Daily Current Affairs

November 29, 2025

Current Affairs

Digital Sequence Information (DSI) and the Global Debate

Digital Sequence Information (DSI) has emerged as one of the most contentious negotiation points at the 11th Governing Body Meeting of the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (ITPGRFA) being held in Lima, Peru. As countries push for equitable use of genetic resources, DSI has created new challenges beyond traditional Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) systems.

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What is Digital Sequence Information (DSI)?

DSI refers to the digital representation of genetic material derived from biological resources. It includes:

  • Nucleic acid sequences (DNA/RNA)
  • Protein structures
  • Metabolic profiles
  • Epigenetic markers
  • Annotated biological datasets

These datasets are stored in major open-access global repositories such as GenBank (USA), EMBL-EBI (UK) and the DNA Data Bank of Japan, collectively operating under the International Nucleotide Sequence Database Collaboration (INSDC). INSDC ensures unified standards and free availability of global nucleotide-sequence data.

DSI allows scientists to analyse genetic information without needing physical samples, thereby accelerating research, supporting synthetic biology, and enabling rapid diagnostics development.

Benefits of DSI

  1. Accelerated Research:
    It removes dependence on time-consuming physical sample collection and permits fast computational analysis.
  2. Rapid Data Sharing:
    Open-access platforms facilitate quick development of vaccines, diagnostics, and precision treatments.
  3. Lower Barriers to Research:
    No transport permits or biosafety logistics are required for digital data, reducing cost and administrative hurdles.
  4. Targeted Therapies:
    Big-data analysis of sequences enables identification of disease-specific markers for highly precise interventions.

Challenges and Concerns

Despite its advantages, DSI has triggered serious global concerns:

  • Unfair Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS):
    Companies can commercialise products using genetic data from biodiverse nations without sharing benefits, as DSI falls outside the CBD and Nagoya Protocol’s ABS mechanisms.
  • Regulatory Uncertainty:
    There is no universally accepted legal definition of DSI, making policy harmonisation difficult.
  • Traceability Issues:
    Tracking the origin of a genetic sequence or its commercial pathway is extremely complex.
  • Capacity Gap:
    Developing countries lack sequencing infrastructure, skilled bioinformaticians, and data-processing capability, limiting their participation.

To address ABS gaps, CBD COP16 (2024) in Colombia created the ‘Cali Fund’, aimed at ensuring fair and equitable benefit-sharing arising from the commercial use of DSI.

ITPGRFA and India's Position

The International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (ITPGRFA), adopted in 2001 and in force since 2004, focuses on conserving and providing access to plant genetic resources essential for food and agriculture. It currently has 155 contracting parties (154 countries + EU).

India’s Membership

India ratified the treaty in 2002 through the Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers’ Rights (PPV&FR) Act, 2001 and the Biological Diversity Act, 2002.

Multilateral System (MLS)

The treaty establishes the MLS, offering rule-based access to 64 Annex-I crops crucial for global food security. Access is governed through Standard Material Transfer Agreements (SMTA), which prohibit claiming intellectual property rights over MLS material.

As DSI becomes central to genetic research, global negotiations aim to balance open science with fairness to biodiversity-rich nations.

India–UAE Third CEPA Joint Committee Meeting

Context: India and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) convened the third Joint Committee Meeting under the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) in New Delhi. The meeting reviewed CEPA’s progress since its signing in 2022 and outlined measures to deepen economic, regulatory, and strategic cooperation.

About CEPA

The India–UAE CEPA, signed in 2022, is India’s first comprehensive economic partnership agreement with any West Asian nation. It aims to:

  • Liberalise trade in goods and services
  • Boost investments
  • Reduce tariff barriers
  • Facilitate customs cooperation
  • Strengthen supply-chain connectivity

The India–UAE Joint Commission is the institutional mechanism responsible for monitoring implementation and ensuring alignment with CEPA objectives.

Key Outcomes of the Third CEPA Joint Committee Meeting

1. Non-Oil Trade Target

Both countries reaffirmed their commitment to achieving USD 100 billion in non-oil, non-precious metal trade by 2030. This target aligns with CEPA’s goal of diversifying economic relations beyond hydrocarbons and gold.

2. Competitive Bidding for Gold TRQ

India informed the UAE of its new online competitive bidding system for Gold Tariff Rate Quota (TRQ) allocations under CEPA.

  • A TRQ allows a specified quantity of imports at a lower or zero tariff.
  • This mechanism is expected to make gold imports more transparent and predictable for industry stakeholders.

3. Regulatory and Sectoral Cooperation

The discussions covered:

  • Pharmaceutical trade facilitation, including faster regulatory approvals
  • Early signing of the Food Safety MoU to harmonise SPS (sanitary and phytosanitary) standards
  • Anti-dumping discussions, aimed at preventing market distortions and ensuring fair trade

Together, these measures aim to reduce non-tariff barriers and strengthen sector-specific value chains.

India–UAE Bilateral Relations

1. Trade Relations

  • UAE is India’s third-largest trading partner and second-largest export destination.
  • Bilateral trade crossed USD 100 billion in FY 2024–25, growing 19.6% year-on-year.

2. Investment Cooperation

  • UAE sovereign wealth funds have committed USD 75 billion for Indian infrastructure.
  • The Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT) 2024 strengthens investor confidence and long-term capital flow.

3. Energy Security

  • UAE is India’s fourth-largest crude oil supplier.
  • It is the only country storing crude oil in India’s Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPRs), strengthening supply security.

4. Defence and Security

  • Defence cooperation includes high-level exchanges, joint exercises like Desert Cyclone and Zayed Talwar, and maritime security collaboration in the Indian Ocean Region.

5. Climate Partnership

  • India and UAE jointly launched the Global Green Credit Initiative (GGCI) to promote international climate stewardship and sustainable practices.

6. Diaspora and Culture

  • The UAE hosts 3.5 million Indians, forming its largest expatriate community.
  • The inauguration of the BAPS Hindu Temple in Abu Dhabi represents a milestone in cultural diplomacy.

Conclusion

The third CEPA Joint Committee meeting reinforces India–UAE relations as one of the most dynamic bilateral partnerships in the Indo-West Asian region.

With deeper trade integration, regulatory harmonisation, major infrastructure investments, and strong diaspora linkages, the relationship is poised to evolve into a comprehensive strategic and economic partnership aligned with India’s long-term global trade goals.

India’s Rising LPG Consumption: Drivers, Trends and Policy Implications

Context: India’s Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) consumption has surged to 31.3 million metric tonnes (MMT) in FY25, driven by expanded household access under the Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY) and growing commercial and industrial demand. With usage expected to reach 33–34 MMT in FY26, LPG continues to dominate India’s clean cooking energy transition.

About LPG

LPG is a compressed mixture of propane and butane (≈40:60) used for:

  • Cooking (household sector)
  • Industrial applications
  • Food services and transport

It burns cleaner than biomass, kerosene, and coal, significantly reducing indoor air pollution.

Trends in India’s LPG Sector

1. Strong Growth in National Consumption

  • FY17: 21.6 MMT
  • FY25: 31.3 MMT
  • FY26 (projected): 33–34 MMT

This represents one of the fastest-growing clean fuel transitions globally.

2. PMUY’s Transformational Impact

Under PMUY, household LPG coverage expanded across rural and low-income homes.

  • Average refill consumption increased from 3.9 cylinders/year to 4.5 cylinders/year.
  • Improved affordability, last-mile delivery expansion and behavioural shift strengthened LPG dependence.

The scheme dramatically reduced household smoke exposure and supported women’s health and safety.

3. Rising Commercial and Industrial Use

Commercial and industrial consumers increased their share of total LPG demand:

  • Earlier: ~10%
  • FY25: ~16%

Growth is driven by:

  • Food service chains
  • Institutional kitchens
  • MSME clusters shifting away from solid fuels

4. Persistent Supply Gap and Import Dependence

Domestic LPG production increased modestly:

  • FY17: 11.2 MMT
  • FY25: 12.8 MMT

But imports rose sharply to ~20.7 MMT, keeping dependence at 55–60%.
India is currently the world’s second-largest LPG importer after China.

5. Import Diversification for Energy Security

  • Middle East supplies dominate India’s imports (91–93%).
  • The new India–US LPG agreement (2.2 MTPA) diversifies sourcing, reduces geopolitical exposure, and strengthens long-term energy security.

About Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY)

A flagship central sector scheme by the Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas, launched in 2016, providing deposit-free LPG connections to women in low-income households.

Eligibility Groups

  • BPL households
  • SC/ST families
  • Antyodaya beneficiaries
  • Forest dwellers
  • SECC-listed households
  • Migrants
  • Women in island territories

Note: Households without an adult woman are ineligible.

Achievements

  • 10.33 crore LPG connections provided
  • 238+ crore refills in 9 years
    PMUY has significantly enhanced women’s health, reduced drudgery, and accelerated India’s adoption of clean cooking fuels.

Conclusion

India’s rising LPG consumption reflects both social welfare gains from PMUY and economic expansion.

However, persistent import dependence underscores the need for domestic production enhancement, diversification of suppliers, and a long-term transition toward cleaner alternatives like bio-LPG, ethanol-based fuels, and green hydrogen derivatives.