UPSC CSE GS Foundation ()
UPSC CSE GS Foundation ()

Current Affairs – March 24, 2026

{GS1 – Geo} India Produced 1 Billion Tonnes of Coal **

  • Context (TH): India achieved 1 billion tonnes (BT) of coal production for the second consecutive year.
  • Captive and commercial mines crossed 200 MT production, registering 10.56% year-on-year growth.
  • Stock: Total national coal stocks reached 210 MT, creating a strategic buffer of 88 days.
  • Ranking: Odisha remains the top producer with 239.4 MT, followed by Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand.
  • Import: Record domestic output led to a 7.9% decrease in coal imports in 2024-25, saving $7.9 billion.
    • Coking coal imports rose due to limited domestic reserves of high-grade steel-making coal.

India’s Coal Policy and Targets

  • Output Target: India aims to achieve 1.5 BT of domestic coal output by FY 2029-30.
  • Auction Reform: Since 2020, coal blocks have been auctioned on a revenue-sharing basis rather than a fixed rupee-per-tonne model, permitting 100% FDI.
  • Coking Coal: Mission Coking Coal aims for 140 MT of domestic raw coking coal production by FY 2029-30 to reduce heavy (~95%) import dependence.
    • Coking coal was notified as a Critical and Strategic Mineral to fast-track approvals and exempt projects from public consultation requirements.
  • Gasification: The National Coal Gasification Mission targets 100 MT of coal gasification by 2030 to manufacture chemicals, urea, and synthetic gas.
  • Exchange Regulator: Coal Controller Organisation (CCO) was appointed in 2025 to register and regulate India’s first coal exchange for transparent market-based trading.
  • Logistics Reform: First Mile Connectivity (FMC) scheme aims to develop 139 mechanised projects by 2030 to replace road transport with conveyors and silos.

Read More > Coal Sector in India

{GS2 – MoIB} Initiatives to Boost India’s Media and Entertainment Sector *

  • Context (PIB | ET): Ministry of Information & Broadcasting launched three initiatives to strengthen India’s media and entertainment sector.
  • Objective: To advance the ‘Orange Economy’ and make digital technology more accessible to everyone.
  • Orange Economy includes industries like media, arts, entertainment, gaming, and digital content that generate wealth through human creativity and intellectual property.

About the Initiatives

  1. National AI Skilling Initiative: To train 15,000 creators, youth, and media professionals in AI-based digital content creation, focusing on AVGC (Animation, Visual Effects, Gaming, and Comics).
    • It was launched in partnership with Google and YouTube through the Indian Institute of Creative Technologies (IICT).
  2. MyWAVES: A ‘citizen creator’ platform on the government’s WAVES OTT that enables users to create and upload multilingual content directly.
  3. Advanced Electronic Programme Guide: Introduces advanced EPG and satellite tuners in TVs, eliminating the need for set-top boxes to make public broadcasting more affordable and accessible.

Read More > Orange Economy, Its Significance & Challenges

{GS2 – Social Sector} World Tuberculosis Day 2026 **

  • Context (DDN | DDN): Every year, 24 March is commemorated as World Tuberculosis (TB) Day to enhance awareness and expedite efforts in combating TB.
  • The day marks the discovery of the TB-causing bacterium by Dr Robert Koch (1882).
  • The 2026 theme, “Yes! We Can End TB! Led by countries, powered by people,” emphasises collective action towards eliminating the disease.
  • Key Launches: India launched initiatives like TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan – 100 Days Campaign, TB Mukt Bharat App, and TB Mukt Urban Ward Initiative on World TB Day 2026.

About Tuberculosis (TB)

  • TB is a contagious disease caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis. It mainly affects the lungs (pulmonary TB), but it can also impact other organs (extrapulmonary TB).
  • Transmission: Through airborne respiratory droplets when an infected person coughs or sneezes.
  • Drug Resistance: Multidrug-Resistant TB (MDR-TB) resists Isoniazid and Rifampicin, two most potent first-line drugs; Extensively Drug-Resistant TB (XDR-TB) also resists second-line drugs.
  • Treatment: An all-oral regimen consisting of Bedaquiline, Pretomanid, Linezolid, and Moxifloxacin is used against drug-resistant TB.
    • BCG (Bacillus Calmette-Guérin) is the only licensed TB vaccine, mainly protecting infants.

TB Burden in India

  • India bears the highest burden with about 25% of global TB cases. [WHO TB Report 2025]
  • Progress: TB incidence decreased by 21% from 2015 to 2024 — the fastest decline rate worldwide.
  • Drug Resistance: India accounts for about 32% of global MDR-TB and Rifampicin-Resistant (RR-TB) cases. [WHO TB Report 2025]

India’s Efforts to Eradicate TB

  • National Tuberculosis Elimination Programme (NTEP) is India’s primary anti-TB framework, adopting the Detect, Treat, Prevent, Build (DTPB) strategy.
  • PM TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan mobilises community support through Ni-kshay Mitras for nutritional, diagnostic, and vocational assistance.
  • Ni-kshay Poshan Yojana provides notified TB patients with ₹1,000 per month as a direct benefit transfer for nutritional support during treatment.

Read More > Tuberculosis | Tuberculosis Elimination in India

{GS2 – Governance} Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026

  • Context (TH): Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 was introduced in the Lok Sabha and subsequently referred to a Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) for scrutiny.
  • Scope: It proposes amendments to the Companies Act, 2013, and the Limited Liability Partnership (LLP) Act, 2008, to align both with modern business practices.

Key Amendments Proposed

  • Decriminalisation: The Bill shifts several minor procedural lapses from criminal liability to civil monetary penalties, adjudicated through an In-House Adjudication Mechanism (IAM).
  • CSR Reforms: Net profit threshold for mandatory CSR applicability is proposed to be doubled, from ₹5 crore to ₹10 crore.
  • Digital Governance: The Bill recognises electronic communication, hybrid meetings, and online disclosures as valid modes of corporate compliance.
    • Companies may hold Annual General Meetings (AGMs) via video conferencing, provided at least one physical AGM is held every three years.
  • Small Company: Eligibility threshold for classification as a “small company” is expanded to a paid-up capital limit of ₹20 crore and a turnover limit of ₹200 crore.
  • Trust Conversion: SEBI-registered private trusts can be converted into LLPs with an automatic deemed transfer of assets and liabilities.
  • Audit Exemption: The Bill empowers the Central Government to exempt specific classes of companies from mandatory statutory audits.
  • IFSC Companies: Companies and LLPs operating in International Financial Services Centres (IFSCs) are permitted to transact and maintain books of account in permitted foreign currencies.
  • Share Buyback: Specified classes of companies are allowed to conduct two share buyback offers per financial year (currently limited to one), provided there is a 6-month gap between them.

Key Concerns with the Bill

  • Executive Overreach: The Bill delegates policy decisions on penalty rules and audit exemptions to the Ministry of Corporate Affairs, effectively giving the executive law-making powers.
  • CSR Dilution: Raising the net profit threshold dilutes CSR by exempting a large number of profitable companies from mandatory social obligations.
  • IAM Concern: The shift toward an In-House Adjudication Mechanism (IAM) for decriminalised offences may bypass the formal judiciary, risking arbitrary or inconsistent penalty application.
  • Audit Risk: Replacing mandatory statutory audits with self-declarations could raise the risk of shell company formation and money laundering.

Read More> Corporate Social Responsibility

{GS3 – IE} SEBI Revamps Conflict-of-Interest Framework

  • Context (IE): SEBI approved a revised conflict-of-interest framework based on recommendations from the High-Level Committee (HLC) chaired by Pratyush Sinha.
  • Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) oversees the capital and securities markets under the Ministry of Finance. Established in 1988, it became a statutory body under the SEBI Act, 1992.

About Conflict of Interest

  • A conflict of interest is an overlap between a public official’s private interests (financial or personal) and public duties that impairs impartial decision-making.
  • It breaches Nolan Committee Principles of public life, specifically Objectivity, Integrity, and Selflessness.
  • Types of Conflict: Conflict of interest may be actual (direct present clash), potential (may arise in future), or apparent (seems biased in public perception even without actual bias).

Legal & Institutional Framework in India

  • Public Servant Rules: Central Civil Services (Conduct) Rules, 1964, prohibit speculative trading and the misuse of office for relatives’ employment.
  • Constitutional Checks: Article 102 disqualifies legislators holding an office of profit, while the Public Servant (RPA), 1951, restricts government contracts.
  • Corporate Framework: Companies Act, 2013 (Section 166) bars directors from engaging in situations with conflicting interests.
  • SEBI Guidelines: SEBI’s securities market code addresses conflicts involving exchanges, intermediaries, and other regulated market entities.

Key Highlights of the Revised Framework

  • Insider Status: SEBI Chairman and Whole-Time Members (WTMs) are now classified as ‘insiders’; they cannot trade in equities and can only invest through mutual funds.
  • Asset Disclosure: Senior officials must publicly disclose immovable property assets, aligning with Central Civil Services norms.
  • Family Definition: Disclosure norms now include dependent children, legal wards, and financially dependent relatives as family, expanding beyond spouses.
  • Institutional Mechanism: SEBI will establish an Office of Ethics and Compliance alongside a digital platform and an anonymous whistleblower system to oversee disclosures, recusals, and conflicts.
  • Market Facilitation: SEBI allowed Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) to settle only the net difference between buy and sell trades, reducing required funds and forex outflows.

Read More > Securities Markets Code Bill, 2025

{GS3 – IE} India’s Strategic Petroleum Reserves **

  • Context (IE): About one-third of India’s Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR) are empty, raising concerns about energy security amid the West Asia conflict.
  • Storage Capacity: India’s SPR system has a total capacity of 5.33 million tonnes of crude oil, stored in underground rock caverns.
  • Current Status: Reserves are about 64% filled (~3.37 MMT), leaving nearly one-third of capacity unused.
  • Coverage of Demand: At full capacity, the SPR can meet about 9.5 days of India’s crude oil requirement; at the current filling level, it covers only about 5 days.
  • Oil Stock Position: Including commercial and other stocks, India currently has about 74 days of oil availability.

Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR)

  • SPRs are government-maintained emergency crude oil reserves used during supply disruptions or crises.
  • Purpose: They ensure energy security, stabilise prices, and act as a buffer against global oil shocks.
  • Origin: Emerged after the 1973 OPEC oil embargo, highlighting vulnerability to supply shocks.
  • Institutional Framework: Led to the formation of the International Energy Agency (IEA), promoting coordinated energy security measures.
  • Global Norms: IEA recommends maintaining at least 90 days of net oil import reserves for members.
  • Global Practice: USA, China, & Japan maintain large SPRs and use them during crises (wars, disasters).

India’s SPR Infrastructure

  • Implementing Agency: India’s Strategic Petroleum Reserves are managed by Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserve Limited (ISPRL) under the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas.
  • Operational Sites: India currently has three operational SPR facilities at Visakhapatnam (Andhra Pradesh), Mangaluru (Karnataka), and Padur (Karnataka).
  • New Facilities: Govt has approved new SPR facilities at Chandikhol (Odisha) & Padur (Karnataka).
  • Proposed Sites: Additional SPRs have been proposed at Bikaner (Rajasthan) and Rajkot (Gujarat).

Strategic & Economic Importance of SPR

  • Energy Security: Provides a buffer against supply disruptions caused by wars, geopolitical tensions, or natural disasters.
  • Price Stabilisation: Helps moderate fuel price volatility by releasing oil during sudden price spikes.
  • Supply Continuity: Ensures uninterrupted availability of crude oil for sectors like industry & defence.
  • Strategic Autonomy: Reduces dependence on external suppliers, enhancing national security.
  • Market Advantage: Enables governments to buy crude at low prices and sell at high prices.

Challenges of Low SPR

  • Inadequate Buffer: Low SPR limits India’s ability to handle prolonged disruptions, such as the West Asia conflict affecting oil supplies.
  • Price Volatility: Reduce the ability to cushion global oil price shocks (i.e., Russia–Ukraine war 2022).
  • Strategic Vulnerability: With ~88% crude import dependence, low SPR increases risk from chokepoints like the Strait of Hormuz.

{GS3 – Envi} India Needs an Efficient Water Governance **

  • Context (NOA): On World Water Day (22 March), PM Modi urged citizens to conserve every drop of water, emphasising the importance of effective and responsible water governance in India.

Why India Needs Efficient Water Governance?

  • Hydrological Paradox: India receives nearly 4,000 cubic kilometres of annual rainfall but holds only 4% of the world’s freshwater resources to support 18% of the global population.
  • Water Stress: Nearly 600 million people face high to extreme water stress, with demand projected to surpass supply by 2030, reducing GDP by 6%.
  • Scarcity Threshold: Per capita water availability has decreased from 5,000 cubic metres in 1947 to about 1,434 cubic metres in 2025, approaching the ‘Water Scarcity’ limit of 1000 cubic metres.
  • Aquifer Depletion: As the world’s largest groundwater consumer, India records annual water table declines of up to 4 cm in its northwestern “breadbasket”.
  • Quality Crisis: India ranks 120th out of 122 countries on the global Water Quality Index, with nearly 70% of freshwater sources contaminated.
  • Health Burden: Inadequate access to water and sanitation contributes to nearly 200,000 annual deaths, primarily from preventable waterborne diseases
  • Distribution Inefficiency: Indian cities lose about 38% of potable water as ‘Non-Revenue Water’ due to ageing infrastructure and leaks, almost double the global efficiency benchmark.

Challenges with India’s Water Governance

  • Institutional Silos: Fragmented mandates among multiple agencies hinder an integrated water resources management (IWRM) strategy.
  • Information Asymmetry: Lack of credible, real-time, and shared data systems weakens evidence-based policymaking and predictive forecasting.
  • Metric Inconsistency: Divergent definitions of “water access” across national surveys (such as NFHS-6) and the Jal Jeevan Mission create unreliable benchmarks for tracking progress.
  • Legal Obsolescence: The Easement Act of 1882 creates a regulatory vacuum by granting landowners de facto ownership of groundwater.
  • Federal Friction: Overlapping authority between the Centre and States often stalls interstate river-sharing agreements and collaborative transboundary basin management.

Govt. Initiatives for Water Governance

  • Rural Supply: Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM) 2.0 has been extended to December 2028 to ensure 55 litres of per capita daily water for all 19.36 crore rural households
  • Urban Circularity: AMRUT 2.0 aims to make 4,700 Urban Local Bodies water-secure by 2026 by mandating 20% of city water demand to be met through recycled wastewater reuse.
  • Community Management: Atal Bhujal Yojana provides performance-linked ‘Incentive Grants’ to over 8,200 water-stressed Gram Panchayats for implementing community-led Water Security Plans.
  • Digital Architecture: Sujalam Bharat framework establishes a national digital architecture to achieve 100% real-time monitoring of rural water assets through a unique Sujal Gaon ID.
  • Local Resilience: Mission Amrit Sarovar (under Jal Shakti Abhiyan) has successfully constructed or rejuvenated 75 water bodies per district.
  • Usage Efficiency: National Water Mission (NWM) aims to achieve a 20% increase in water-use efficiency across industrial, domestic, and irrigation sectors by 2030.

Constitutional Provisions for Water Governance

  • State Primacy: Entry 17 of the State List grants states legislative authority over water supply, irrigation, canals, drainage, and storage within their territories.
  • Union Oversight: Entry 56 of the Union List empowers the Central Government to regulate and develop inter-state rivers and valleys to the extent declared by Parliament in the public interest.
  • Conflict Adjudication: Article 262 provides the framework for resolving inter-state river disputes and permits Parliament to exclude the Supreme Court’s jurisdiction.
  • Local Decentralisation: Articles 243G and 243W facilitate the devolution of functional authority to Panchayats and Municipalities for drinking water, sanitation, and minor irrigation management.
  • Public Trust Doctrine: Judicial interpretation of Article 21 treats water as a community resource held by the State in public trust. The doctrine includes man-made lakes and reservoirs.

Read More> Water Crisis in India | Wastewater Management for Sustainable Water Crisis

{Prelims – Geo} Molecular Clouds *

  • Context (PIB): Scientists from ARIES have mapped the “skeleton” of magnetic fields around molecular clouds near the Milky Way for the first time.
  • Molecular clouds are dense, cold regions of gas and dust in space where molecules (mainly H₂) exist.
  • Composition: Composed mostly of molecular hydrogen (H₂) along with helium and interstellar dust.
  • Temperature: Extremely cold (around 10–20 Kelvin), allowing molecules to form and survive.
  • High Density: Much denser than the surrounding interstellar medium, enabling gravitational collapse.
  • Sites of Star Formation: Act as stellar nurseries, where new stars and planetary systems are born.
  • Types: They include giant molecular clouds and smaller dark clouds such as Bok globules.

Key Findings of the Study

  • Magnetic fields, along with gravity and turbulence, play a major role in regulating star formation.
  • The two molecular clouds studied, L1604 and L121, are magnetically sub-critical, where magnetic support resists large-scale collapse.
  • The study shows that magnetic fields slow the rate of star formation and prevent rapid conversion of galactic gas into stars.

{Prelims – Initiatives} National Water Data Policy Published during World Water Day Conclave

  • Context (PIB): Ministry of Jal Shakti organised the World Water Day Conclave 2026 with the theme “Industry for Water“.
  • Launch: National Water Data Policy 2026 was launched along with the 7th Minor Irrigation Census, 2nd Census of Water Bodies, 1st Census of Springs, and 1st Census of Major and Medium Irrigation Projects.
  • Commitment: Under a Joint Industry Declaration, industries commit to conducting regular water audits from 2027 and reducing their total water footprint by 50% by 2030.
  • World Water Day is observed on March 22 to promote sustainable management of water resources. The theme for 2026 is “Water and Gender.”

About National Water Data Policy 2026

  • Unified Architecture: The policy replaces fragmented departmental silos with a standardised national system that integrates water quantity, quality, and usage across hydrological units.
  • Repository: National Water Informatics Centre serves as the sole national repository and ‘single source of truth’ to streamline data-driven water governance.
  • Basin-Scale Management: Data collection and planning are shifted from administrative boundaries to Hydrological Units. River basins are treated as single management entities.

{Prelims – IR} BIMSTEC Youth Programme

  • Context (DDN): India hosted the BIMSTEC Youth Heritage and Sustainability Immersion Programme in Madhya Pradesh.
  • Organising Bodies: Ministry of External Affairs, in collaboration with Bharat Scouts and Guides.
  • Objectives: Strengthen cultural exchange, people-to-people connectivity, and cooperation in culture, environment, and youth sectors.
  • Key Outcomes: Improved cultural understanding, leadership skills, and creation of a BIMSTEC Youth Sustainability Network aligned with Mission LiFE.

Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperation

  • It was established in 1997 (Bangkok Declaration); the BIMSTEC Secretariat is in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
  • It has 7 member countries: India, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, & Thailand.
  • Objective: To promote regional cooperation in trade, connectivity, energy, & sustainable development.
  • Significance: Acts as a bridge between South Asia and Southeast Asia, strengthening India’s Act East and Neighbourhood First policies.

Read More About> BIMSTEC

{Prelims – S&T} GARBH-INi Programme *

  • Context (PIB): The Union government unveiled the results of the decade-long GARBH-INi programme at the India Habitat Centre in New Delhi.
  • GARBH-INi (Interdisciplinary Group for Advanced Research on Birth Outcomes) is India’s largest pregnancy cohort study under the Department of Biotechnology (DBT).
  • The programme monitors over 12,000 pregnant women to study preterm birth and find genetic markers for predicting the risk of premature delivery.
  • Objective: Improve maternal health & reduce neonatal mortality with indigenous, AI-driven solutions.
  • Implementation: Phase I began in 2015 with enrolled pregnant women; Phase II, launched in 2021, monitored their babies through the first 1,000 days of life.
  • Garbhini-GA2: It is the first indigenous AI model for Indian women to accurately determine fetal age, developed by IIT Madras and THSTI.
  • GARBH-INi-DRISHTI: It is a data-sharing platform providing biospecimens and clinical data to researchers for maternal and child health research.

{Prelims – S&T} Smog-Eating Photocatalytic Coatings *

  • Context (IE): The Delhi government has partnered with IIT Madras to study “smog-eating” photocatalytic coatings as a potential solution to reduce urban air pollution.
  • These are surface coatings containing photocatalysts like titanium dioxide (TiO), designed to actively reduce air pollution when exposed to light.
  • When sunlight falls on TiO₂, it chemically reacts with pollutants, breaking them into harmless substances such as nitrogen, oxygen, and water.
  • Target Pollutants: Aims to reduce nitrogen dioxide (NO₂) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs), major contributors to urban air pollution.
  • Application: Can be applied as coatings on roads and buildings, mixed into construction materials, or installed as pollution-reducing panels on urban infrastructure.
  • Benefit: Provides continuous, low-cost reduction of air pollutants in urban areas using sunlight.
  • Challenge: Effectiveness is limited by factors like low sunlight, dust accumulation, & regular maintenance.
  • Photocatalytic refers to a process in which a substance (called a photocatalyst) uses light energy (usually sunlight) to speed up chemical reactions without being consumed.

{Prelims – Species} Chhapgarus ngankeeae

  • Context (RM): Researchers described a new marine crab species, Chhapgarus ngankeeae, from India’s west coast mangrove ecosystems.
  • Appearance: It is a small crab with a squarish chestnut-brown carapace covered with fine hair-like setae.
  • Unique Feature: The crab has a narrower abdomen and a distinct V-shaped first gonopod (male reproductive organ).
  • Habitat: It inhabits intertidal mangrove zones beneath stones in muddy substrates.
  • Range: The species is endemic to the west coast and is found in Goa, Karnataka, and Maharashtra.
  • Diet: As an omnivore and detritivore, it feeds on organic debris and plant matter.
  • Role: It acts as an ecosystem engineer by decomposing organic matter and aerating sediments.

{Prelims – In News} India’s First LPG ATM

  • Context (TOI): India’s first fully automated LPG ATM, officially known as the Bharatgas Insta LPG Machine, was recently launched in Gurugram.
  • Implementing Agency: Bharat Petroleum Corporation Limited (BPCL) launched the machine as a pilot under its ‘Bharatgas’ initiative.
  • Operational Mechanism: It functions as a 24/7 self-service vending machine where registered users pay digitally and get a filled one in 2-3 minutes.
  • Modern Cylinders: The machine dispenses 15 kg fibre composite cylinders, lighter than conventional ones (31 kg); they remain rust-free and transparent for visible gas-level checking.
  • Significance: It provides a robust alternative distribution approach & encourages innovation in fuel retailing.