Prelims Nuggets

Private Member’s Bill to Amend the Tenth Schedule

Context: A Private Member’s Bill has been introduced in the Lok Sabha proposing significant reforms to the Tenth Schedule (Anti-Defection Law). The Bill seeks to allow Members of Parliament (MPs) to vote independently on most legislative business, while retaining party discipline only on motions that directly affect the stability of the government.

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Key Features of the Bill

The Bill proposes a limited application of disqualification. An MP would face disqualification only if they vote or abstain against party directions on motions that determine government survival, such as confidence motions, no-confidence motions, and money bills.

On all other legislation, MPs would enjoy free voting, enabling them to exercise judgment based on constituency interests and legislative merit. To ensure clarity, the Speaker or Chairman must explicitly announce when a party whip is issued for stability-related motions.

The Bill introduces a structured appeal mechanism, allowing a disqualified member to appeal within 15 days, with a mandatory decision by the Presiding Officer within 60 days.

Further, it proposes shifting defection adjudication from the Presiding Officer to independent tribunals, comprising Supreme Court Division Benches for Parliament and High Court Division Benches for State Legislatures.

Rationale Behind the Bill

The proposal addresses key shortcomings of the existing anti-defection framework. While the current law curbs individual defections, it has failed to prevent coordinated group defections that destabilise elected governments.

The Bill seeks to restore voter-centric accountability, ensuring that MPs are answerable primarily to their electorate rather than party leadership.

By limiting whips to critical votes, the reform aims to improve legislative scrutiny, encouraging MPs to engage more deeply with bills, suggest amendments, and enhance parliamentary deliberation.

Anti-Defection Law: Constitutional Background

The Tenth Schedule was inserted by the 52nd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1985, and later strengthened by the 91st Amendment Act, 2003.

It provides for disqualification of legislators who voluntarily give up party membership or violate party whips, unless condoned within 15 days.

Independent members are disqualified if they join a political party post-election, while nominated members face disqualification if they join a party after six months.

An exception exists where two-thirds of a legislative party support a merger. Currently, disqualification decisions are taken by the Presiding Officer, subject to judicial review.

Significance

If enacted, the Bill could rebalance the relationship between party discipline and parliamentary democracy, strengthening debate, accountability, and legislative effectiveness without undermining government stability.

Right to Disconnect: Towards Work–Life Balance in India

Context: A Private Member’s Bill titled the Right to Disconnect Bill, 2025 has been introduced in the Lok Sabha to address rising concerns over excessive work-related digital communication beyond official hours. The Bill seeks to legally empower employees to disengage from work calls, emails, and messages after working hours without fear of penalties or disciplinary action.

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What is the Right to Disconnect?

The Right to Disconnect refers to an employee’s right to remain offline outside official working hours and to refuse work-related communication unless explicitly required by the nature of employment. It aims to draw clear boundaries between professional and personal life in an era of smartphones, remote work, and constant connectivity.

Key Provisions of the Bill

The Bill proposes the creation of an Employees’ Welfare Authority to oversee implementation. Employers violating the provisions may face a penalty of up to 1%, alongside mandatory overtime compensation for after-hours work.

It also recommends counselling services and digital detox centres to promote healthy technology usage.

Need for a Right to Disconnect in India

India currently lacks statutory safeguards against digital overreach at the workplace. This legal vacuum enables unpaid overtime and constant availability expectations, often described as telepressure. Such practices adversely affect mental health and productivity.

From a constitutional perspective, the Bill aligns with Article 21, which encompasses the right to health, rest, and sleep, and reinforces Articles 39(e) and 42, which mandate humane working conditions and maternity relief.

Empirical evidence underscores the urgency: studies indicate that nearly 49% of Indian employees report work-related stress, while average weekly working hours stand at 47.7 hours, among the highest globally.

Excessive work hours have also been linked to declining productivity, burnout, and presenteeism, suggesting that structured rest improves efficiency and workplace outcomes.

Global Best Practices

Several countries have already legislated the right to disconnect. France pioneered this approach under the El Khomri Labour Law (2017). Portugal criminalised after-hours work contact in 2021, except during emergencies. Australia, in 2024, introduced an enforceable right allowing employees to refuse unreasonable after-hours communication.

Significance for India

If enacted, the Bill could modernise India’s labour governance framework, promote mental well-being, and align workplace practices with constitutional values and global standards.

RBI Measures for Macroeconomic Stability

Context: To reinforce macroeconomic stability amid easing inflation and resilient growth, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)—through the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) and liquidity management tools—has announced a coordinated set of monetary and liquidity measures.

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Key Measures by the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC)

1. Repo Rate Cut (25 basis points to 5.25%)

The RBI reduced the repo rate—the rate at which it lends short-term funds to banks against government securities.

Objective: Stimulate economic activity by lowering borrowing costs and ensuring adequate liquidity.

Impact: Bank lending rates and EMIs decline, corporate borrowing becomes cheaper, and money-market rates align more closely with the policy rate.

2. “Goldilocks” Forecast Revisions

The RBI revised FY26 GDP growth upward to 7.3% and lowered the CPI inflation projection to 2.0%.

A “Goldilocks” scenario denotes strong growth with low inflation—neither overheating nor recessionary.

Impact: Improved market sentiment, softer bond yields, higher equity valuations, and better anchoring of expectations.

About the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC)

  • Nature: Six-member statutory body (established in 2016 via amendment to the RBI Act, 1934).
  • Mandate: Maintain price stability while supporting growth.
  • Inflation Target: CPI at 4% ± 2% under the inflation-targeting framework.
  • Composition: RBI Governor (Chair), one Deputy Governor, one RBI official, and three Government-appointed external members (four-year terms).
  • Process: Decisions by majority vote; Governor has a casting vote; minimum four meetings annually.
  • Legal Basis: Section 45ZB; decisions binding on the RBI.

Supplementary Liquidity Measures by the RBI

1. Open Market Operations (OMO)

  • Action: Purchase of government securities worth ₹1 lakh crore.
  • Objective: Inject durable liquidity and stabilise bond yields across maturities.
  • Impact: Higher system liquidity, stable call-money rates, and rising bond prices.

2. USD/INR Forex Buy–Sell Swap ($5 billion, 3-year maturity)

  • Mechanism: RBI buys dollars now (injecting rupees) and sells them back later.
  • Objective: Boost rupee liquidity while moderating forex volatility.
  • Significance: Adjusts liquidity without permanently expanding the RBI’s balance sheet (unlike OMO).
  • Impact: Improved banking liquidity, predictable hedging costs, and balanced dollar supply.

Overall Significance

Together, the rate cut, optimistic macro forecasts, OMOs, and forex swaps signal a calibrated easing—supporting growth, anchoring inflation expectations, and preserving financial stability. This multi-instrument approach strengthens confidence in India’s macroeconomic resilience.

Finland to Host Circular Economy Roadshows in India

Context: Finland will organise Circular Economy Roadshows across major Indian cities as part of deepening India–Finland cooperation on sustainability. The initiative comes ahead of India hosting the World Circular Economy Forum (WCEF) in October 2026, positioning the country as a global hub for circular transition dialogue and solutions.

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About Circular Economy

The circular economy is an economic model that aims to design out waste, extend product lifespans, and close material loops by promoting reuse, repair, remanufacturing, and recycling. Unlike the linear “take–make–dispose” model, it focuses on keeping materials and products in use for as long as possible.

Key drivers of a circular economy include eco-design and product innovation, advances in material recovery and recycling technologies, and producer-responsibility frameworks such as Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR), which shift waste management accountability to manufacturers.

According to the United Nations Development Programme, a global transition to a circular economy could unlock $4.5 trillion in economic value by 2030, while simultaneously reducing greenhouse gas emissions, pollution, and pressure on natural resources.

India’s Circular Economy Potential

India’s circular economy potential is estimated at $2 trillion and 10 million jobs by 2050, reflecting the country’s large material base, growing markets, and demographic advantage. At present, India’s circular efforts are largely concentrated on waste management and recycling, especially in plastics, e-waste, and construction debris.

To move up the value chain, India has identified several priority sectors for circular transition:

  • Textiles (fibre recycling, sustainable fashion)
  • Electronics (e-waste recovery, critical minerals)
  • Construction (reuse of demolition waste)
  • Mobility (vehicle life extension, shared mobility)
  • Packaging (plastics and paper alternatives)
  • Clean energy value chains, including batteries and critical materials

The Finnish roadshows aim to share global best practices, scalable technologies, and policy insights that can help India shift from recycling-centric models to design-led circular systems.

About the World Circular Economy Forum (WCEF)

The World Circular Economy Forum is a global annual conference launched in 2017 by SITRA, Finland’s innovation fund. It brings together governments, businesses, researchers, and civil society to showcase circular economy solutions, policy frameworks, and industrial models.

WCEF serves as a platform for high-level discussions, cross-sector collaboration, and international partnerships. India hosting WCEF 2026 highlights its growing role in shaping global sustainability and resource-efficiency agendas.

Significance

The Finland-led roadshows will help build capacity, foster industry partnerships, and align Indian policies with global circular economy standards, supporting sustainable growth and climate goals.

Fluoride Contamination in Groundwater

Excess fluoride in groundwater has emerged as a serious public health and environmental concern in India. Recent reports from Odisha’s Mayurbhanj district indicate fluoride concentrations as high as 8.2 mg/L, far exceeding safe limits and causing widespread dental and skeletal fluorosis across several villages. The issue highlights the intersection of geogenic pollution, drinking water safety, and rural health.

About Fluoride

Fluoride is a naturally occurring mineral found in soil, water, plants, and living organisms. In trace amounts, it is beneficial for dental health, strengthening tooth enamel. However, excessive intake over prolonged periods leads to fluorosis.

  • Safe Limits:
    • WHO guideline: 1.5 mg/L
    • BIS standard: 1.0 mg/L (desirable) and 1.5 mg/L (maximum permissible)
  • Source of Contamination:
    Fluoride enters groundwater through leaching of fluoride-bearing minerals such as fluorspar, cryolite, fluorapatite, and granite, especially in hard-rock aquifers.

Health Impacts

  • Dental Fluorosis:
    Affects children below eight years; symptoms range from faint white streaks on teeth to brown stains and pitting.
  • Skeletal Fluorosis:
    Results from long-term exposure; causes joint pain, bone deformities, stiffness, and in severe cases, permanent disability.
  • Neurological Effects:
    Studies from endemic regions indicate that high fluoride exposure may impair children’s cognitive development and lower IQ.

India’s Burden

Fluoride contamination above safe limits has been reported in 469 districts across 27 States.

  • Highly affected States: Rajasthan (highest burden), Haryana, Karnataka, Telangana, Gujarat, and Andhra Pradesh.
    The widespread nature of the problem makes fluorosis a national public health challenge rather than a localized issue.

Government Action and Institutional Measures

  • National Programme for Prevention and Control of Fluorosis (NPPCF):
    Launched in 2008–09, now implemented under the National Health Mission (NHM) to prevent, diagnose, and manage fluorosis.
  • Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM):
    Initiated in 2019 to provide functional household tap connections with safe drinking water to all rural households.
    • Har Ghar Jal Yojana ensures potable water supply.
    • Jal Sakhis conduct village-level water quality testing.
  • Defluoridation Technologies:
    • Nalgonda Technique: Uses aluminium salts, lime, and bleaching powder.
    • Activated Alumina Filters: Remove fluoride through adsorption.

Conclusion

Addressing fluoride contamination requires a multi-pronged approach—safe water supply, continuous monitoring, affordable defluoridation technologies, and community awareness. Strengthening groundwater governance is essential to prevent fluorosis and safeguard public health.

Bioremediation in India: From Pollution Burden to Nature-Based Cleanup

Context: India faces one of the world’s largest industrial and urban pollution burdens — from toxic rivers and chemical waste to heavy metal hotspots. Traditional clean-up methods remain expensive, energy-intensive, and incapable of tackling the growing scale of contamination. In this context, bioremediation, a nature-driven pollution treatment technique, is emerging as a sustainable, low-cost alternative to restore degraded environments.

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What is Bioremediation?

Bioremediation harnesses the power of microbes, fungi, algae, and plants to break down dangerous pollutants into harmless by-products such as water, carbon dioxide, or stable mineral forms. Techniques may be in-situ (treating contamination on-site) or ex-situ (excavation and treatment elsewhere).

It aligns perfectly with circular economy goals — returning polluted ecosystems to productive health rather than relocating toxins.

Why India Needs Bioremediation Urgently

India’s environmental crisis is largely human-made, and biological tools can help reverse the damage:

Polluted Rivers: CPCB (2024) notes ~72% of monitored river stretches remain polluted, dominated by sewage and industrial discharge.
Industrial Legacy Waste: Over 1,700 contaminated sites are officially identified — tanneries, pesticide dumps, petrochemical leaks, and e-waste hubs.
Heavy Metal Hotspots: Chromium in Kanpur groundwater exceeds WHO limits by 100–250 times, impacting health and food safety.
Cost Advantage: Bioremediation reduces clean-up expenditure by up to 60–70% (MoEFCC estimates).

For a developing country balancing fiscal limits and ecological recovery, this approach offers the best price-performance ratio.

Challenges in Scaling

Despite promise, India has not mainstreamed bioremediation into national pollution strategy.

  1. Microbe Suitability Issues
    Over 58% microbial formulations failed in field trials (CSIR, 2023) due to soil and pH variability.
  2. Regulatory Gaps
    No national protocol exists for approval or deployment of microbial agents; only 6 states have operational guidelines.
  3. Approval Delays for GM Bioremediation
    Less than 15% of DBT proposals using genetically engineered microbes received clearance (2022–24), slowing innovation.
  4. Monitoring and Biosafety
    MoEFCC pilots indicate uncontrolled microbe dominance risks if ecological monitoring is weak.

India’s institutional ecosystem must catch up with technological potential.

Way Forward

A smart expansion strategy must integrate science, governance, and community capacity:

National Standards & Microbe Registry under MoEFCC — similar to the US EPA Superfund model.
Regional Bioremediation Hubs connecting IITs–CSIR–industry–urban bodies, focusing on cluster-level sites.
Startup mobilisation via DBT-BIRAC for affordable microbial kits in sewage plants and landfills.
Community-led Implementation — jobs for local workers in applying and monitoring biological treatment systems.

Ultimately, bioremediation aligns with Mission LiFE and India’s global climate commitments — enabling ecological recovery without economic strain.

Conclusion

As India navigates the twin crises of pollution and climate stress, bioremediation is not merely a technical intervention but a shift toward living with nature, not against it. With the right regulatory push and local adoption, it can transform India’s toxic legacies into landscapes of regeneration.

India Warns of Growing Bioterrorism Threat

At the 50th-anniversary conference of the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC), India’s External Affairs Minister cautioned that bioterrorism is no longer a hypothetical risk but an emerging global reality.

Rapid advances in biotechnology, inexpensive gene-editing tools, and weak international oversight have expanded opportunities for non-state actors to misuse biological agents.

Bioterrorism involves the deliberate release of bacteria, viruses, toxins, or engineered pathogens to cause mass illness, disrupt economies, and spread fear. The COVID-19 pandemic exposed serious gaps in global preparedness, demonstrating how easily biological threats can escalate across borders.

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Biological Weapons Convention (BWC)

The BWC, also known as the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention, is the world’s first multilateral disarmament treaty eliminating an entire class of weapons of mass destruction.

Negotiated in Geneva (1969–1971) and entering into force in 1975, it bans the development, production, stockpiling, and acquisition of biological weapons.

The BWC complements the 1925 Geneva Protocol, which prohibited only the use of biological weapons but not their possession. Today the Convention has 188 States Parties, including India (ratified 1974), and 4 Signatories yet to ratify (Egypt, Haiti, Somalia, Syria).

Five states—including Israel and Chad—have neither signed nor acceded. A Review Conference takes place every five years to strengthen implementation.

Why Bioterrorism Is a Serious Concern

Technological and geopolitical changes have intensified risks:

  • Low-cost gene editing: CRISPR kits costing under ₹50,000 increase accessibility.
  • Rising terror interest: A 2024 UNSC study found 35+ groups attempted to procure biological agents.
  • Weak surveillance: 191 countries reported monitoring failures during the 2020–22 pandemic.
  • Dual-use danger: WHO notes that 42% of high-risk labs lack adequate oversight.
  • Synthetic biology boom: A projected $30–35 billion market by 2030 raises misuse potential.

Weaknesses in the BWC Framework

Despite its importance, the BWC struggles with structural limitations:

  • No verification mechanism to inspect labs or confirm compliance.
  • No permanent technical body for scientific risk assessment.
  • Lack of mandatory reporting of pathogen inventories or research activities.
  • Poor compliance culture: Only 19% of member states regularly file confidence-building measures.

India’s Contributions to Strengthening Biosecurity

India has adopted institutional, legal, and diplomatic measures:

  • 1989 Biosecurity Rules regulating hazardous microorganisms and genetically engineered organisms.
  • WMD Prohibition Act, 2005 criminalising illegal manufacture, financing, or transfer of WMDs.
  • SCOMET Export Controls monitoring high-risk biological materials (Category-2).
  • India–France proposal for a BWC Article VII assistance database.
  • ITEC training programmes on UNSC 1540 and strategic trade controls.

Way Forward

  • Verification Protocol: Create an inspection-based mechanism similar to IAEA and OPCW.
  • Permanent BWC Secretariat for tracking gene-editing and dual-use risks.
  • Global Data-Sharing Network for outbreak alerts and unusual lab activity.
  • National Biosecurity Law integrating existing rules, export controls, and disaster-response frameworks.

Strengthening the BWC is essential for ensuring that scientific progress does not become a pathway to global insecurity.

Parliamentary Deadlock and Declining Legislative Effectiveness

India’s Parliament, constitutionally envisioned as the central arena for deliberation and accountability, is witnessing a troubling decline in legislative productivity. Frequent disruptions, walkouts, and persistent deadlocks have raised concerns that the institution is losing its deliberative character and drifting away from its representative mandate.

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Current Status of Parliamentary Functioning

The Monsoon Session 2025 reflected the growing dysfunction. The Lok Sabha worked for only 29% of its scheduled time, while the Rajya Sabha functioned for 34%. This continues a long-term downward trend: annual sittings have fallen from 121 days (1952–70) to about 68 days since 2000, significantly reducing the time available for legislative scrutiny.

The decline is also visible in the weakening of parliamentary instruments. Question Hour productivity dropped to 23% in the Lok Sabha and 6% in the Rajya Sabha during Monsoon 2025—severely limiting executive accountability. Another major concern is the shrinking role of Parliamentary Committees.

Only 20% of Bills were referred to committees in the 16th and 17th Lok Sabhas, compared to nearly 60% in earlier decades. Additionally, the absence of a Deputy Speaker in both the 17th and 18th Lok Sabhas marks a deviation from long-standing parliamentary convention.

Reforms Required for Effective Functioning

1. Strengthening Institutional Dialogue
Structured engagement between the Leader of the House, Prime Minister, and Leader of Opposition—similar to the UK’s House Business Committee practices—can help address disruptions proactively and build bipartisan consensus.

2. Anti-Defection Reform
India’s expansive whip system curtails individual MP autonomy. Restricting the whip to confidence motions and money bills, aligned with practices in the UK and Canada, would restore deliberative independence within parties.

3. Revitalising Committees
Mandating that at least 75% of Bills be examined by Standing Committees, with provision for public consultations and expert testimony, can strengthen legislative quality and reduce hasty lawmaking.

4. Guaranteed Sitting Days
Introducing a statutory minimum of 100–120 sittings per year, similar to Australia’s fixed parliamentary calendar, would ensure predictability and adequate time for discussion.

Summoning of Parliament

Under Article 85(1), the President summons each House of Parliament, ensuring that the gap between two sessions does not exceed six months.

The Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha need not be summoned on the same date, and India does not follow a fixed parliamentary calendar.

Conventionally, Parliament meets in three sessions—Budget, Monsoon, and Winter—though their duration has steadily shortened.

The persistence of deadlock and declining deliberative quality calls for structural reforms that balance executive efficiency with parliamentary oversight. Reviving the institution’s vibrancy is essential for preserving India's democratic robustness.

ST Status for Six Communities in Assam: Key Recommendations and Constitutional Procedure

Context: A Group of Ministers (GoM) in Assam has submitted an interim report recommending Scheduled Tribe (ST) status for six communities—Ahom, Chutia, Moran, Matak, Koch-Rajbongshi, and the Tea Tribes. The recommendations aim to extend socio-economic protections while safeguarding the rights of existing ST populations.

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Communities Proposed for ST Status

  1. Ahom
  2. Chutia
  3. Moran
  4. Matak
  5. Koch-Rajbongshi
  6. Tea Tribes

These groups have long demanded ST status due to historical deprivation and limited access to constitutional safeguards.

Key Recommendations of the Interim Report

A. Structural & Reservation Framework

1. Creation of a Three-Tier ST Structure

The report proposes restructuring Assam’s ST categories into:

  • ST (Plains)
  • ST (Hills)
  • ST (Valley) – a new category

ST (Valley) would include:

  • Tai Ahom
  • Chutia
  • Tea Tribes
  • Koch-Rajbongshi (except those in undivided Goalpara)

2. Protection of Existing Quotas

  • Current quotas for ST (Plains) and ST (Hills) will remain unchanged.
  • A separate reservation roster, vacancy register, and quota must be created for ST (Valley) to avoid dilution of existing benefits.
  • For central services, all notified STs—both old and newly added—will compete within one unified ST pool.

B. Cultural and Political Safeguards

1. Extension of Land Rights

  • Until legal inclusion is completed, the six communities should receive interim land-related protections currently available to existing STs.

2. Cultural Oversight

  • Their cultural practices, traditional institutions, and indigenous customs should fall under the Department of Indigenous and Tribal Faith and Culture.

3. Parliamentary Representation

  • The two Lok Sabha constituencies covering Sixth Schedule areas should be permanently reserved for existing STs through a constitutional amendment, preventing political displacement.

How Communities Are Included in the ST List: Constitutional Procedure

  1. State Proposal – State/UT submits a formal request to the Ministry of Tribal Affairs (MoTA).
  2. MoTA Scrutiny – Ministry reviews evidence, socio-cultural traits, and historical deprivation.
  3. RGI Review – Registrar General of India conducts an ethnographic assessment.
  4. NCST Recommendation – Proposal sent to the National Commission for Scheduled Tribes for advice.
  5. Union Cabinet Approval – MoTA prepares a Cabinet note seeking approval.
  6. Parliamentary Amendment – Introduced as a Bill under Articles 341 & 342; passed by simple majority.
  7. Presidential Notification – The President formally updates the ST list.

This process safeguards constitutional integrity while ensuring inclusive tribal recognition.

Conclusion

The GoM’s interim recommendations mark a significant step in addressing long-standing socio-political demands in Assam. By proposing a three-tier ST structure, protecting existing quotas, and outlining cultural safeguards, the report seeks to balance recognition of new communities while maintaining the rights of current ST groups.

Final inclusion will depend on completing the multi-stage constitutional process involving MoTA, RGI, NCST, Parliament, and presidential notification.

Methane Hotspot Warning for India

Context: A new UNEP report released at COP30 (Belém, Brazil) identifies India as a global methane hotspot, raising concerns as methane was missing from India’s national statement at the summit.

Methane (CH₄), though short-lived, is 80x more potent than CO₂ in global warming over 20 years, making it key to rapid climate action.

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Key UNEP Findings

  • India emitted 31 Mt methane in 20209% of global share
  • 3rd-largest emitter globally after China & USA
  • G20 responsible for 65% of global methane
  • Waste burning methane ↑ 64% since 1995 (Global rise: 43%)
  • Agriculture emits 20 Mt (12% of global agricultural methane)
  • Rice methane likely ↑ 8% by 2030
  • Energy sector methane: 4.5 Mt/year

India’s Methane Profile

SectorMethane EmissionsStatus
Livestock~20 MtLargest source; enteric fermentation
Rice cultivationMajor contributorLikely to increase by 2030
Waste burning & landfills7.4 MtRapid growth; urban challenge
Energy sector4.5 MtCoal mining, leakages

Why India Avoided Methane Commitments at COP30

  • Agriculture dependency: 54% workforce relies on farming
  • Food security priority for 1.4 billion population
  • India’s NDC lacks agricultural methane targets
  • Previously declined the Global Methane Pledge (2021)
  • Focus remains on renewables, hydrogen & forests rather than farm-based mitigation

Way Forward for India

Farm Diversification
Promote millets & pulses through Shri Anna Mission to reduce paddy-linked methane

Crop Residue Management
Happy Seeder, balers & PUSA Bio-Decomposer to curb stubble burning

Methane Capture & Utilization
Support CBG plants & biogas under SATAT Scheme

Waste Management Reform
Segregation, landfill capping & biomethanation
Example: Indore biogas model

Satellite-Based Monitoring
Leverage EU Copernicus-like systems with ISRO collaboration

Policy Integration
Include methane targets in updated NDCs & state climate plans

Methane mitigation offers fastest climate cooling gains before 2050 — critical for India to balance economic growth, food systems, and climate leadership.

Australia Enforces World’s First Under-16 Social Media Ban

Context: Australia has implemented the world’s first nationwide ban on social media access for children under 16, effective 10 December 2025. The law mandates platforms to verify user age, delete underage accounts, and comply with stringent enforcement oversight.

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Why the Ban Was Introduced

Multiple studies and clinical observations indicate rising digital harm among children:

  • Online Exposure Risks: Nearly 70% of users aged 10–15 report exposure to violent content, misogyny, or self-harm posts.
  • Cyberbullying: Over 50% of Australian children experienced bullying online, correlating with increased cases of anxiety, trauma, and social withdrawal.
  • Addictive Design: Children reportedly spend 4–6 hours per day on platforms, with persuasive design techniques increasing compulsive use by 30–40%.
  • Mental Health Decline: Youth suicides (15–17 age group) have risen by 13% in five years, and mental health experts have linked excessive screen time to worsening emotional instability.

Implementation Challenges

The policy faces several structural hurdles:

  • Age-Verification Gaps: AI-based age-estimation tools have an inaccuracy margin of 25–35%, risking false approvals and exclusions.
  • Data Privacy Risks: With recent breaches exposing over 10 million records, the public fears storing sensitive identity or biometric data.
  • Circumvention Methods: Evidence from the UK shows a 1,800% increase in VPN use post similar regulations.
  • Weak Enforcement: The penalty of $49.5 million per violation may be low compared to revenue scales of global platforms.

Global Context

  • UK: The Online Safety Act 2023 mandates strict age controls and executive accountability.
  • EU: Several nations require verified parental consent for minors under 15; proposals for bans and curfews are increasing.
  • Malaysia: A nationwide age-verification system linked to MyKad/MyDigitalID will apply from 2026.

Way Forward

Experts suggest:

  • Layered Age Assurance: Combine device-level controls, behavioural signals, and optional ID verification for balanced compliance.
  • Independent Audits: Third-party algorithm reviews ensure transparency and prevent misuse.
  • Cross-Platform Regulation: Policies must include AI chat tools, games, and VR platforms.
  • Digital Literacy: Schools and parents must be equipped to guide safe online behaviour.

Relevance to India

India has 820+ million internet users, including over 500 million social media users. The regulatory framework includes the IT Act 2000, IT Rules 2021, and the Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023.

Key provisions include:

  • Mandatory removal of harmful content within 24 hours.
  • Appointment of compliance officers in India.
  • Parental consent required for users under 18, with bans on profiling and targeted advertising.

Cybercrime in India surged 65% (2019–23), and child cybercrime reports rose 400%, underlining the urgency of stronger safeguards.

Supreme Court Case Pendency

The incoming Chief Justice of India-designate Justice Surya Kant has placed the reduction of the Supreme Court’s mounting case backlog and revival of long-pending constitutional matters at the top of his reform agenda. With pendency touching 90,225 cases as of 22 November 2025—the highest in the Court’s history—the issue has assumed renewed national significance.

The data comes from the National Judicial Data Grid (NJDG), a public dashboard under the e-Courts project that provides real-time statistics on case institution, disposal and pendency across all courts.

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Why Case Pendency is Rising

1. Heavy Constitutional Docket

The Supreme Court hears a disproportionately large volume of Article 136 Special Leave Petitions (SLPs). The Law Commission has described India’s apex court as one of the world’s most overburdened because it entertains appeals on a far broader scale than comparable jurisdictions.

2. Bypassing High Courts

Digital filing, virtual hearings and the belief that the Supreme Court offers quicker relief have incentivised litigants to approach the apex court directly. This sidesteps High Courts, weakening the intended filtering mechanism envisioned in the constitutional scheme.

3. Understaffed Judiciary

Vacancies in the Supreme Court—often arising from delays in the Collegium–Government clearance cycle—reduce judicial strength and adversely impact disposal rates. The Department of Justice repeatedly highlights that even short periods of vacancy significantly slow case hearings.

4. Legacy and Structural Backlogs

Several constitutional, land, taxation and service matters have remained unresolved for decades. The primary reason is the irregular functioning of Constitution Benches, which require five or more judges under Article 145(3). Without regular sittings, related cases also remain stalled.

5. Procedural Burden

The Court faces frequent interim applications, review petitions, curative petitions and repeated listings that consume substantial judicial time. This procedural overload further delays final hearings.

Key Constitutional Provisions

  • Article 136 – Special Leave Petition (SLP):
    A discretionary power enabling the Supreme Court to hear appeals against any judgment/order of any court or tribunal (except military courts).
  • Constitution Bench:
    A bench of five or more judges, constituted to interpret substantial constitutional questions.

Way Forward

  • Regular 7-judge and 9-judge Constitution Benches:
    Big-ticket constitutional issues must be settled to unlock thousands of pending connected cases.
  • Strengthen High Courts:
    Encourage litigants to approach High Courts first, restoring their constitutional role and reducing the Supreme Court’s admission burden.
  • Accelerate Appointments:
    Streamline the Collegium-Government consultation timelines to prevent vacancies and keep benches fully functional.
  • Institutional Mediation:
    Justice Surya Kant has termed mediation a potential “game-changer”—particularly for civil, commercial and family disputes—helping reduce case inflow.

The urgent need for systemic reforms makes pendency reduction central to restoring the Supreme Court’s constitutional mandate as a court of law rather than a court of routine appeals.