The Hindu UPSC News Analysis For 25 June 2026

The Hindu — UPSC Analysis

Thursday, 25 June 2026

Bengaluru City Edition  ·  Curated for Prelims & Mains | GS I · II · III · IV

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GS3

Safety After Disasters: Kolkata Collapse & 'Surakshit Bharat'

Context

Five workers were killed and at least 18 feared trapped when an under-construction warehouse collapsed in the Taratala area of Kolkata. Coming days after the Lucknow coaching-centre fire (15 dead), it reinforces an editorial argument: India's development ambition cannot be separated from public safety — "A Viksit Bharat must also be a Surakshit Bharat."

Background & Key Facts

  • Kolkata: the multi-storey warehouse, on land leased by the Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port Authority, came down; the lessee's January building plan was found faulty by Kolkata Municipal Corporation engineers. The CM ordered suspension of all KMC under-construction activity pending an audit by July 31; the Army joined the rescue.
  • Lucknow editorial: the three-storey building was reportedly unauthorised for commercial use yet escaped demolition despite notices; "electrical fire" often conceals causes like overloaded circuits, harmonic currents, poor wiring and missing arc-fault protection.
  • Systemic gap: India lacks adequate firefighting infrastructure and trained fire-forensics experts for root-cause analysis; many buildings lack fire-detection/suppression systems standard in developed countries.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Enforcement deficit: Both disasters stem from weak enforcement of building and safety norms, not missing rules — the cost of inaction far exceeds the cost of enforcement.

Investigation culture: Without fire-forensics capacity, "lessons from each disaster remain limited," and tragedies repeat.

✅ Way Forward
  • Strict enforcement of building codes and structural-safety audits, with accountability for violators.
  • Build fire-forensics expertise and a nationwide building-safety assessment (even via sample survey).
  • Make fire-detection/suppression systems mandatory and audited (links to SDG 11, SDG 9).
📝 Prelims Relevance
National Building Code NDRF Arc-fault protection Surakshit Bharat
10M Mains Question: "A Viksit Bharat must also be a Surakshit Bharat." Examine the structural and institutional gaps behind India's recurring building disasters. (10 marks, 150 words)
MCQ: Disaster Response

Consider the following statements:

  1. The National Disaster Response Force functions under the National Disaster Management Authority.
  2. The National Building Code provides guidelines on structural and fire safety.
  3. Public health and municipal regulation are subjects on which States can legislate.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (d) — All three are correct, reflecting the NDRF's structure, the NBC's scope, and the State's role in municipal/public-health regulation.
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GS2

The Right to Trauma Care: A Constitutional Mandate

Context

In SaveLIFE Foundation vs Union of India (May 26, 2026), the Supreme Court held that the right to trauma care is an integral part of the right to life under Article 21 — extending from the site of injury to definitive hospital treatment — and issued nine binding directions to the Union, States and UTs.

Background & Key Facts

  • The burden: ~4.67 lakh Indians die yearly from injuries (road crashes alone ~1.77 lakh, per NCRB); trauma is the leading cause of death among those aged 18–45; ~30% of deaths are linked to delays in emergency response (NITI Aayog–AIIMS).
  • Jurisprudence: builds on Parmanand Katara (1989, doctors' duty to give emergency aid) and Paschim Banga Khet Mazdoor Samiti (1996, emergency care read into Article 21). Article 21 now covers the whole chain — bystander, emergency call, ambulance, paramedic, receiving facility.
  • Cooperative federalism: health and ambulance services are in the State List; the Union acts as an "enabler." Directions cluster around communications (integrate all helplines into 112 in 3 months), bystander protection (Good Samaritan grievance redress), pre-hospital response (National Ambulance Code, GPS-linked, EMT curriculum), graded trauma hospitals, and finance (operationalise PM RAHAT cashless scheme within 8 weeks).
  • Compliance architecture: Action Taken Reports to the Court Registry; the Attorney General to monitor; the matter relisted in ~4 months.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Systems, not institutions: "A well-equipped hospital cannot compensate for a delayed ambulance" — survival depends on an integrated chain, imposing a positive obligation on the State.

Implementation is the test: State capacity, ambulance networks and helpline integration vary widely; the burden of inaction has now shifted to governments.

✅ Way Forward
  • Integrate emergency helplines into 112 and enforce the National Ambulance Code with real-time GPS.
  • Operationalise PM RAHAT and protect Good Samaritans through robust grievance redress.
  • Build a coordinated national trauma registry and EMT workforce (links to SDG 3).
📝 Prelims Relevance
Article 21 Good Samaritan / PM RAHAT ERSS-112 National Ambulance Code NCAHP
15M Mains Question: "The right to timely trauma care is now part of Article 21." Discuss the constitutional basis and the cooperative-federalism approach to realising it. (15 marks, 250 words)
MCQ: Trauma Care

Consider the following statements:

  1. In Parmanand Katara, the Supreme Court recognised doctors' duty to render emergency aid.
  2. Public health and hospitals are subjects in the State List of the Seventh Schedule.
  3. ERSS-112 is intended to be an integrated emergency response helpline.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (d) — All three are correct, reflecting Parmanand Katara, the State List entry, and the 112 helpline.
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GS2

PACOM: The Deeper Meaning of a Dropped Prefix

Context

The U.S. military renamed its regional command from "US INDOPACOM" back to "US PACOM" — dropping the "Indo-" prefix added in 2018. An op-ed argues the change, far from trivial, signals deeper shifts in U.S. policy that recast the region and India's position within it.

Background & Key Facts

  • Symbolic signal: in 2018 the U.S. dropped "Asia-Pacific" for "Indo-Pacific" to recognise India's rising significance; the new U.S. Secretary of War's 2026 Shangri-La speech contained not a single reference to the "Indo-Pacific."
  • Three geographies of concern:
    1. US–China & the Quad: Trump 2.0's outreach to China (a "G-2"/"spheres of influence" idea) is diminishing the Quad's salience; the U.S. National Defense Strategy (Jan 2026) doesn't mention the Quad; the U.S. ordered Anthropic to end access to its latest AI models for all non-Americans, undercutting Quad AI cooperation.
    2. West Asia: the U.S.–Iran "Islamabad MoU" (14 paragraphs) commits the U.S. to remove forces near Iran, hand Hormuz administration to Iran-Oman, and provide $300bn for Iran's reconstruction — tilting regional leverage and pressuring India's stance on Iranian oil and Chabahar.
    3. South Asia: Sergio Gor as Ambassador-cum-Special Envoy and U.S.–China competition for influence (amid weak SAARC/BIMSTEC) test India's regional leadership.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Beyond the surface: "The shifts run far deeper than the ripples on the surface caused by a dropped prefix" — India's Indo-Pacific-centred strategic calculus may need recalibration.

Strategic autonomy: India must hedge — reviving the Australia-India-Japan trilateral, alternative maritime coalitions, and pan-regional frameworks (IORA, BIMSTEC, even SAARC).

✅ Way Forward
  • Diversify partnerships and revive minilaterals to offset Quad uncertainty.
  • Reassess compliance with U.S. sanctions on Iranian oil and Chabahar.
  • Reassert regional leadership via IORA, BIMSTEC and a possible SAARC revival (links to SDG 16, SDG 17).
📝 Prelims Relevance
Quad Indo-Pacific IORA SAARC / BIMSTEC Chabahar
15M Mains Question: "Shifts in U.S. policy are recasting the Indo-Pacific and India's place in it." Examine the implications for India's strategic autonomy and regional leadership. (15 marks, 250 words)
MCQ: Indo-Pacific & Quad

Consider the following statements:

  1. The Quad comprises India, the United States, Japan and Australia.
  2. India chairs the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA).
  3. Chabahar port is located in Iran.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (d) — All three are correct, reflecting Quad membership, India's IORA chair, and Chabahar's location in Iran.
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GS1 · GS2

Sustaining India's Low-Fertility Future

Context

The latest Sample Registration System data puts India's total fertility rate (TFR) at 1.9 — below the replacement level of 2.1. An op-ed argues India has "crossed into low fertility as a nation, but not as one demographic economy," with major federal and welfare implications.

Background & Key Facts

  • Divergence: urban TFR is 1.5, rural near replacement; Delhi 1.2, Kerala/TN/West Bengal 1.3 (below the U.S. at 1.6 and Japan at 1.3), while Bihar (2.9), UP (2.6), MP (2.4) and Rajasthan (2.3) remain high.
  • Weak base: India ages on a weaker fiscal footing than Japan/Western Europe — per-capita income ~$2,800, net direct taxpayers ~6% of population, and ~90%+ of workers in informal/semi-formal work, leaving old-age income security outside formal contracts.
  • Thin safety nets: Atal Pension Yojana assumes steady contributions; NSAP old-age pension is just ₹200/month (60–79) and ₹500 (80+). India has ~150 million people aged 60+, projected to reach 347 million (≈1/5 of the population) by 2050; NITI Aayog notes 70% of the elderly depend on others and 78% have no pension cover.
  • Federal dimension: ageing States will need workers from younger States — requiring portable welfare benefits ("if workers move across borders, their entitlements must move with them").
⚠ Critical Analysis

Ageing before prosperity: India enters mass ageing before completing the institutional transitions that made it manageable elsewhere.

Hidden welfare state: The joint family that quietly absorbed old-age costs is weakening under urbanisation, migration and women's aspirations.

✅ Way Forward
  • Introduce an inflation-indexed minimum pension floor as a basic public risk-pooling layer.
  • Make welfare benefits portable across States; invest in education/skills in younger States.
  • Embed geriatric care into primary care and district health planning (links to SDG 1, SDG 3).
📝 Prelims Relevance
Total Fertility Rate Sample Registration System Atal Pension Yojana NSAP
15M Mains Question: "India is ageing before it has grown rich." Discuss the fiscal, federal and welfare challenges of sustaining a low-fertility future. (15 marks, 250 words)
MCQ: Demographics & Welfare

Consider the following statements:

  1. The Sample Registration System is a source of fertility and mortality estimates in India.
  2. Replacement-level fertility is about 2.1 children per woman.
  3. The Atal Pension Yojana is a contribution-based pension scheme.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (d) — All three are correct, reflecting the SRS, replacement-level fertility, and the contributory nature of the APY.
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GS2

FCRA: No 'Carte Blanche' for Foreign Funds

Context

A news analysis traces the legal foundation of the new FCRA (Amendment) Rules, 2026: the Centre's argument — upheld by the Supreme Court — that the freedom to form associations or do "charity" does not include a right to receive unbridled foreign funds or use them outside "permissible activities."

Background & Key Facts

  • New rule: Rule 9(1B) requires registration certificates to specify the purpose(s) and the States/UTs of operation; NGOs are limited to specific stated spheres (excluding proselytisation) and geographic bounds.
  • Judicial backing: in Noel Harper vs Union of India (2022), a three-judge Bench held "no one can claim a vested right to accept foreign donation, much less an absolute right." In INSAF vs Union of India (2020), the Court upheld regulation for "protecting national interest" but called for a "balance," holding only associations in active/party politics are barred from foreign funds.
  • Constitutional basis: the Centre cites Article 19(4) and 19(6) to reasonably restrict the rights to associate (19(1)(c)) and to trade/occupation (19(1)(g)) in the interest of sovereignty, public order and public interest.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Regulation vs civic space: The Court has upheld strong regulatory powers, but the INSAF "balance" principle warns against measures that disproportionately choke legitimate voluntary work.

Sovereignty framing: The State frames foreign-fund regulation as national-interest protection; critics see a tightening squeeze on civil society.

✅ Way Forward
  • Apply the law proportionately, preserving genuine charitable and developmental work.
  • Ensure transparent, time-bound compliance and grievance redress.
  • Balance national-security concerns with a vibrant civil society (links to SDG 16, SDG 17).
📝 Prelims Relevance
FCRA, 2010 Article 19(1)(c) / 19(4) Noel Harper case INSAF case
10M Mains Question: "The right to form associations is no carte blanche to receive foreign funds." Examine the constitutional balance in regulating foreign contributions. (10 marks, 150 words)
MCQ: FCRA & Rights

Consider the following statements:

  1. Article 19(1)(c) guarantees the right to form associations or unions.
  2. Article 19(4) permits reasonable restrictions on this right in the interest of sovereignty and public order.
  3. The FCRA is administered by the Ministry of Home Affairs.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (d) — All three are correct, reflecting Article 19(1)(c), 19(4), and the MHA's role.
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GS3

El Niño on a Razor's Edge

Context

The nationwide southwest monsoon deficit has widened from 35% to 43%, with the winds stalled near Mumbai. Both NOAA and the IMD expect a moderate-to-strong El Niño, an editorial notes — leaving agriculture, especially in rain-fed districts, on a razor's edge.

Background & Key Facts

  • Drivers: El Niño suppresses cloud-forming vertical air movement; a warming Pacific weakens moisture-bearing trade winds; the Madden-Julian Oscillation is in an unfavourable phase and the Indian Ocean Dipole offers no buffer.
  • Uneven spread: northwest India is +5%, but central India and the northeast face deficits of 63% and 43%. With two-thirds of seasonal rain historically arriving in July–August, recovery is possible; reservoir storage (30.4%) is better than past El Niño years (25.1%).
  • Agriculture risks: the Ministry has prioritised 111 of 315 vulnerable districts; extreme heat hits farm-labour productivity and the cardamom harvest in Idukki; kharif sowing (rice, pulses, oilseeds) and fertilizer availability (Chinese export curbs, West Asia tensions) are under pressure. Retail food inflation was 4.2% in April.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Structural vulnerability: India's rural economy is built on the assumption of reliable rainfall — "no adaptation strategy can indefinitely outpace unchecked warming."

Fragmented governance: Cropping governance is split between the Agriculture and Jal Shakti Ministries and the IMD, weakening a coordinated response.

✅ Way Forward
  • Shift from rain-centric to water-centric organisation; cut dependence on water-intensive crops.
  • Implement adjustable sowing windows and alternative seed varieties at scale.
  • Consider a new authority to coordinate inter-State water use and cropping based on El Niño forecasts (links to SDG 2, SDG 6, SDG 13).
📝 Prelims Relevance
El Niño / ENSO Madden-Julian Oscillation Indian Ocean Dipole Kharif crops
15M Mains Question: "India's rural economy is built on the assumption of reliable rainfall." Discuss the need to shift from a rain-centric to a water-centric agricultural strategy. (15 marks, 250 words)
MCQ: Monsoon Dynamics

Consider the following statements:

  1. A positive Indian Ocean Dipole is generally favourable for the Indian monsoon.
  2. The Madden-Julian Oscillation influences tropical rainfall on intra-seasonal timescales.
  3. El Niño refers to the abnormal warming of the central and eastern Pacific Ocean.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (d) — All three are correct, reflecting the positive IOD, the MJO, and the definition of El Niño.
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GS3

Pollinators: The Unsung Kingmakers of Agriculture

Context

A Science feature highlights research showing that wild insects dramatically boost mango yields — and that native pollinators are under threat from the very insecticides meant to protect the crop, raising questions about how India values and protects pollinators.

Background & Key Facts

  • The finding: a Bengaluru–Germany study (2023) found that allowing flowers access to ants and flying visitors (wild bees, hoverflies, flies) increased mango yield by 350%; barring crawling insects reduced yields.
  • Native vs non-native: in Mexico, non-native European honey bees did 80% of pollination but lowered yields (wrong pollen, malformed fruit), while native bees transferring pollen between orchards produced fuller, juicier fruit.
  • The threat: neonicotinoid insecticides are neurotoxic, impairing bee navigation, learning and memory; the Bengaluru study saw fewer bees and ~30% lighter fruit — a "three-way loss" (costly pesticides, lost pollinators, lower yield).
  • Valuation: India's new 'environmental accounting' framework recognises 800+ bee species (plus butterflies, birds, bats) and attaches a monetary value of 8–10% of total crop output (₹2.6 lakh crore in 2021-22). In Peru, stingless bees became the first insects to win legal rights to exist and be represented in court.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Hidden ecosystem service: Pollinators "carry the weight of the country's agriculture," yet remain invisible in policy until valued.

Monoculture & pesticides: Monoculture farms suffer higher pest attacks and pollinator loss — a self-defeating cycle.

✅ Way Forward
  • Promote bee-safe pesticides and time sprays to avoid peak pollinator activity.
  • Protect natural/semi-natural areas (forest patches, wildflower strips) near orchards.
  • Use monetary valuation to nudge pollinator-protective farm and landscape policy (links to SDG 2, SDG 15).
📝 Prelims Relevance
Pollinators / pollination Neonicotinoids Environmental accounting Ecosystem services
10M Mains Question: "Pollinators are an invisible foundation of food security." Discuss the threats they face and the policy measures needed to protect them. (10 marks, 150 words)
MCQ: Pollinators

Consider the following statements:

  1. Neonicotinoids are a class of insecticides that can harm bees.
  2. Pollination is an example of an ecosystem service.
  3. India's environmental-accounting framework has assigned a monetary value to pollinators.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (d) — All three are correct, reflecting neonicotinoids' impact, pollination as an ecosystem service, and the monetary valuation of pollinators.
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GS2

Iran Deal: IAEA Inspections & a Congressional Rebuke

Context

IAEA chief Rafael Grossi said inspections in Iran will go ahead "soon" following the interim US–Iran accord, though modalities (dates, procedures, places) are still being worked out. Meanwhile, the U.S. Senate passed a symbolic resolution rebuking President Trump's war with Iran.

Background & Key Facts

  • The accord: a 14-point MoU set out broad agreements to end the war and opened 60 days of talks on thornier nuclear details. Paragraph 8 explicitly states nuclear activities will be supervised by the IAEA.
  • The uranium question: Iran has not let the IAEA return to its most sensitive sites since the June 2025 US-Israeli bombing; the IAEA estimated Iran had 440.9 kg of uranium enriched to up to 60% (a short step from ~90% weapons grade) — potentially enough for ~10 weapons. Iran has not disclosed how much survived the attacks.
  • Congressional pushback: the Senate's 50–48 "concurrent resolution" directs the removal of U.S. forces from hostilities with Iran absent Congressional authorisation; under the 1973 War Powers Act, Presidents must seek authorisation within 60 days — though the resolution carries disputed legal force.
  • India angle: Iran invited PM Modi to the funeral ceremonies of the late Supreme Leader; Iran's Petroleum Minister visited Delhi for BRICS energy talks.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Verification gap: Inspections "will take place," but undisclosed enriched-uranium stockpiles and unresolved modalities keep proliferation risk live.

War-powers tension: The Senate vote, though symbolic, reflects a constitutional contest over executive war-making — relevant to global stability and energy markets.

✅ Way Forward
  • Support full IAEA access and accounting of enriched uranium for a verifiable settlement.
  • India should maintain communication with all sides and diversify energy sourcing.
  • Strengthen multilateral non-proliferation safeguards (links to SDG 16).
📝 Prelims Relevance
IAEA Uranium enrichment War Powers Act, 1973 Concurrent resolution
10M Mains Question: "Verification is the heart of any nuclear agreement." Examine the role of the IAEA in the US–Iran interim accord and its implications for India. (10 marks, 150 words)
MCQ: Iran & Non-Proliferation

Consider the following statements:

  1. Uranium enriched to around 90% purity is considered weapons-grade.
  2. The IAEA is responsible for verifying nuclear safeguards.
  3. The U.S. War Powers Act requires the President to seek Congressional authorisation within 60 days of introducing forces into hostilities.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (d) — All three are correct, reflecting weapons-grade enrichment, the IAEA's role, and the War Powers Act's 60-day rule.
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GS2

India–China Reset Continues

Context

A day after Foreign Minister Wang Yi met PM Modi, China's Foreign Ministry said Beijing is "ready to work with India side by side" to enhance mutual trust, dispel doubts, properly handle sensitive issues and deepen cooperation — continuing a cautious thaw.

Background & Key Facts

  • The messaging: spokesperson Lin Jian spoke of implementing leaders' "common understandings" and maintaining the "positive momentum" of China–India relations; the Chinese Ambassador said both, "as the two largest developing countries," should play an "exemplary role" in promoting Global South solidarity.
  • BRICS context: the meeting followed the BRICS NSAs' meeting (June 22–23); China said it will support India as BRICS rotating chair. Modi conveyed greetings to President Xi and Premier Li and backed BRICS cooperation.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Warming, with caution: Normalisation is advancing, but "dispelling doubts" and "sensitive issues" (the boundary, trade imbalance) remain the real tests.

Global South framing: China's emphasis on developing-world solidarity is strategic; India must engage while safeguarding its core interests.

✅ Way Forward
  • Revive stalled dialogue mechanisms while holding firm on the boundary and sovereignty.
  • Address the trade imbalance and de-risk critical supply chains.
  • Leverage BRICS and Global South platforms constructively (links to SDG 17).
📝 Prelims Relevance
BRICS rotating chair Global South India–China relations Special Representatives
10M Mains Question: "India–China normalisation rests on trust-building amid unresolved disputes." Examine the opportunities and limits of the current reset. (10 marks, 150 words)
MCQ: India–China & BRICS

Consider the following statements:

  1. India currently holds the rotating chair of BRICS.
  2. BRICS originally comprised Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.
  3. The 'Global South' broadly refers to developing and emerging economies.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (d) — All three are correct, reflecting India's BRICS chair, the original membership, and the meaning of 'Global South'.
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GS2

The Mekedatu Furore: Cauvery's Trust Deficit

Context

The Mekedatu dam row resurfaced as the Tamil Nadu Assembly adopted a unanimous resolution against Karnataka's proposed drinking water-cum-balancing reservoir across the Cauvery, after the Supreme Court dismissed TN's review petition as "premature" — clearing Karnataka to submit a revised Detailed Project Report.

Background & Key Facts

  • The project: a ₹9,000-crore reservoir at Mekedatu (~100 km from Bengaluru) impounding 67.16 TMC, with a 400 MW hydropower component but no irrigation component, to serve Bengaluru's drinking-water needs (the 2018 SC verdict gave Karnataka an additional 4.75 TMC for Bengaluru).
  • TN's case: the Cauvery is deficit, so "no new project is permissible"; TN now also seeks a tribunal to examine the project (a March 4 communication to the Centre, made public June 19).
  • Karnataka's case: the dam will also benefit TN as a balancing reservoir regulating flood flows from KRS and Kabini to the Mettur dam.
  • Legal hurdle: under the Inter-State River Water Disputes Act, the Centre accepts a tribunal demand only when convinced the dispute can't be settled by negotiation; no India-Karnataka-TN Mekedatu meeting has occurred in 15 years.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Trust deficit: The core problem is the inter-State trust deficit, leading TN to view even a drinking-water project with suspicion.

Federal friction: River-water disputes test cooperative federalism; negotiation has stalled, pushing both sides toward litigation and tribunals.

✅ Way Forward
  • Revive bilateral/multi-stakeholder negotiations under the Cauvery framework.
  • Build transparency and data-sharing to rebuild inter-State trust.
  • Explore mutually acceptable engineering alternatives that protect both Bengaluru's drinking water and TN's farmers (links to SDG 6, SDG 16).
📝 Prelims Relevance
Inter-State River Water Disputes Act Cauvery / Mekedatu Article 262 KRS / Mettur dam
15M Mains Question: "Inter-State river-water disputes are as much about trust as about water." Examine with reference to the Mekedatu controversy and the mechanisms for resolution. (15 marks, 250 words)
MCQ: River-Water Disputes

Consider the following statements:

  1. Article 262 empowers Parliament to provide for adjudication of inter-State river-water disputes.
  2. The proposed Mekedatu reservoir is on the Cauvery river.
  3. Under the Inter-State River Water Disputes Act, the Centre may constitute a tribunal when a dispute cannot be settled by negotiation.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (d) — All three are correct, reflecting Article 262, the Mekedatu location, and the tribunal mechanism.
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GS2 · GS3

India's Trade Diplomacy: US BTA & UK CETA

Context

Two trade tracks advanced: USTR Jamieson Greer and Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal reviewed the interim deal and broader India–US Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA), while Goyal heads to the U.K. to review readiness for the India–UK CETA rollout on July 15.

Background & Key Facts

  • US BTA: announced February 2025; both sides noted "substantial progress" on market access, digital trade, supply-chain resilience and non-tariff barriers, but the statement set no deadlines. The interim deal aims to be a milestone toward a comprehensive BTA delivering benefits for businesses, farmers, workers and consumers.
  • UK CETA: Goyal will meet the U.K. Business & Trade Secretary to align regulatory roadmaps and finalise mechanisms for the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement and its Double Contribution Convention (DCC), implemented from July 15.
  • Domestic pushback: farmer groups (Kisan Mazdoor Morcha) protested across 21 Punjab districts against the proposed India–US deal, fearing harm to farmers, labourers and small traders.
⚠ Critical Analysis

Balancing act: India seeks market access and resilient supply chains while protecting sensitive agriculture and small producers from import competition.

Pace vs protection: The absence of deadlines on the US deal reflects hard bargaining over agriculture, dairy and non-tariff barriers.

✅ Way Forward
  • Pursue balanced, commercially meaningful deals with safeguards for vulnerable sectors.
  • Ensure transparency and stakeholder consultation in trade negotiations.
  • Leverage trade deals to build trusted, resilient supply chains (links to SDG 8, SDG 17).
📝 Prelims Relevance
India–US BTA India–UK CETA Double Contribution Convention Non-tariff barriers
10M Mains Question: "Free trade agreements offer opportunity but also test domestic safeguards." Discuss with reference to India's ongoing trade negotiations. (10 marks, 150 words)
MCQ: Trade Agreements

Consider the following statements:

  1. The India–UK CETA is a comprehensive economic and trade agreement.
  2. A Double Contribution Convention typically addresses social-security contributions of workers.
  3. Non-tariff barriers include measures other than customs duties that restrict trade.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (d) — All three are correct, reflecting CETA, the DCC's purpose, and the meaning of non-tariff barriers.
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GS3

India's 'Low Equilibrium' Growth Worry

Context

Economists have grown vocal about structural challenges in India's growth, warning the economy may be trapped in a "low equilibrium" path where official growth figures overstate underlying strength.

Background & Key Facts

  • The concern: weak consumption, slowing productivity and limited job creation leave the economy vulnerable to external shocks and "rising stagflation risks" (Systematix). Post-pandemic consumption (driven by formal hiring and credit) has slowed.
  • Markets: foreign institutional investors sold more than ₹2.8 lakh crore in 2026 as earnings did not justify prices; small- and mid-cap stocks trade above earnings, signalling downside risk and concentration in retail-held riskier stocks.
  • Structural gaps: uneven consumption across households, a fiscal balance sheet with little room for consolidation, an income crisis, weak private investment and the organised–informal divide.
  • New metric: MoSPI will release a new Index of Services Production (ISP) — a services counterpart to the IIP — with a 60-day lag (first for April 2026 on July 14).
⚠ Critical Analysis

Crisis of employability: Beyond unemployment, the deeper issue is employability and the organised–informal divide that limits broad-based demand.

Reality check: Headline growth may mask weak consumption and productivity; "the time for denial is over," analysts warn.

✅ Way Forward
  • Address the income crisis, revive broad-based private investment, and bridge the organised–informal divide.
  • Strengthen skilling and formal job creation to lift consumption.
  • Improve data (e.g., ISP) for evidence-based policy (links to SDG 8, SDG 9).
📝 Prelims Relevance
Index of Services Production IIP Stagflation FII / FPI flows
10M Mains Question: "India risks a 'low equilibrium' growth trap." Examine the structural challenges and the reforms needed for broad-based growth. (10 marks, 150 words)
MCQ: Economy

Consider the following statements:

  1. The Index of Industrial Production measures short-term changes in industrial output.
  2. The proposed Index of Services Production will be released by MoSPI.
  3. 'Stagflation' refers to a combination of stagnant growth and high inflation.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (d) — All three are correct, reflecting the IIP, the ISP, and the meaning of stagflation.
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GS1 · GS2 · GS3

Polity · IR · S&T — Quick Roundup

CRPF Officer Suspended Over CAPF Act Protest (GS2 — Polity)

  • Twenty CRPF officers were transferred and a DIG-rank officer suspended, allegedly because they or their families opposed the Central Armed Police Force (General Administration) Act, 2026. Ex-paramilitary associations alleged "targeted harassment," raising questions about service rights and dissent.

Passport ≠ Citizenship; NMC & NEET-SS (GS2 — Governance)

  • An MEA official clarified the Indian passport is a "travel document," not proof of citizenship — relevant to whether it can challenge SIR voter-list exclusion; 27 countries offer visa-free entry to Indian passport holders.
  • The NMC will phase out PG diploma medical courses from 2027-28 (converting diploma seats to MD/MS), raising concerns about district-level specialist availability.
  • The Supreme Court backed a lower NEET-super speciality cut-off for in-service government doctors who "serve the public and study at the same time."

Afghan Women Turn to Entrepreneurship (GS1 — Society/Gender)

  • With universities and formal workplaces barred to women under the Taliban (female labour-force participation ~5%; female university enrolment fell from ~55,000 in 2019 to zero), registered women-owned businesses rose from 2,421 to 9,162 — a fragile economic lifeline, though only 28% are formally registered.

Great Nicobar & Environmental Oversight (GS3 — Environment)

  • The Public Accounts Committee (chaired by K.C. Venugopal) sought a Home Ministry report on the Great Nicobar Project, flagging the felling of 1.5 crore trees and the fragile island ecology versus commercial use.

IR & Science Briefs (GS2 / GS3)

  • North Korea's Kim Jong-un unveiled plans for a nuclear-armed navy and larger (10,000-tonne) warships.
  • China's Premier Li Qiang reframed concerns over "China Shock 2.0" as "China Opportunity 2.0" at Summer Davos, defending its tech rise; the OECD warned state subsidies can distort markets.
  • A positive Ebola case was confirmed in France in a doctor returning from Congo, where the DRC's 17th outbreak (Bundibugyo strain, no vaccine) has killed 250+.
📝 Prelims Relevance
CAPF Act, 2026 NMC / NEET-SS Great Nicobar Project Ebola (Bundibugyo strain) Public Accounts Committee
10M Mains Question: "Large infrastructure projects in ecologically fragile zones demand robust parliamentary and environmental oversight." Discuss with reference to the Great Nicobar Project. (10 marks, 150 words)
MCQ: Mixed Current Affairs

Consider the following statements:

  1. The Public Accounts Committee examines the audit reports of the Comptroller and Auditor General.
  2. The National Medical Commission regulates medical education in India.
  3. An Indian passport is legally a document establishing citizenship.
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (a) — Statements 1 and 2 are correct. A passport is a travel document, not proof of citizenship, so statement 3 is wrong.
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Prelims

📝 Quick Prelims Revision — MCQ Bank

Q1 — Trauma Care & Rights

The right to emergency/trauma care has been read by the Supreme Court into which Article?

  1. Article 14
  2. Article 19
  3. Article 21
  4. Article 32
Answer: (c) — The Court held the right to trauma care to be an integral part of the right to life under Article 21.
Q2 — Demography

According to the latest SRS data cited, India's total fertility rate is:

  1. 2.1
  2. 1.9
  3. 2.5
  4. 1.5
Answer: (b) — India's TFR is reported at 1.9, below the replacement level of 2.1.
Q3 — Foreign Relations

The Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA) is:

  1. A military alliance
  2. An inter-governmental organisation of Indian Ocean littoral states
  3. A UN specialised agency
  4. A trade bloc within the EU
Answer: (b) — IORA is an inter-governmental organisation of Indian Ocean rim countries promoting regional cooperation.
Q4 — Environment

Neonicotinoids, in the news, are:

  1. A class of antibiotics
  2. A class of insecticides harmful to bees
  3. A type of fertilizer
  4. A genetically modified crop
Answer: (b) — Neonicotinoids are neurotoxic insecticides known to harm pollinators such as bees.
Q5 — Federalism

Which constitutional provision deals with the adjudication of inter-State river-water disputes?

  1. Article 262
  2. Article 263
  3. Article 280
  4. Article 356
Answer: (a) — Article 262 empowers Parliament to provide for the adjudication of inter-State river-water disputes.
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❓ FAQs

Frequently asked exam-oriented questions — 25 June 2026 edition

What did the Supreme Court hold on the right to trauma care?
In SaveLIFE Foundation vs Union of India (May 2026), the Court held that the right to trauma care is an integral part of the right to life under Article 21, covering the entire chain from the site of injury to definitive hospital treatment. It issued nine binding directions — integrating emergency helplines into 112, protecting Good Samaritans, enforcing the National Ambulance Code, grading trauma hospitals, and operationalising the PM RAHAT cashless scheme — using a cooperative-federalism approach with the Union as enabler.
Why is the renaming of US INDOPACOM to PACOM significant?
In 2018 the U.S. added "Indo-" to recognise India's growing strategic significance. Dropping it in 2026 — alongside the absence of "Indo-Pacific" in recent U.S. defence strategy and the Quad's diminishing salience — signals deeper shifts: U.S. outreach to China ("G-2"/spheres of influence), a recalibrated West Asia posture after the Iran deal, and growing U.S. ambitions in South Asia. For India, whose strategy has been Indo-Pacific-centred since 2018, this calls for recalibration and hedging.
What does India's falling fertility rate mean for the future?
With the TFR at 1.9 (below the 2.1 replacement level), India has entered low fertility — but unevenly: Delhi (1.2) and southern States are very low while Bihar (2.9) and UP (2.6) remain high. This means India is ageing on a weaker fiscal base than Japan or Europe, with most workers in informal jobs and thin pension cover. It calls for an inflation-indexed minimum pension floor, portable welfare benefits across States, investment in younger States' skills, and embedding geriatric care into primary health.
Why is the Mekedatu project controversial?
Karnataka's proposed ₹9,000-crore reservoir on the Cauvery (to supply Bengaluru's drinking water, with a 400 MW hydropower component but no irrigation) is opposed by Tamil Nadu, which argues the Cauvery is already deficit so no new project is permissible. The Supreme Court dismissed TN's review petition as "premature," letting Karnataka submit a revised DPR. The deeper issue is the inter-State trust deficit; TN now also wants a tribunal under the Inter-State River Water Disputes Act.
Why are pollinators getting policy attention in India?
Research shows wild insects can raise mango yields by 350%, and native bees that move pollen between orchards produce fuller fruit — yet they are threatened by neurotoxic neonicotinoid pesticides. India's new environmental-accounting framework recognises 800+ bee species and assigns pollinators a monetary value of 8–10% of crop output (₹2.6 lakh crore in 2021-22). Valuing them can nudge bee-safe pesticides, better spray timing, and protection of natural habitat near farms — and echoes Peru granting stingless bees legal rights.

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Analysis based on The Hindu, Bengaluru City Edition, 25 June 2026. Prepared for academic use. Static background and frameworks added for exam preparation; original article text has been paraphrased, not reproduced.

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