule.
- LAB (Leh Apex Body) & KDA (Kargil Democratic Alliance): Two civil society bodies representing the two districts of Ladakh. Demand Statehood + Sixth Schedule since 2020.
- Pang Renewable Energy Project: ~13 GW solar energy project in Changthang, Ladakh — ₹50,000 crore investment. Ladakhi Changpa herders’ grazing lands affected — no local democratic oversight.
- NSA detention of Wangchuk: Sonam Wangchuk was detained under National Security Act in 2025; released March 14, 2026. May 22 meeting was his first formal participation in negotiations.
| State | Population at Statehood | Financially Self-sufficient? | Strategic Border? | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nagaland (1963) | ~3.5 lakh | No | Yes (Myanmar) | Full Statehood granted |
| Mizoram (1987) | ~5 lakh | No | Yes (Myanmar, Bangladesh) | Full Statehood granted |
| Sikkim (1975) | ~2 lakh | No | Yes (China, Nepal) | Full Statehood granted |
| Ladakh (2026) | ~3 lakh | No | Yes (China, Pakistan) | Denied legislature — offered districts |
- Electoral promise breach: BJP leaders explicitly promised Sixth Schedule in 2019–2020 manifestos. After winning elections on these promises, the commitment was abandoned — raising serious accountability questions.
- Security argument is inconsistent: Arunachal Pradesh (most sensitive China border, vast, sparse) got full Statehood in 1987. The “too strategic for self-governance” logic is selectively applied.
- Energy colonialism: ₹50,000 crore Pang energy project decisions — land acquisition, Changpa herders’ grazing rights, royalties — made without Ladakhi democratic voice. This resembles colonial resource extraction without local consent.
- NSA detention counterproductive: Wangchuk’s 2025 NSA detention for peaceful protest deepened alienation rather than resolving demands — suppressing democratic aspirations is historically counterproductive to integration.
- Extend Sixth Schedule to Ladakh: Create Autonomous District Councils for Leh and Kargil with powers over land, culture, and natural resources — constitutionally consistent with tribal protection framework.
- Energy revenue sharing: Legislate mandatory royalty-sharing from Pang and other energy projects — defined percentage to local Ladakhi communities.
- FPIC for infrastructure: Free, Prior and Informed Consent of Changpa herder communities before any solar/wind project proceeds on their traditional grazing lands.
- Interim legislature: Even within UT status — create a Ladakh Legislative Assembly with powers over local subjects (land, employment, environment) as a first step.
- Align with DPSP Article 40 (Panchayati Raj — local self-governance), SDG 10 (reduced inequalities — political inclusion), and SDG 15 (land and ecosystem protection).
“Offering more districts instead of a legislature to Ladakh reflects an impoverished understanding of democracy.” Critically examine Ladakh’s demand for Sixth Schedule inclusion and Statehood in the context of India’s federal tradition and constitutional values.
1. It currently applies to tribal areas in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram.
2. It provides for Autonomous District Councils with legislative, executive and judicial powers over tribal affairs.
3. Ladakh was included under the Sixth Schedule after the abrogation of Article 370 in 2019.
Which are correct?
- (A) 1 only
- (B) 1 and 2 only
- (C) 2 and 3 only
- (D) 1, 2 and 3
- The Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming (PROG) Act, 2025 banned real-money online gaming — but has proven counterproductive: offshore platform usage surged from 68–91% across Delhi NCR, Tamil Nadu, and Maharashtra (CUTS International study).
- The ban has created new risks: money laundering, terror financing, and online fraud through offshore platforms beyond Indian regulatory reach — far greater harms than regulated domestic gaming would have caused.
- The article (by MP Karti P. Chidambaram) argues that regulation with consumer safeguards — not prohibition — is the appropriate policy, citing evidence from UAE, Sri Lanka, and Western countries.
- PROG Act 2025: Passed October 2025; bans real-money online gaming; implemented by MeitY (Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology).
- MeitY Online Gaming Rules 2023: Pre-PROG framework — distinguished permissible (skill-based) from non-permissible (chance-based) games; required SRO (Self-Regulatory Organisation) verification. Overridden by PROG Act.
- State List jurisdiction: Gambling/betting is Entry 34, State List. Centre’s PROG Act relies on IT Act powers — creates federal-constitutional tension.
- SC/HC rulings on skill games: Multiple courts held fantasy sports (Dream11, MPL) are games of SKILL, not gambling — constitutionally protected activity. PROG Act’s broad ban may override this distinction.
- CUTS International data: Offshore platform usage post-PROG: Delhi NCR 68.3% → 82%; Tamil Nadu 67.8% → 83%; Maharashtra 66.7% → 91.7%.
- MeitY URL blocking: 8,376 URLs blocked — but users shift to mirror sites instantly via VPN/proxy/Telegram. Technical enforcement is ineffective for digital platforms.
| Country | Policy | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| India (PROG Act 2025) | Blanket ban | Offshore surge 68% → 91%; fraud networks; no tax revenue |
| UAE | Controlled federal licensing; deposit limits; harm prevention | Domestic framework; reduced unregulated offshore activity |
| Sri Lanka | Gambling Regulatory Authority (from June 2026) | Consolidating oversight; bringing offshore within domestic framework |
| UK | Gambling Commission regulation | Large regulated market; tax revenue; consumer protection |
- Paternalism failure: For digital, non-physical products with zero-cost switching (VPN), a ban eliminates legal supply without eliminating demand — the classic Prohibition failure (USA, 1920s).
- Lost tax revenue: India’s legal gaming industry generated ~₹1.5L crore in 2024–25. At 28% GST, this was significant revenue — now transferred to zero-tax offshore platforms.
- Fraud network expansion: The Sivaganga constituency “Old Coin Purchase Task” fraud (Telegram-based; mule bank accounts) illustrates how offshore gaming creates financial crime infrastructure beyond Indian oversight.
- Federal tension: Gambling is a State subject (Entry 34); different States have different laws. A central PROG Act creates jurisdictional conflict — vulnerable to constitutional challenge.
- Restore skill/chance distinction: Repeal PROG Act; restore MeitY 2023 Rules with SRO oversight — allow skill-based gaming, ban chance-based (lottery/casino) gaming.
- Federal licensing framework: UAE model — controlled licensing, deposit limits (max wager caps), mandatory identity verification, responsible gaming (self-exclusion, cooling-off).
- FATF-linked offshore enforcement: Treat offshore gaming platforms as AML (Anti-Money Laundering) risks — international cooperation through FATF to track money flows.
- Earmarked gaming tax: Tax revenue from regulated gaming dedicated to addiction prevention and rehabilitation — addresses social harm concern without prohibition.
- Align with SDG 16 (Strong Institutions — regulated markets) and SDG 17 (responsible governance frameworks).
Evidence shows India’s PROG Act 2025 (online gaming ban) has increased offshore platform usage from 68% to 91% in some States, creating new risks of money laundering and fraud. Critically examine this evidence and make a case for a regulated domestic framework as an alternative to prohibition.
1. Gambling and betting is a State subject under Entry 34 of the State List (Seventh Schedule).
2. Courts in India have held that fantasy sports games like Dream11 constitute gambling and are thus prohibited.
3. MeitY’s Online Gaming Intermediary Rules (2023) distinguished between permissible skill-based and non-permissible chance-based games.
Which are correct?
- (A) 1 only
- (B) 1 and 3 only
- (C) 2 and 3 only
- (D) 1, 2 and 3
- India’s April 2026 crude oil imports fell 4.3% in volume (20.1 mt vs 21 mt) but the import bill soared ~50% ($16.3B vs $10.7B) — a stark price-volume paradox driven by the Strait of Hormuz closure.
- The overall net oil+gas import bill rose 23% to $13.9 billion in April. LNG imports declined 30% in volume and LPG sales fell 12.7% — reflecting demand destruction, NOT self-sufficiency improvement.
- India’s gas import dependence fell to 41.6% from 49.2% a year ago — because of lower consumption (industrial slowdown, conservation), not because of improved domestic production (which also fell 4.2%).
- PPAC (Petroleum Planning and Analysis Cell): Under MoPNG; publishes monthly oil and gas data; calculates India’s crude oil basket price.
- India’s crude basket price: April 2026 average ~$106–107/barrel — up ~50% from ~$71/barrel in April 2025.
- India’s oil import dependence: ~85% of crude requirements imported. World’s 3rd largest oil importer. Major suppliers: Russia (~40%), Saudi Arabia, Iraq.
- Demand destruction: When prices rise sharply, consumers and industries reduce consumption — lower LNG and LPG consumption in April 2026 reflects this phenomenon, not genuine energy security improvement.
- LPG allocation cut: Government allocated commercial establishments only 70% of their pre-crisis LPG consumption — rationing that affects restaurants, hotels, small industries.
| Indicator | April 2025 | April 2026 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Crude oil volume | 21 mt | 20.1 mt | ↓ 4.3% |
| Crude oil import bill | $10.7 billion | $16.3 billion | ↑ ~52% |
| Net oil+gas import bill | ~$11.3 billion | $13.9 billion | ↑ 23% |
| LNG imports (volume) | 2,778 MMSCM | 1,954 MMSCM | ↓ ~30% |
| LPG sales | ~2.5 mt | ~2.2 mt | ↓ 12.7% |
| Gas import dependence | 49.2% | 41.6% | ↓ (demand destruction) |
- Demand destruction ≠ energy independence: Lower LNG and gas import dependence reflects economic pain and conservation — not genuine progress toward self-sufficiency. When prices stabilise, dependence will return.
- Stagflationary trap: Higher oil prices → input cost inflation → demand destruction → lower growth. India risks a stagflationary phase if the West Asia crisis extends beyond 6 months.
- Rupee amplification: Rupee at ₹96.7/$ means the 50% dollar-price shock becomes a 55–60% rupee-price shock — further compressing OMC margins and straining fiscal capacity.
- LPG rationing impact: 70% LPG allocation to commercial establishments affects 10 crore+ Ujjwala households indirectly through restaurant and food service prices.
- Emergency SPR release: Release from Strategic Petroleum Reserve to bridge supply-price gap and signal market confidence.
- Accelerate domestic E&P: Oil India’s 100-well programme and Mozambique LNG (restart by 2028–29) must be expedited to structurally reduce import dependence.
- Renewable acceleration: 500 GW renewable target by 2030 is the only long-term answer — every GW of solar/wind displaces ~10,000 barrels/day of oil imports over a year.
- RBI forex management: Sustain pre-open dollar intervention to prevent rupee free-fall from amplifying the import shock further.
- Align with SDG 7 (Affordable and Clean Energy) and SDG 13 (Climate Action — structural energy transition).
India’s April 2026 oil data reveals falling import volumes but soaring import bills — a price-volume paradox. Analyse the economic implications of this disconnect for India’s trade balance, inflation, and fiscal stability in the West Asia crisis context.
- (A) Ministry of Finance
- (B) Ministry of Commerce and Industry
- (C) Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas
- (D) Ministry of External Affairs
- The All India Transporters Welfare Association (AITWA) announced a 4% freight rate hike from May 20, 2026 — comprising 3% on non-diesel components (toll, tyre, lubricants) and a new Fuel Adjustment Factor (FAF): 0.65% per ₹1 diesel price rise above the May 15 base rate.
- Following two diesel price hikes in one week (₹3 on May 15 + 90 paise on May 20), the freight rate increase will embed into prices of all goods transported across India — fuelling consumer price inflation.
- Transporters also flagged diesel shortages stalling trucks across India, and appealed to customers not to impose penalties for delivery delays — indicating acute supply chain stress.
- AITWA: All India Transporters Welfare Association — coordinates freight rate decisions during supply chain crises; represents India’s trucking industry.
- Diesel as % of trucking cost: ~65% of total trucking operational cost — every ₹1 diesel hike significantly impacts trucking economics. The FAF makes this pass-through contractual and automatic.
- Freight cost embedded in goods: Transport cost = 5–15% of final price of essential goods (food, medicine, construction). A 4% freight hike → ~0.2–0.6% increase in end-consumer prices.
- National Logistics Policy (NLP) 2022: Targets reducing India’s logistics cost from ~14% of GDP to 8% by 2030. West Asia crisis freight hikes are a setback. Established ULIP (Unified Logistics Interface Platform) as single-window data system.
- Dedicated Freight Corridors (DFCs): Eastern DFC (Ludhiana–Kolkata) and Western DFC (Delhi–Mumbai) — reduce road freight dependence; key for long-term logistics efficiency.
- Cascading inflation risk: Freight rate hike during summer (peak vegetable price season) is particularly damaging for food inflation — already stressed by fuel and fertilizer costs.
- Small trucker loan default risk: Transporters explicitly mentioned risk of loan defaults — small truck owners (1–3 vehicles, leveraged with vehicle loans) are most financially vulnerable.
- Diesel hoarding: Pump owners hoarding diesel in anticipation of further price hikes — creating artificial shortages, extending supply chain disruption.
- NLP 2030 target at risk: India’s logistics cost (~14% of GDP) is already nearly double the global average (~8%). Every supply chain shock widens this gap and delays the 2030 efficiency target.
- Priority diesel allocation to truckers: Government should designate industrial diesel supply channels for trucking — prevent retail hoarding and diversion.
- EV trucking pilot: 1,000 electric truck pilot on Golden Quadrilateral by 2027 with FAME-III incentives — demonstrate commercial viability and begin structural shift.
- Multimodal logistics: Accelerate coastal shipping and DFC utilisation — cheaper, less diesel-intensive alternatives to road freight.
- ULIP implementation: Implement NLP’s Unified Logistics Interface Platform fully — reduce empty-load runs, improve freight matching, cut systemic logistics cost.
- Align with SDG 9 (Industry and Infrastructure) and SDG 11 (Sustainable Cities — logistics efficiency).
The 4% freight rate hike of May 2026 illustrates how external energy shocks transmit into domestic inflation through the logistics chain. Analyse the mechanism and suggest structural reforms to make India’s logistics sector more resilient to energy price shocks.
1. NLP targets reducing India’s logistics cost from approximately 14% of GDP to 8% by 2030.
2. NLP established the Unified Logistics Interface Platform (ULIP) as a single-window logistics data system.
3. NLP mandates that all freight movement in India must shift from road to dedicated freight corridors by 2025.
Which are correct?
- (A) 1 only
- (B) 1 and 2 only
- (C) 2 and 3 only
- (D) 1, 2 and 3
- A detailed reportage from Chennai’s resettlement colonies (Perumbakkam, Ezhil Nagar) reveals that pregnant women in TNUHDB public housing face extreme heat stress — disrupted sleep, worsening anaemia, dehydration, and heightened obstetric risks.
- A 2024 BJOG study of 800 pregnant Tamil Nadu women found nearly half exposed to unsafe heat levels — with significantly higher risks of miscarriage, preterm birth, low birthweight, and intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR).
- The story embodies climate justice: the women most affected by climate change are those with the least resources, political voice, and access to adaptation measures — a core UPSC ethics and GS-I dimension.
- TNUHDB: Tamil Nadu Urban Habitat Development Board — builds resettlement housing for urban poor. Colonies like Perumbakkam house families relocated from informal settlements.
- Urban Heat Island (UHI) Effect: Dense concrete, minimal vegetation → urban areas significantly hotter than surrounding rural areas. Resettlement colonies with no trees and concrete-to-concrete windows are extreme UHI environments.
- Heat Action Plans (HAPs): City-level emergency response frameworks. NDMA mandates HAPs for cities above 10 lakh population — but HAPs focus on acute heatwave events, not chronic month-long heat stress in poor housing.
- NDMA 2025 Advisory: Recommends mapping heat-vulnerable settlements; cool roofs, trees, cooling centres; integrating heat resilience into housing schemes and urban planning.
- Tamil Nadu Heat Mitigation Strategy: TN State Planning Commission identifies pregnant women among most vulnerable — 74% of TN’s population exposed to temperatures exceeding 35°C.
- Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana-NULM: Central scheme for urban livelihoods — MoHUA directed States to ensure cooling and ORS in NULM shelters; implementation remains limited.
| Health Risk | Heat Mechanism | Compounding Factor |
|---|---|---|
| Miscarriage | Core temperature rise disrupts fetal development | Anaemia + dehydration |
| Preterm birth | Heat stress triggers early labour hormones | Strenuous work; cannot stop for rest |
| Low birthweight / IUGR | Dehydration reduces placental blood flow | Paid water cans unaffordable in summer |
| Electrolyte imbalance | Sweating loses water + electrolytes | Anaemia; restricted water access |
| Maternal exhaustion | Disrupted sleep from midnight heat | Household work, childcare — no rest option |
- Housing design failure: TNUHDB’s own policy document acknowledges housing prioritised cost over liveability — windows into adjacent block walls (no cross-ventilation), no trees, concrete courtyards. This design choice created a public health crisis.
- Water access as equity issue: Residents buy drinking water in cans — hydration becomes unaffordable as summer heat increases household water need. No piped water access in many units is a design and governance failure.
- “Cannot stop working” trap: Economic vulnerability prevents rest during extreme heat — the intersection of poverty and climate change creates compounded harm that neither health nor social protection schemes address.
- HAP inadequacy: City Heat Action Plans address acute heatwave events (distributing ORS, opening cooling centres) — they do not address the chronic, structural heat stress in poorly designed public housing. This is a fundamental gap in climate adaptation policy.
- Climate justice dimension: The most climate-vulnerable — relocated urban poor, pregnant women, daily wage workers — have the least adaptation resources and political voice. This is textbook climate injustice, relevant for Essay and Ethics papers.
- Mandatory thermal comfort standards: All new TNUHDB/PMAY housing must meet thermal comfort standards — cool roofs (reflective coatings), cross-ventilation design, minimum 1 tree per 10 families.
- Free piped water guarantee: 24-hour piped drinking water in all public housing colonies — end dependence on paid water cans for the poorest urban residents.
- Maternal Heat Action Plan: Dedicated component in city HAPs — cooling centres with maternity focus; free ORS and iron supplements at PHCs during summer; community health workers trained on heat-related pregnancy complications.
- ICDS-climate integration: Anganwadi workers should track heat exposure alongside nutrition monitoring for pregnant women — integrate into national ICDS protocols.
- Align with SDG 3 (Good Health), SDG 5 (Gender Equality), SDG 11 (Sustainable Cities), and SDG 13 (Climate Action).
Heat stress on pregnant women in Chennai’s resettlement colonies illustrates the intersection of climate change, unequal housing design, and health equity. Critically examine this intersection and suggest a framework integrating climate resilience into India’s public housing and maternal health policies.
1. A 2024 BJOG study from Tamil Nadu found that nearly half of 800 pregnant women studied were exposed to unsafe heat levels, with higher risks of preterm birth and low birthweight.
2. NDMA mandates Heat Action Plans for all cities above 5 lakh population.
3. The Urban Heat Island effect is the phenomenon of higher urban temperatures compared to surrounding rural areas, primarily due to concrete construction and reduced green cover.
- (A) 1 only
- (B) 2 and 3 only
- (C) 1 and 3 only
- (D) 1, 2 and 3
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The Hindu News Analysis | May 22, 2026 | For educational purposes only. All news sourced from The Hindu, Bengaluru City Edition.
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