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(The Gist of PIB) Ek Bharat Shreshtha Bharat programme  [JUNE-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) Ek Bharat Shreshtha Bharat programme

 [JUNE-2020]

 Ek Bharat Shreshtha Bharat programme

  • Union Ministry of HRD has decided to take forward the Ek Bharat Shreshtha Bharat (EBSB) programme by using innovative ways in view of the prevailing conditions of COVID 19.

Key highlights:

  • To move towards digital mediums for the carrying on the activities under EBSB by each participating Ministry/ Department. To organise webinars on Ek Bharat Shreshtha Bharat themes for their wide dissemination.
  • To have a common repository for the Ek Bharat Shreshtha Bharat digital resources that can be used by every Ministry. This repository may be hosted on a common portal.
  • About the program:
  • The program was announced by the Prime Minister in 2015 on the 140th birth anniversary of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel. Subsequently, the initiative was announced in the Union Budget for 2016-17.
  • To promote engagement and thereby understanding amongst the people of different states/UTs to ensure ensure a stronger united India.
  • The Ministry of Human Resource Development has been designated Nodal Ministry for co-ordination of the programme.

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(The Gist of PIB) Index of Eight Core Industries  [JUNE-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) Index of Eight Core Industrie

 [JUNE-2020]

Index of Eight Core Industries

  • The Office of Economic Adviser, Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) released the Index of Eight Core Industries (Base: 2011-12=100) for the Month of April, 2020.

About:

  • The growth rate of Index of Eight Core Industries for April 2020 declined by 38.1% (provisional) compared to decline of 9% (provisional) previous month of March 2020.
  • In view of nationwide lockdown during April 2020 due to COVID-19 pandemic, various industries viz. Coal, Cement, Steel, Natural Gas, Refinery, Crude Oil etc. experienced substantial loss of production.
  • Production of coal, crude oil, natural gas, refinery products, fertiliser, steel, cement and electricity contracted by 15.5%, 6.4%, 19.9%, 24.2%, 4.5%, 83.9%, 86%, 22.8%, respectively.
  • The Eight Core Industries comprise 40.27 percent of the weight of items included in the Index of Industrial Production (IIP).
  • During 2019-20, core industries recorded 0.6% growth against 4.4% in 2018-19.

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(The Gist of PIB) India National Supermodel  [JUNE-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) India National Supermodel

 [JUNE-2020]

India National Supermodel

  • Department of Science and Technology (DST) has initiated a COVID-19 Indian National Supermodel to help monitor the future transmission of infection.

About:

  • This will aid decisions involving health system readiness and other mitigation measures.
  • Numerous mathematical models for Covid-19 forecasting and surveillance are being worked out by investigators funded by DST-SERB (Science and Engineering Research Board) and other agencies.
  • As part of this initiative, Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (JNCASR) and IISc, Bangalore will co-ordinate to connect and work with all COVID-19 modeling projects and programs in the country.

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(The Gist of PIB) My Life My Yoga contest  [JUNE-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) My Life My Yoga contest

 [JUNE-2020]

My Life My Yoga contest

  • Prime Minister of India announced the “My Life – My Yoga”(also called “Jeevan Yoga”) Video Blogging Contest.

About:

  • The contest is a joint effort by the Ministry of AYUSH and the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR) to inspire people to become active participants in the observation of the sixth International Day of Yoga (IDY) coming up on 21st June 2020.
  • This contest is open to all participants across the world. The contest has gone live on the social media handles of the Ministry of AYUSH today, 31 May 2020.
  • To enter into the contest the participants are required to upload a 3 minutes duration video of 3 Yogic practices (kriya, asana, pranayama, bandha or mudra), including a description on how the said Yogic practices influenced their life.
  • For the India contestants, prizes worth Rs. 1 lakh, 50K and 25K for 1st, 2nd and 3rd ranking within 6 categories have been announced. Details of the global prizes will be announced shortly on the Yoga Portal of Ministry of AYUSH.

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(The Gist of PIB) 21st meeting of Central Employment Guarantee Council  [JUNE-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) 21st meeting of Central Employment Guarantee Council

 [JUNE-2020]

21st meeting of Central Employment Guarantee Council

  • Union Minister of Rural Development chaired the 21st meeting of Central Employment Guarantee Council.

About:

  • The Central Employment Guarantee Council was constituted under Section 10 of the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment
  • Guarantee Act (Mahatma Gandhi NREGA), 2005.
  • Addressing the participants, rural development minister said that for the Financial Year 2020-21, Rs.61,500 crore has been allocated for this program which is an all-time high.
  • Additional provision of Rs.40,000 crore has been made for this program under Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan to provide employment to the needy workers during this difficult period arising from COVID-19.

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(The Gist of PIB) National List of Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH) of India  [MAY-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) National List of Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH) of India

 [MAY-2020]

National List of Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH) of India

  • Union Minister for Culture launched the National List of Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH) of India in New Delhi. 

About:

  • The National ICH List is an attempt to recognize the diversity of Indian culture embedded in its intangible heritage. It aims to raise awareness about the various intangible cultural heritage elements from different states of India
  • This initiative is also a part of the Vision 2024 of the Ministry of Culture.
  • Following UNESCO’s 2003 Convention for Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, this list has been classified into five broad domains in which intangible cultural heritage is manifested: 
  • Oral traditions and expressions, including language as a vehicle of the intangible cultural heritage;
  • Performing arts;
  • Social practices, rituals, and festive events;
  • Knowledge and practices concerning nature and the universe;
  • Traditional craftsmanship.

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(The Gist of PIB) India and Bhutan on Cooperation in the areas of Environment  [JUNE-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) India and Bhutan on Cooperation in the areas of Environment

 [JUNE-2020]

India and Bhutan on Cooperation in the areas of Environment

  • The Union Cabinet has given its approval for signing the MoU between the Government of India and Bhutan on Cooperation in the areas of Environment.

About:

  • The MoU will cover the following areas of the environment: (1) Air; (2) Waste; (3) Chemical Management; (4) Climate Change; and () Any other areas jointly decided upon.
  • This MoU shall enter into force on the date of signature and shall continue to remain in force for a period of ten years.
  • It will facilitate exchange of best practices and technical knowhow through both public and private sectors and shall contribute to sustainable development. It provides the possibility for joint projects in areas of mutual interest. However, no significant employment generation is envisaged.

Background:

  • A MoU was signed between the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), Ministry of Environment, India and the National Environment Commission (NEC) of Bhutan in 2013.
  • This MoU expired in 2016. Noting the benefits of the earlier MoU, both sides have decided to continue cooperation and collaboration in the field of Environment.

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(The Gist of PIB) Pharmacopoeia Commission for Indian Medicine and Homoeopathy  [JUNE-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) Pharmacopoeia Commission for Indian Medicine and Homoeopathy

 [JUNE-2020]

Pharmacopoeia Commission for Indian Medicine and Homoeopathy

  • The Union Cabinet has given its approval to re-establish Pharmacopoeia Commission for Indian Medicine and Homoeopathy (PCIM&H) as Subordinate Office under Ministry of AYUSH.

About:

  • PLIM and HPL being the subordinate offices and PCIM&H- an autonomous organization under Ministry of AYUSH are going to be merged to establish PCIM&H, as a subordinate office of the Ministry with a common administrative control.
  • The two central laboratories established at Ghaziabad since 1975.
  • Pharmacopoeia Commission for Indian Medicine & Homoeopathy (PCIM&H) is an autonomous body under the aegis of Ministry of AYUSH established since 2010.

Key highlights:

  • The merger is aimed at optimizing the use of infrastructural facilities, technical manpower and financial resources of the three organizations for enhancing the standardization outcomes of Ayurveda, Siddha, Unani and Homoeopathy drugs towards their effective regulation and quality control.
  • This merger will facilitate focused and cohesive development of standards of AYUSH drugs and publication of pharmacopoeias and formularies.
  • It is also intended to accord legal status to the merged structure of PCIM&H and its laboratory by virtue of making necessary amendment and enabling provisions in the Drugs and Cosmetics Rules, 1945.
  • Post-merger PCIM&H will have adequate administrative structure under the Ministry to strive for augmenting the capacity and outcomes of pharmacopoieal work, achieving harmonization of pharmacopoeial standards of Ayurveda, Siddha, Unani and Homoeopathy drugs, preventing duplication and overlapping of drug standardization work and optimal utilization of resources in effective manner.

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(The Gist of PIB) PM chairs Cabinet Meeting to give historic boost to Rural India  [JUNE-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) PM chairs Cabinet Meeting to give historic boost to Rural India

 [JUNE-2020]

PM chairs Cabinet Meeting to give historic boost to Rural India

  • The Union Cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi met on 3rd June, 2020. Several landmark and historic decisions were taken in the meeting, which will go a long way in helping India’s farmers while also transforming the agriculture sector.

Historic Amendment to Essential Commodities Act

  • The Cabinet today approved historic amendment to the Essential Commodities Act. This is a visionary step towards transformation of agriculture and raising farmers’ income.

Background

  • While India has become surplus in most agri-commodities, farmers have been unable to get better prices due to lack of investment in cold storage, warehouses, processing and export as the entrepreneurial spirit gets dampened due to hanging sword of Essential Commodities Act.
  • Farmers suffer huge losses when there are bumper harvests, especially of perishable commodities. With adequate processing facilities, much of this wastage can be reduced.

Benefits

  • With the amendment to Essential Commodities Act, commodities like cereals, pulses, oilseeds, edible oils, onion and potatoes will be removed from list of essential commodities. This will remove fears of private investors of excessive regulatory interference in their business operations.
  • The freedom to produce, hold, move, distribute and supply will lead to harnessing of economies of scale and attract private sector/foreign direct investment into agriculture sector. It will help drive up investment in cold storages and modernization of food supply chain.

Safeguarding interest of consumers

  • The Government, while liberalizing the regulatory environment, has also ensured that interests of consumers are safeguarded. It has been provided in the Amendment, that in situations such as war, famine, extraordinary price rise and natural calamity, such agricultural foodstuff can be regulated.
  • However, the installed capacity of a value chain participant and the export demand of an exporter will remain exempted from such stock limit imposition so as to ensure that investments in agriculture are not discouraged.
  • The amendment announced will help both farmers and consumers while bringing in price stability. It will create competitive market environment and also prevent wastage of agri-produce that happens due to lack of storage facilities.

Barrier-free trade in agriculture produce

  • Cabinet approved ‘The Farming Produce Trade and Commerce (Promotion and Facilitation) Ordinance, 2020’.

Background

  • Farmers in India today suffer from various restrictions in marketing their produce. There are restrictions for farmers in selling agri-produce outside the notified APMC market yards.
  • The farmers are also restricted to sell the produce only to registered licensees of the State Governments.
  • Further, Barriers exist in free flow of agriculture produce between various States owing to the prevalence of various APMC legislations enacted by the State Governments.

Benefits

  • The Ordinance will create an ecosystem where the farmers and traders will enjoy freedom of choice of sale and purchase of agri-produce.
  • It will also promote barrier-free inter-state and intra-state trade and commerce outside the physical premises of markets notified under State Agricultural Produce Marketing legislations.
  • It will open more choices for the farmer, reduce marketing costs for the farmers and help them in getting better prices. It will also help farmers of regions with surplus produce to get better prices and consumers of regions with shortages, lower prices. The ordinance also proposes an electronic trading in transaction platform for ensuring a seamless trade electronically.
  • The farmers will not be charged any cess or levy for sale of their produce under this Act. Further there will be a separate dispute resolution mechanism for the farmers.

One India, One Agriculture Market

  • The ordinance basically aims at creating additional trading opportunities outside the APMC market yards to help farmers get remunerative prices due to additional competition. This will supplement the existing MSP procurement system which is providing stable income to farmers.
  • It will certainly pave the way for creating One India, One Agriculture Market and will lay the foundation for ensuring golden harvests for our hard working farmers.

Farmers empowered to engage with processors, aggregators, wholesalers, large retailers, exporters:

  • Cabinet approved ‘The Farmers (Empowerment and Protection) Agreement on Price Assurance and Farm Services Ordinance, 2020’.

Background:

  • Indian Agriculture is characterized by fragmentation due to small holding sizes and has certain weaknesses such as weather dependence, production uncertainties and market unpredictability.
  • This makes agriculture risky and inefficient in respect of both input and output management.

Benefits:

  • The ordinance will empower farmers for engaging with processors, wholesalers, aggregators, wholesalers, large retailers, exporters etc., on a level playing field without any fear of exploitation.
  • It will transfer the risk of market unpredictability from the farmer to the sponsor and also enable the farmer to access modern technology and better inputs. It will reduce cost of marketing and improve income of farmers.
  • This Ordinance will act as a catalyst to attract private sector investment for building supply chains for supply of Indian farm produce to global markets. Farmers will get access to technology and advice for high value agriculture and get ready market for such produce.
  • Farmers will engage in direct marketing thereby eliminating intermediaries resulting in full realization of price. Farmers have been provided adequate protection. Sale, lease or mortgage of farmers’ land is totally prohibited and farmers’ land is also protected against any recovery.
  • Effective dispute resolution mechanism has been provided for with clear time lines for redressal.

Government committed to the cause of farmer welfare:

  • A series of steps were announced as part of the Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyaan to provide a boost to those engaged in agriculture and allied activities.
  • These include provision of concessional credit through Kisan Credit Cards, financing facility for agri-infra projects, Pradhan Mantri Matsya Sampada Yojana and other measures to strengthen fisheries, vaccination against Foot & Mouth Disease and Brucellosis, Herbal Cultivation promotion, boost to beekeeping, Operation Green etc.
  • Through PM KISAN, over 9.54 crore farmer families(as on first June 2020) have benefited and an amount of Rs. 19,515 crore has been disbursed so far during the lockdown period. An Amount of Rs. 8090 crore has been paid during lockdown period under PMFBY.
  • These steps are only the latest in a series of measures taken by the government, which shows its continuous commitment to championing the cause of welfare of the hardworking farmers of India.

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(The Gist of PIB) Amery Ice Shelf  [JUNE-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) Amery Ice Shelf

 [JUNE-2020]

Amery Ice Shelf

  • The National Centre for Polar and Ocean Research (NCPOR) predicts that there would be a 24% increase in the expansion of Ameri Ice Shelf (AIS) boundaries by 2021 and another 24% expansion by 2026 from its 2016 positions.

Background:

  • The prediction made by NCPOR is based on a 16-year-long satellite-based observation that covered an area of 60,000 sq. km across the AIS. Scientists feel that this study would help understand the ongoing changes in the ocean and atmospheric forces better.

Key highlights:

  • The floating sheets of ice called the ice shelves play a multi-faceted role in maintaining the stability of a glacier. Ice shelves connect a glacier to the landmass.
  • The ice sheet mass balance, sea stratification, and bottom water formation are important parameters for the balancing of a glacier. Latent and sensible heat processes do play important roles here.
  • The AIS is one of the largest glacier drainage basins in the world, located on the east coast of Antarctica, at about 70ºS Latitude, 70ºE Longitude. The AIS dynamics and mass balance help in understanding the changes in the global climate scenario.
  • The insulation of ice shelves from atmospheric forcing is dependent on a temperature gradient that the ocean cavity beneath the ice shelves provides. It is the pressure exerted by the ice shelves upon the ocean cavity that determines this temperature gradient.
  • There is always a stress on the sea ice and ice sheets itself plays an indirect role in reducing the amplitude of the ocean swell. This is assisted by the freezing atmospheric temperature, which is capable of promoting a change in the morphology of ice shelves.

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(The Gist of Kurukshetra) Solution to Groundwater Crisis INDIA [JUNE-2020]


(The Gist of Kurukshetra) Solution to Groundwater Crisis

INDIA [JUNE-2020]

Solution to Groundwater Crisis

Introduction:

  • The General Budget for 2020–21, Finance Minister announced that the government will identify 100 most ‘water stressed’ districts and comprehensive measures on addressing this shortage will be chalked out. Ms Sitharaman further said that this will be a part of the Jal Jivan mission, for which Rs 3.06 lakh crore has been earmarked.

Outline of the Jal Jivan mission:

  • The proceeds outlined for the Jal Jivan is slated to be used for augmenting existing water resources, recharging of lakes, water desalination, rain water harvesting as well as sewage water treatment.
  • Announcement of such a huge cash spending on a problem which had so far been mostly heard only in seminars, closed door discussions and by the way of NGO activism, was no aberration.
  • This development had been written in 2018 when NITI Aayog, the top intellectual body of the Central Government, came up with its maiden the Composite Water Management Index (CWMI).
  • This was the first ever effort in independent India to fathom the water crisis scientifically at every inch of the country.
  • NITI Aayog described it as “the first comprehensive collection of country-wide water data in India based on in-depth structured questionnaires followed by focus group discussions to generate qualitative information.”
  • The scenario that this decorated document unveiled left little option with the government to further delay the response to the looming water crisis in front of the country.

Ground Water Crisis in India: How severe is it?

  • According to the maiden CWMI report released by the NITI Aayog in 2018, 21 major cities (Delhi, Bengaluru, Chennai, Hyderabad and others) are racing to reach zero groundwater levels by 2020, affecting access for 100 million people.
  • Nearly 40 percent of the population will have absolutely no access to drinking water by 2030, and 6 percent of India’s GDP would be lost by 2050 due to water crisis.
  • However, 12 per cent of India’s population is already living the ‘Day Zero’ scenario, thanks to excessive groundwater pumping, an inefficient and wasteful water management system and years of deficient rains. The CWMI report also states that by 2030, the country’s water demand is projected to be twice the available supply, implying severe water scarcity for hundreds of millions of people. It has been reported that in many parts of the country the water table is declining at the rate of 1-2 m/year.

International norms to recognised as water stress country:

  • As per the international norms, a country is classified as water stressed and water scarce if per capita water availability goes below 1700 cubic meter and 1000 cubic meter, respectively.
  • The per capita availability of water is estimated to decline further to 1465 cubic meter by 2025 and 1235 cubic meter by 2050. If it declines further to around 1000-1100 cubic meters, then India could be declared as a water-stressed country.”

Government’s Response So Far:

  • Equipped with the broad scientific data about rapidly deteriorating qualitative as well as quantitative water tables across India, the Narendra Modi Government established a whole new ministry to fight the menace in its second term.
  • In May 2019, as Modi 2.0 government took the reign of the country in its second term, the Prime Minister merged two ministries Ministry of Water Resources, River Development and Ganga Rejuvenation and Ministry of Drinking Water and Sanitation to create a new ministry, which was named as Ministry of Jal Shakti.
  • The ministry launched Jal Shakti Abhiyan in an effort to over bridge the water challenge being faced by 1592 water-stressed blocks in 256 districts by the way of a campaign for water conservation and water security.
  • It was decided on the highest level that water conservation efforts would be unleashed to ensure five important water conservation interventions: water conservation and rainwater harvesting; renovation of traditional and other water bodies/tanks; reuse borewell recharge structures; watershed development and intensive afforestation.

Two ways the government can play its role:

  • One, by extending policy incentives to stop the misuse of ground water; and
  • Two, by unleashing a movement on the model of ‘Swachh Bharat Abhiyan’ to create awareness among people against wasting water.

Anatomy of the Problem: 

  • While talking about the water crisis, potability is only a small part of the problem.
  • In fact, many developed countries have already found a solution of potable water by turning sea water into drinkable water on mass scale. But the real catastrophe waiting to happen, is in agriculture.
  • As per the Land Use Statistics 2014–15, the total geographical area of the country is 328.7 million hectares, of which 140.1 million hectares is the reported net sown area. As per a World Bank report, India withdrew a total of 761 billion cubic meter ground water in 2018 out of which 688 billion cubic metre was used for agriculture. This is 90 percent of the total ground water withdrawn in a year. The other side of the problem is that out of the total water volume needed for agriculture, 70 percent is groundwater today. Both the data, if put together, gives us a glimpse about the possible ways to find a solution of this grim problem.

Agricultural success in Punjab region:

  • Punjab, a celebrated story of agricultural success, is gradually turning into a graveyard of agriculture. The result of the policy of excessive subsidy on chemical fertilizers and pesticides on one hand and encouragement to farmers for unbridled se of groundwater by providing them free electricity on the other, has resulted in double whammy. One, the state is devoid of ground water and two, the upper crest under soil has developed a layer of hard chemical residue due to which the rain water simply flows away without seeping into the ground. So, there is little bewilderment that Punjab has the highest ground water development ratio.
  • The level of ground water development is very high in the states of Delhi, Haryana, Punjab and Rajasthan, where ground water development is more than 100 percent with Punjab being on top with 172 percent. This implies that in these states, the annual ground water consumption is more than annual ground water recharge. Not only that, incentives to waste water has also worsened the state’s water productivity. Punjab requires two to three times as much water as Bihar and West Bengal to produce a kilogram of rice.

How will it impact the farmers?

  • Farmers often give such maths a cold shoulder terming it a luxury because they think it is something they are supposed to worry about in favour of comparatively affluent people. What they don’t comprehend is that it is them, who is most affected by this anomaly.
  • The adversity befalls upon them in two ways.
  • Sinking water level increases their cost of cultivation and decreases the production level at one hand, and increases their cost of living on the other hand.
  • Water scarcity impacts farmers’ profit negatively, established a study titled ‘The Efficiency of Rationing: Agricultural Power Subsidies, Power Supply and Groundwater Depletion in Rajasthan’ published in 2018.
  • This study found that farmers facing greater water scarcity sink deeper wells and are more likely to grow water-hardy crops and make investments in water-conserving irrigation technologies.
  • Despite these investments, water scarcity still decreases profits and lands them in debt, according to the study.
  • In many parts of the country, where the ground water has reached to the level of rocks beneath soil, the productivity has gone down drastically and the cost of cultivation has shot up. Even in the selection of crops, the farmers in such areas don’t find much option. Even if the water table goes down below 600 ft plus, the cost of borewell increases multiple times.
  • There are strong links between cash cropping, the failure of borewells, overwhelming debts and farmer suicides in the semi-arid regions of northern and western Andhra Pradesh and other parts of the Deccan plateau, according to a study published in Third World Quarterly in 2013.

What is the solution?

  • One thing is very clear. We cannot create water. We can only preserve water that we already have with us and that we will get in future in the form of rains. But again the rain data across the globe describes the challenge.
  • While at just over 260 cubic km per year, India uses 25 percent of all groundwater extracted globally, ahead of the US and China, while it receives only four percent of the global precipitation and ranks 133 in the world in terms of water availability per person per annum.
  • The approach to control the situation before it gets out of hand must have multi-directional dimensions. And because 90 percent of the water is used by agriculture, no solution will work lest we should keep cultivation in the centre.
  • The key to the solution is producing more with less water. This goal can be achieved in two ways, one by shifting from more water guzzling crops to lesser ones and two, by creating awareness among farmers to use micro-irrigation tools.
  • To achieve the optimum result with the first approach, ICAR’s two bodies, National Institute of Agricultural Economics and Policy Research and Indian Institute of Farming Systems Research at Modipuram, Meerut, are working toward this aim. The crop planning would be based
  • on local climatic conditions, water availability and overall demand-supply situation and could help the government to plan its incentives in such ways that farmers will adopt those recommended crops, according to the ICAR.
  • Experts say there is a need to double the area under micro-irrigation from the current level of nine million hectares.
  • But it is easier said than done. In spite of the fact that almost all states have subsidy on getting micro-irrigation system, it is flouted by the lower lever corruption by the related companies in connivance with agriculture department officials. This discourages farmers from going for it.
  • Moreover, due to lack of awareness, most of them think that micro-irrigation is only for the regions where farmers don’t have much water availability.
  • To change the mindset of the producers, the government needs to rope in the private sector along with its own agencies for successfully running focussed awareness programmes around the benefits of micro-irrigation.
  • The farmers should be taught how flood irrigation results in wastage of water and energy as well as reduce the efficiency of fertilisers.
  • Also, there should be stress laid on the need for scheduling of irrigation processes and said technologies like moisture sensors and other software that are available to achieve this aim.
  • Other than to use the available water judiciously, the farmers also need to be made aware and trained about conservation of water. There are many farmers across the country who have developed unique models of cultivation where each drop of rain water falling within their farmland is preserved.

Conclusion:

  • With all means of communication, it has to be made a part of national conscience that groundwater rejuvenation has no option and that it is needed not only for future generations, but also for the present population.

(The Gist of Science Reporter) GOI Launches Aarogya Setu App  [JUNE-2020]


(The Gist of Science Reporter) GOI Launches Aarogya Setu App

 [JUNE-2020]


GOI Launches Aarogya Setu App

  • Aarogya Setu is a mobile application developed by the Government of India to link essential health services with the people of India to fight against COVID-19.
  • The App is intended at enhancing the initiatives of the Government of India, mainly the Department of Health, in actively reaching out to and informing the users of the app regarding various risks, best practices and relevant advisories relating to the control of COVID-19.
  • The application tracks through a bluetooth and location generated social graph, it notifies the user about closeness with a COVID-19 positive individual. The app alerts are accompanied by instructions on how to self-isolate and what to do in case if someone has developed symptoms.
  • The app has various advisories on how to maintain social distancing, and various recommendations to stay safe. It also indicates the level of risk regarding infection.

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(GIST OF YOJANA) International Day of Yoga [June-2020]

(GIST OF YOJANA) International Day of Yoga

[June-2020]

International Day of Yoga

  • While addressing the 69th session of United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) on September 27, 2014, the Honorable Prime Minister of India urged the world community to adopt an International Day of Yoga. On December 11, 2014, the 193 member UNGA approved the proposal by consensus with a record 177 cosponsoring countries, a resolution to establish 21 June as “International Day of Yoga”.
  • Yoga is essentially a spiritual discipline based on an extremely subtle science which focuses on bringing harmony between mind and body. It is an art and science for healthy living. The word “Yoga” is derived from the Sanskrit root ‘yuj’ meaning “to join”, “to yoke” or “to unite”. According to Yogic scriptures, the practice of Yoga leads to the union of an individual consciousness with the universal consciousness. According to modern scientists, everything in the universe is just a manifestation of the same quantum firmament. One who experiences this oneness of existence is said to be “in Yoga” and is termed as a yogi who has attained a state of freedom, referred to as mukti, nirvāna, kaivalya or mokṣa.
  • “Yoga” also refers to an inner science comprising a variety of methods through which human beings can achieve union between the body and mind to attain self-realisation. The aim of Yoga practice (sādhana) is to overcome all kinds of sufferings that lead to a sense of freedom in every walk of life with holistic health, happiness and harmony.

How Yoga Can Help:

  • Yoga is essentially a path to get liberated from all the bondages. However, medical research in recent years has uncovered many physical and mental benefits that Yoga offers, corroborating the experiences of millions of practitioners. A small sampling of research shows that:
  • Yoga is beneficial for physical fitness, musculoskeletal functioning and cardio-vascular health.
  • It is beneficial in the management of diabetes, respiratory disorders, hypertension, hypotension and many lifestyle related disorders.
  • Yoga helps to reduce depression, fatigue, anxiety disorders and stress.
  • Yoga helps to regulate menstrual and menopausal symptoms.
  • In essence, Yoga is a process of creating body and mind that are stepping-stones, not hurdles, to an exuberant and fulfilling life.

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UPSC Pre General Studies Study Material

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(The Gist of PIB) Central Food Technological Research Institute  [MAY-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) Central Food Technological Research Institute

 [MAY-2020]

Central Food Technological Research Institute

  • The Mysuru-based CSIR-Central Food Technological Research Institute (CRTRI) has made available high-protein biscuits to the COVID-19 patients undergoing treatment in the All India Institute of Medical Science (AIIMS), New Delhi.

Key highlights: 

  • CFTRI supplied 500 kg of high-protein biscuits and 500 kg of high-protein rusks to the Dietetics department of AIIMS to supply to the patients. The biscuits were supplied on request from the officials of the Institute.
  • The biscuits contain 14% of protein while usual biscuits contain around 8-9% protein. The enriched biscuits will provide the protein needed for recuperating patients.

About:

  • CSIR-Central Food Technological Research Institute (CSIR-CFTRI), is one of the constituent laboratories under the aegis of the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR).
  • It was opened in 1950 in Mysore, Karnataka.
  • The institute develops technologies to increase efficiency and reduce post-harvest losses, add convenience, increase export, find new sources of food products, integrate human resources in food industries, reduce costs, and modernize

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(The Gist of PIB) Cove Warriors  [MAY-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) Cove Warriors

 [MAY-2020]

Cove Warriors

  • Union Health Ministry has created an online data pool on www.covidwarriors.gov.in of health care professionals, volunteers from National Yuva Kendras, NCC, Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana and ex-Servicemen for use by the ground level administration at state, district or municipal levels.

About:

  • It contains state wise and district wise availability of the large pool of human resources from various groups along with contact details of the nodal officers.
  • The dashboard is available for use by various authorities to prepare Crisis Management and Contingency Plans based on the available manpower, in coordination with nodal officers for each group.
  • This will also help States and Union Territories to move human resources from one location to the other for their utilization.

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(The Gist of PIB) Blazar  [MAY-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) Blazar

 [MAY-2020]

Blazar

  • Researchers from the Indian Institute of Astrophysics (IIA), Bangalore, an autonomous institute of the Department of Science and Technology have conducted the first systematic study on the gamma-ray flux variability nature on different types of blazars.

About:

  • At the center of most galaxies, there’s a massive black hole that can have a mass of millions or even billions of Suns that accrete gas, dust, and stellar debris around it.
  • As these materials fall towards the black hole, their gravitational energy gets converted to light forming active galactic nuclei (AGN). A minority of AGN (~15%) emit collimated charged particles called jets traveling at speeds close to the speed of light.
  • Blazars are AGN whose jets are aligned with the observer’s line of sight. Some blazars are thought to host binary black holes in them and could be potential targets for future gravitational-wave searches.

 

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(The Gist of PIB) Artificial Neural Networks based global Ionospheric Model  [MAY-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) Artificial Neural Networks based global Ionospheric Model

 [MAY-2020]

Artificial Neural Networks based global Ionospheric Model

  • Researchers from the Indian Institute of Geomagnetism (IIG), Navi Mumbai, have developed a new Artificial Neural Networks based global Ionospheric Model (ANNIM) using long-term ionospheric observations to predict the ionospheric electron density and the peak parameters.

About:

  • Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs) replicate the processes in the human brain (or biological neurons) to solve problems such as pattern recognition, classification, clustering, generalization, linear and nonlinear data fitting, etc.
  • Tracking the variability of the Ionosphere is important for communication and navigation. The ionospheric variability is greatly influenced by both solar originated processes and the neutral atmosphere origin
  • The model developed by IIG researchers may be utilized as a reference model in the ionospheric predictions and has potential applications in calculating the Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) positioning errors.

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(The Gist of PIB) Lithium in space  [MAY-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) Lithium in space

 [MAY-2020]

 Lithium in space

  • Researchers at the Indian Institute of Astrophysics (IIA), an autonomous institute under the Department of Science and Technology have discovered hundreds of Li-rich giant stars indicating that Li is being produced in the stars and accounts for its abundance in the interstellar medium. 

About:

  • They have also associated such Li enhancement with central He-burning stars, also known as red clump giants, thereby opening up new vistas in the evolution of the red giant stars.
  • This is an important discovery that will help to eliminate many proposed theories such as planet engulfment or nucleosynthesis during the red giant evolution in which helium at the center is not burning. 
     

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THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 7 July 2020 Indian Ocean Front(Indian Express)



Indian Ocean Front(Indian Express)


Mains Paper 2:International Relations 
Prelims level: East China Sea, the Bohai Sea, the Yellow Sea and the South China

Mains level: Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests

Context: 

  • In the wake of China’s behaviour on our northern border, India needs to look carefully at other areas of potential conflict. 
  • The Indian Ocean is an obvious one. 
  • In his keynote address at the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore in June 2018, our prime minister presented India’s Indo-Pacific vision. 
  • It is rooted in our historical associations with this region, and our understanding of its seminal importance in building prosperity in this century. 
  • The clarity of our approach was captured thus: “Inclusiveness, openness and ASEAN centrality and unity, therefore, lie at the heart of the new Indo-Pacific. 
  • India does not see the Indo-Pacific Region as a strategy or as a club of limited members. 
  • Nor as a grouping that seeks to dominate. And by no means do we consider it as directed against any country.”

China and Indian Ocean:

  • China is not a littoral state in the Indian Ocean. Nor, historically speaking, did it have a naval presence. 
  • This by no means suggests that China did not play an important part in Indian Ocean trade.
  • It is to merely posit that such trade, especially beyond the Malacca Straits, was mainly carried on by Arab, Indian and Persian traders. 
  • Nonetheless, in today’s context, China is the second largest economy and the world’s largest trading nation. 
  • The sea-lanes of communication in the Indian Ocean are vital to her economy and security. 
  • China should have equal access under international law and in accordance with international practice.
  • China could have been expected to welcome the Indo-Pacific approach which gives her both legitimacy and respect in the Indian Ocean. 
  • She has, instead, opted to undermine it. 
  • China now alleges that this is an American-led plot to “contain” China’s rise.

 China’s “Malacca Dilemma”:

  • After the founding of the People’s Republic in 1949, China was initially focussed on the consolidation of the “homeland”. 
  • Its horizons broadened as its economy went global, and the consequent challenge was encapsulated by President Hu Jintao in November 2003 to party cadres as China’s “Malacca Dilemma”. 
  • They imagined that others would block the Malacca Straits to “contain” the Chinese. 
  • From that point forward, China has strategised to dominate not just the Malacca Straits, but the ocean beyond it. 
  • The PLA Navy (PLAN) made its first operational deployment in the Gulf of Aden in 2008.
  • In December 2009 retired PLAN Admiral Yin Zhuo referred to a possible overseas base or facility.
  • In 2010 a China State Oceanic Administration report alluded to plans to build aircraft carriers.
  • By 2012 China was ready to make the move into the Indian Ocean. 
  • A Maritime Rights and Interests Leading Group was established inside the Communist Party. 
  • The Report to the 18th Party Congress in the same year saw the first official reference to “building China into a sea-power nation”. 
  • The plan was presented as the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road in Jakarta in October 2013, carefully wrapped in terms of trade and finance, in order to disguise its dual purpose. 
  • In May 2014 three Chinese researchers affiliated to the China Naval Research Institute laid out the real game-plan in their article, “The Strategic Scenario in the Indian Ocean and the Expansion of Chinese Naval Power”.  

Challenges to the Chinese Plan:

  • Acknowledging that US hegemony and India’s regional influence in the Indian Ocean posed challenges to the Chinese plan, the authors laid out the inherent deficiencies that China needed to overcome, namely that 
    • o    it is not a littoral state; 
    • o    its passage through key maritime straits could be easily blocked; and 
    • o    the possibility of US-India cooperation against China. 

They suggested that these deficiencies might be overcome by:

  • To carefully selecting sites to build ports — Djibouti, Gwadar, Hambantota, Sittwe and Seychelles were specifically named; 
  • By conducting activities in a low-key manner to “reduce the military colour as much as possible”; and 
  • By not unnerving India and America by cooperating at first, then slowly penetrating into the Indian Ocean, beginning with detailed maritime surveys, ocean mapping, HADR, port construction and so on. 
  • The Chinese have moved precisely along those lines.

Dual use:

  • The official establishment continues to deny that the BRI has military or geo-strategic intent.
  • A Chinese scholar at Jiao Tong University has recently acknowledged that the dual-use ports are likely to support future projection of military power. 
  • China has conveniently forgotten its assurance, in the Defence White Paper (1998) that she “does not station any troops or set up any military bases in any foreign country”. 
  • The PLA’s new base in Djibouti is the prototype for more “logistics” facilities to come. 
  • More port construction projects that are commercially unviable but have military possibilities, like Gwadar and Hambantota, are being offered to vulnerable countries. 
  • Chinese “civilian” vessels routinely conduct surveys in the EEZ of littoral states. 
  • In January 2020 the PLA Navy conducted tripartite naval exercises with Russia and Iran in the Arabian Sea. They have the largest warship building programme in the world.
  • The Indo-Pacific idea might potentially derail their carefully crafted plans. It is inclusive, participative and evolving through open discussion; the Maritime Silk Road by contrast is a Chinese fait accompli.
  • After initially disparaging the idea, they now wish to cause alarm by raising fears about Great Power “strategic collision” caused by the so-called American-led “containment” strategy. 
  • This is the classic Chinese ruseof deflecting attention from the real issue on hand, their efforts to dominate the Indian Ocean. 

Conclusion:

  • It is important to look past their propaganda. 
  • In September 2019, Vice Foreign Minister Le Yucheng said: “We are firmly against attempts to use the Indo-Pacific strategy as a tool to counter the BRI or even contain China”. 
  • China still thinks in terms of balance of power while speaking about a Community with a Shared Future of Mankind. 
  • It should re-consider its position and view the Indo-Pacific idea as an instrument for advancing common interests, and not make it a source of conflict or tension.

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Prelims Questions:

Q.1). With reference to the G4 flu virus, consider the following statements:

1. It is genetically descended from the H1N1 strain that was responsible for the 2009 swine flu pandemic.
2. Swine flu is a respiratory disease of pigs caused by type A influenza viruses that regularly cause outbreaks of influenza in pigs. 

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2

Answer: C

Mains Questions:

Q.1). As India tries to diffuse the tension along the disputed northern border with China, it must focus on the other potential fronts that China could open. India Ocean could be the next one. In this context how India should be taken their approach to the centrality of the Indian Ocean for China and their approach to the region. Comment. 

THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 7 July 2020 Revise the law(Indian Express)



Revise the law(Indian Express)


Mains Paper 2:Governance 
Prelims level: Indian Penal Code
Mains level: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors

Context: 

  • The setting up of a five-member expert committee by the Union Ministry of Home Affairs to overhaulcriminal laws in the country is a welcome step that is long overdue. 
  • The Indian Penal Code and its corollary laws, the Indian Evidence Act and the Code of Criminal Procedure, were all first enacted in the late 19th-century. 
  • And despite proposals and suggestions in the past, these acts have not undergone comprehensive revision.

Rooted in Colonial World: 

  • The Indian Penal Code, the legislation that an ordinary citizen arguably interacts with the most, and which governs his relationship with the state, is still rooted in colonial ideas. 
  • Although some changes have been made through amendments and judicial pronouncements, the laws do not reflect the aspirations of a Constitution that gives primacy to liberty and equality. 
  • While it took 158 years for the courts to decriminalise homosexuality and adultery — many others that still remain in the books do not recognise individual agency. 
  • This is especially true for women. 
  • “Enticing” of a married woman who is “in the care of” a man is an offence that carries a jail term of up to two years, for instance. 
  • Too many laws protect and promote patriarchal attitudes within a constitutional framework that promises equality. 
  • Sedition, punishable with imprisonment for life, is another colonial spirited law misused by the state against its citizens — and another provision that needs revisiting. 

Criminal Law needs to be updated:

  • New crimes need to be defined and addressed, especially concerning technology and sexual offences. 
  • It is important to not give in to populist demands and run the risk of excessive policing and over-criminalising.
  • When dealing with demands for safety, governments often take refuge in stricter laws and harsher punishments. 
  • As a renewed debate on the death penalty continues both within and outside judicial circles, the harshest punishment needs a legislative approach which is not just passing the buck to the judiciary. 
  • On procedural aspects of criminal law, there is a need to harmonise the statute books with court rulings. 
  • Despite “landmark rulings” reading down provisions and inserting safeguards through guidelines, processes of the state are often weaponised against citizens. 
  • From raids to arrests and the holding of accused in state custody — criminal law needs to be updated to meet the demands of the democratic temper of the 21st-century.

 Conclusion:

  • While the committee debates the idea of criminal justice and what the gamut of laws really achieves, it also needs to place various stakeholders at the heart of this change. 
  • If the victim is often on the margins of the justice process, the accused is burdened with institutional delays. 
  • Accountability, above all, must guide the balance between the rights of the citizen and imperativesof state.
  • Review of penal code, its statutes, is long overdue. Exercise must be guided by imperative of ensuring accountability.

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Prelims Questions:

Q.1). With reference to the special liquidity scheme for NBFCs and HFCs, consider the following statements:

1. RBI will provide funds for the Scheme by subscribing to government guaranteed special securities issued by the Trust.
2. Government of India will provide an unconditional and irrevocable guarantee to the special securities issued by the Trust. 

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2

Answer: C

Mains Questions:

Q.1). What do you mean by the Indian Penal Code and its corollary laws? What is the Indian Evidence Act and the Code of Criminal Procedure? Discuss the concern associated with them and way forward.

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