{GS2 – Polity} Amul and IFFCO Ranked World’s Top Cooperatives*
- Context (DDN | TOI): Amul and IFFCO emerged as the top two global cooperatives, ranking first and second, respectively, in the World Cooperative Monitor (WCM) 2025.
- The WCM 2025 was released at the ICA CM50 Conference held in Doha, Qatar; it ranked cooperatives by GDP per capita performance, highlighting their contribution to the economy.
- WCM: It is an annual global study that evaluates the economic performance and social impact of cooperatives. It is jointly developed by the International Cooperative Alliance (ICA) and Euricse.
- ICA CM50 Conference: It is a global gathering of cooperative leaders aimed at positioning cooperatives as solutions to international economic and social issues.
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About Amul and IFFCO
- Amul: It is India’s pioneering dairy cooperative that became the model for the nationwide “Operation Flood“; it is managed by the Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation (GCMMF).
- It includes more than 18,600 village dairy societies and 3.6 million milk producers.
- IFFCO: The Indian Farmers Fertiliser Cooperative Limited, based in New Delhi, is a multi-state cooperative society that manufactures and markets fertilisers and agricultural inputs.
- IFFCO supports around 50 million farmers through 35,000 member cooperatives across India.
About Cooperatives
- A cooperative is a voluntary, democratic, and autonomous enterprise controlled by its members.
- Part IXB of the Indian Constitution grants constitutional status to cooperative societies. It was incorporated through the 97th Constitutional Amendment Act, 2011.
- Legal Framework: Single-state cooperatives are regulated by State Acts, while multi-state cooperatives follow the Multi-State Cooperative Societies (MSCS) Act, 2002.
- Institutional Support: The Ministry of Cooperation, established in 2021, offers a dedicated administrative and policy framework to strengthen India’s cooperative movement.
- The United Nations (UN) declared 2025 the International Year of Cooperatives (IYC) to highlight the role of cooperatives in promoting social inclusion and sustainable economic growth.
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Read More > Revitalizing Cooperative Societies in India
{GS2 – MSDE} Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana
- Context (IE): The Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana (PMKVY) is facing irregularities and corruption issues in its implementation.
About PMKVY
- PMKVY is a flagship outcome-based skill development scheme launched in 2015 by the Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship (MSDE).

- Objective: The scheme aims to provide large-scale, short-term skill training to Indian youth to enhance their employability and livelihood opportunities.
- Implementation: It is implemented under the Skill India Mission through the National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC).
- Current Phase: PMKVY 4.0 (FY 2022–23 onwards) functions as a Central Sector Scheme emphasising new-age skills like AI, robotics, and data analytics, while mandating On-the-Job Training (OJT).
- Training Components:
- Short-Term Training (STT): Offers National Skills Qualification Framework (NSQF)-aligned courses for school dropouts and unemployed youth.
- Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL): Certifies informal skills of existing workers with industry-recognised credentials.
- Special Projects: Provides customised training for marginalised groups, aspirational districts, and emerging job sectors.
- Achievements: PMKVY has trained over 1.64 crore youth, with 45% of beneficiaries being women and a significant share from the SC, ST, and OBC categories.
Read More > 10 Years of Skill India Mission | Innovative Skilling for Industry 4.0
{GS2 – Governance} Sports Need to Be a National Priority Sector **
- Together, they underline the need to treat sports as a national investment, not discretionary spending, integral to achieving Viksit Bharat 2047.
Current Scenario
- Limited Economic Share: Sports and Physical Activity (SAPA) contribute only 0.1% of India’s GDP and 0.5% of total employment (NSP 2025).
- Demographic Dividend: 65% of India’s population is below 35 years, a potential workforce for sports, fitness, and allied industries.
- Rising Health Burden: Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) cause over 60% of deaths in India (MoHFW, 2024), underscoring the need for preventive health through active living.
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Economic & Social Significance of the Sports Sector
- GDP Boost Potential: SAPA can contribute up to 2% of GDP and 4% of national jobs by 2047.
- Employment Engine: Expanding sports tech, fitness services, and sports media.
- Preventive Healthcare: Active lifestyles could save up to ₹15 lakh crore in health costs by 2047.
- Social Cohesion: Sports build inclusivity, national pride, and community participation.
Key Challenges Faced by the Sports Sector
- Infrastructure Gaps: Only 30% of rural schools have playgrounds (UDISE+ 2022–23), limiting early participation and grassroots sports development.
- Funding Deficit: Sports receives less than 0.08% of the Union Budget, far below the 1–2% allocation seen in sports-driven economies (NSP Draft, 2025).
- Fragmented Governance: India has 10+ agencies managing sports at different levels, leading to poor coordination and duplication of efforts (NITI Aayog Review 2024).
- Low Private Participation: Private-sector contribution to sports infrastructure is below 20%, compared to 60–70% in developed economies (CII Sports Report 2023).
- Talent Pipeline Weakness: Only 15% of athletes identified at sub-junior levels reach state-level championships (Sports Authority of India Data 2024).
- Gender Disparity: Female participation in organised sports remains below 30%, especially in rural belts (Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports, 2024).
Way Forward
- Grassroots Integration: Include daily sports periods in schools under the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020; expand Khelo India School Games to every district.
- Health Mainstreaming: Integrate SAPA goals into the National Health Mission (NHM) for NCD prevention through active lifestyle campaigns.
- Private Sector Incentives: Introduce sports infrastructure PPP models with CSR tax deductions and viability gap funding for private academies. E.g. Australia’s “Sport Investment Framework”
- Infrastructure Development: Create district-level sports complexes under the PM YASASVI Scheme and urban planning mandates for open play spaces.
- Sports Industry Boost: Align sports tech, apparel, and analytics startups with Make in India 2.0 to localise production and create employment. E.g. The U.S. “SportTech Innovation Network” links startups with training academies and research institutions for scalable innovation.
Read More> Khelo Bharat Niti 2025
{GS2 – IR} Threat of US Secondary Sanctions on Russian Oil Producers
- Context (IE): The US-imposed sanctions on Russian oil producers Rosneft and Lukoil have raised concerns among Indian refiners about potential secondary sanctions.
- Russia’s crude oil exports to India declined to 1.19 million bpd in late October from 1.95 million bpd.
About Sanctions
- Sanctions are economic restrictions imposed to influence the actions of a state or entity.
- Primary Sanctions: They prohibit US citizens and companies from engaging with sanctioned entities.
- Secondary Sanctions: They penalise non-US actors for dealing with sanctioned entities by restricting access to US markets and financial systems.
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Key Concerns for India
- Supply Disruption: The sanctions threaten India’s crucial energy security since India is the second-largest importer of Russian crude, sourcing over 35% of its oil from Russia.
- Rising Import Costs: Decline in discounted Russian oil, which saved India nearly $13 billion between 2022 and 2024, significantly increases import expenses and fiscal pressure.
- Refinery Adjustments: Refineries optimised for Russian crude blends need to reconfigure their operations, which reduces efficiency and profits.
- Diplomatic Strain: The sanctions complicate India’s strategic balance between the United States and Russia, limiting its energy autonomy and challenging its policy of non-alignment.
{GS2 – IR} India–UAE Cultural Cooperation
- Context (IE): At the 2nd Joint Steering Committee Meeting of the India–UAE Cultural Council, both nations agreed to deepen cultural, educational, and youth cooperation.
India–UAE Cultural Cooperation Highlights
- Cultural Landmark: India House to be built in Abu Dhabi as a hub for art, yoga training, and heritage exhibitions, symbolising the creative bond between the two nations.
- Yoga Recognition: To formalise Yoga as a competitive sport, first in the Gulf via UAE Yoga Committee.
- Archival Linkages: Plans for cooperation between National Archives of India and UAE’s archival institutions to document shared maritime and cultural history.
- Youth, Education, Tourism: Roadmap for student mobility and co-branded tourism events.
About Yoga
- Philosophical Foundation: Rooted in the six orthodox schools (Darshanas) of Hindu philosophy, especially Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras (2nd century BCE), which codified Ashtanga Yoga (Eightfold Path).
- Global Recognition: United Nations declared June 21 as International Day of Yoga (IDY) in 2014.
- Cultural Heritage Status: Recognised by UNESCO (2016) as part of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, acknowledging yoga’s universal value.
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Read More > Importance of UAE for India
{GS3 – IE} Inequalities in Global Health Security **
- Context (DD): The UNAIDS Global Council warned that widening inequalities are making pandemics more severe and prolonged, urging nations to embed equity into health-security planning.
Inequality in Global Health Security
- Unequal Access: Low-income nations received < 20 % of vaccines during COVID-19 (WHO 2023).
- Fiscal Divide: Developed economies spend ≈ 2 % of GDP on preparedness; poorer nations < 1 %.
- Health Infrastructure Gap: Weak primary-care and surveillance systems heighten disease impact.
- Gender Inequity: 70 % of the health workforce is Women, but underpaid and underprotected.
Impact of Global Health Inequality
- Higher Fatality Rates: Countries with high income gaps recorded 2× COVID-19 mortality (Lancet 2023).
- Slower Recovery: Poorer economies lost > 6 % GDP vs 3 % global average (IMF 2023).
- Poverty Surge: 120 million pushed into extreme poverty (World Bank 2023).
- Education Loss: School closures deepened learning inequality and child malnutrition.
- Cycle Effect: Pandemics worsen inequality, which in turn amplifies future pandemic risk.
Way Forward
- Fiscal Reform: Expand the global Pandemic Fund to support low-income countries (World Bank 2022).
- Technology Sharing: Adopt open licensing for vaccines. E.g. WHO mRNA Hub, South Africa.
- Public Health Systems: Strengthen primary care and data surveillance – E.g. India’s IHIP Platform 2023.
- Gender Mainstreaming: Equal pay for frontline workers – E.g. UN Women Health Leadership 2024.
- Global Treaty: Advance the WHO Pandemic Accord for equitable access to countermeasures.
Read More> Global Pandemic Agreement
{GS3 – IE} SEBI Proposes Changes to Mutual Fund Regulations
- Context (BL): The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has proposed changes to mutual fund regulations aimed at reducing costs and improving transparency for investors.
- SEBI functions as India’s capital market regulator under the Ministry of Finance. It was established in 1988 and was granted statutory powers under the SEBI Act, 1992.
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Key Proposals
- Statutory Levies: GST, Securities Transaction Tax (STT), Commodity Transaction Tax (CTT), and stamp duty will be excluded from the Total Expense Ratio (TER); they will be charged separately.
- Exit-Load Charge: The additional five bps charge on schemes introduced in 2012 that levies an exit load will be removed.
- Revised TER Slabs: A slight five basis points increase in the base TER slabs for initial assets of active schemes to offset revenue loss.
- Performance-Based Fees: SEBI is considering a voluntary framework that allows AMCs to charge fees based on a scheme’s performance.
- Brokerage Fees: Maximum brokerage fees will be reduced; execution and research costs will be separated to prevent double-charging investors.
About Total Expense Ratio (TER)
- The TER represents the annual cost to manage and operate a mutual fund, expressed as a percentage of its average Assets Under Management (AUM).
- It includes fund management fees, administrative and operational expenses, marketing and distribution costs, and transaction charges like brokerage fees.
- These expenses are charged indirectly to investors as daily deductions from the fund’s assets.
- Use: TER helps investors compare the cost efficiency of funds, with actively managed schemes usually having higher TERs than passive index funds.
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Read More > SEBI Board Approves Ease of Doing Business Measures
{GS3 – IE} Supreme Court Allows Reassessment of AGR Dues *
- Context (FE): The Supreme Court has permitted a complete reassessment of Vodafone Idea’s (Vi) Adjusted Gross Revenue (AGR) dues up to FY 2016–17.
About Adjusted Gross Revenue (AGR)
- AGR is the revenue base used by the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) to determine usage and licensing fees that the GoI charges telecom operators.
- India shifted from a fixed annual license fee to a revenue-sharing model in 1999 to support the struggling telecom sector; operators now pay a percentage of their AGR to the government.
About AGR Dispute
- A legal dispute over the definition of AGR emerged after the 1999 revenue-sharing reforms, with court challenges appearing soon afterwards.
- DoT’s Stance: AGR should include total company revenues, both telecom income (calls, data, SMS) and non-telecom income (interest, asset sales, rent, dividends, etc.).
- Telcos’ Stance: AGR should only include revenues from core telecom services, excluding non-telecom sources of income.
- 2019 Ruling: The Supreme Court upheld DoT’s broader definition, directing firms to pay dues based on total revenues.
- 2025 Ruling: The Supreme Court allowed a review of AGR dues, including interest and penalties, specifically limiting the decision to Vodafone Idea.
Read More > Telecom Industry | Resilient Telecom Infrastructure
{GS3 – Agri} India’s Fortified Rice Kernel Export to Costa Rica
- Context (DDN): Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority (APEDA) facilitated India’s first export of Fortified Rice Kernels (FRK) from Chhattisgarh to Costa Rica.
- Costa Rica is a Central American country bordered by Nicaragua (north), Panama (southeast), Pacific Ocean (west), and the Caribbean Sea (east). Its capital is San José, and the official language is Spanish.
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About Fortified Rice Kernels
- Fortified Rice Kernels (FRK) are reconstructed grain kernels created from rice flour enriched with micronutrients like iron, folic acid, and vitamin B12.
- Process: They are produced through hot extrusion, where rice flour and micronutrients are blended, cooked, and shaped to resemble natural rice grains.
- Purpose: FRK aims to tackle ‘hidden hunger’ and reduce micronutrient deficiencies (e.g., anaemia) in rice-dependent populations.
- Standards: FSSAI mandates fortification with iron, folic acid, and vitamin B12, while zinc, vitamin A, and other B-vitamins remain optional.
- Blending Ratio: FRK is blended with regular rice in a 1:100 ratio.
- Framework: The Food Safety and Standards (Fortification of Foods) Regulations, 2018, govern FRK production, quality, and labelling across India.
{GS3 – Envi} High Seas Treaty
- Context (TH): The High Seas Treaty (Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction: BBNJ) has been ratified by over 60 countries and will be effective in January 2026.
About High Seas Treaty
- It is formally Agreement on Conservation and Sustainable Use of Marine Biological Diversity of Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ Treaty), and is often called the “Paris Agreement for the Ocean.”
- Adopted in 2023, it aims to head off a biodiversity crisis in the open ocean.
- The treaty is the first legally binding international pact focused on protecting marine life in the high seas (areas beyond national jurisdiction).
- India signed the agreement in September 2024.
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Key Provisions of the Treaty
- Marine Genetic Resources (MGRs): Recognise them as the common heritage of humankind, intended to ensure equitable benefit sharing.
- Area-Based Management Tools (ABMTs): These tools enable the creation of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) to conserve ecologically sensitive zones.
- Environmental Impact Assessments (EIAs): Mandatory prior assessment for any activity that may cause transboundary or cumulative ecological damage.
Significant Challenges of the High Seas Treaty
- Principle Ambiguity: Unclear balance between common heritage and freedom of the high seas, creating confusion in implementation.
- Benefit Sharing: No defined mechanism for sharing profits from Marine Genetic Resources, raising biopiracy concerns.
- Power Participation: Major ocean powers (the U.S., China, and Russia) have not ratified the treaty, weakening global enforcement.
- Institutional Overlap: Coordination issues are likely with bodies like the United Nations Convention on Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) & International Seabed Authority (ISA), risking fragmented ocean governance.
{GS3 – S&T} NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar (NISAR) Satellite *
- Context (TH): ISRO Chairman V. Narayanan announced that the NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar (NISAR) satellite will soon be fully operational.
About the NISAR Satellite
- NISAR is the first Earth-observation satellite jointly developed by NASA (U.S.) and ISRO (India).
- It was launched aboard ISRO’s GSLV-F16 from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota.
- Key Feature: It is the world’s first such satellite to utilise a dual-frequency Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) system (L-band and S-band) from a single platform.
- L-Band (NASA): Operates at a lower frequency that can penetrate forest canopies and measure soil moisture, forest biomass, and the motion of land and ice surfaces.
- S-Band Radar (ISRO): Operates at a higher frequency, increasing its sensitivity to smaller vegetation structures, soil moisture changes, crop conditions, and snow cover variations.
- A SAR system is a type of radar that produces detailed, high-resolution images of objects and landscapes on Earth’s surface, even in dark or cloudy conditions.
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- Specifications: The satellite weighs approximately 2,400 kg and has a minimum mission life of 3 years.
- Orbit and Coverage: It will orbit the Earth at an altitude of 747 km in a Sun-synchronous orbit, mapping its land and ice surfaces twice every 12 days.
Other Scheduled ISRO Missions
- Gaganyaan: India’s first uncrewed human spaceflight test is scheduled for January 2026, with crewed missions expected by 2027.
- Bhartiya Antariksh Station: India’s first space station module is scheduled to launch by 2028, with the full five-module lab operational by 2035.
- The Indian space station will be a 52-tonne facility hosting 3-4 crew members for long stays and up to 6 for short missions.
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Read More about NISAR
{Prelims – Geo} Meghalaya’s Umngot River
- Context (IE): The Umngot River in Meghalaya has turned unusually murky this winter, triggering concern among local communities and environmental bodies.
About Umngot River
- It is located in Meghalaya’s West Jaintia Hills near the Bangladesh border and is famous for its crystal-clear waters. Dawki and Shnongpdeng are the main tourism spots.
- For years, the river was considered among the cleanest in Asia. Tourists could clearly see the riverbed from boats, making it a key attraction for boating, kayaking, and eco-tourism.
- Local Khasi communities depend on the river for fishing, drinking water, agriculture, and tourism, which are major sources of income.
- In Oct 2025, the river suddenly turned brown and muddy. Investigations linked this to uncontrolled dumping of soil and debris from hill-cutting for the Shillong–Tamabil (Dawki) road project.
{Prelims – Species} Neurotoxin Found in Cycad Plants
- Context (DDN): Scientists and medical experts at a recent AIIMS Bhubaneswar workshop cautioned against serious health risks from ancient Cycad plants.
- Neurotoxin: Researchers identified BMAA (β–N–methylamino–L–alanine), a potent neurotoxin, in several Cycad species native to Odisha.
About Cycad Plants
- Cycads are ancient dioecious (either male or female) gymnosperm plants that resemble palms or ferns but form a distinct evolutionary group.
- Morphology: They have stout, unbranched trunks with crowns of large, stiff, evergreen leaves.
- Longevity: Cycads exhibit slow growth &remarkable longevity, often surviving for thousands of years.
- Symbiosis: Their coralloid roots host nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria that supply essential nutrients.
- Habitat Range: They thrive in diverse habitats, including rainforests, savannas, and semi-arid regions with well-drained soils.
- Global Spread: Cycads occur in tropical and subtropical regions across all continents, except Europe and Antarctica.
- Indian Range: They are found in Odisha, Assam, Meghalaya, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands.
- Toxic Compounds: All parts of the cycad plant contain toxins like Cycasin, BMAA, and MAM to protect against herbivores.
- Health Risk: BMAA exposure is associated with neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinsonism, motor neuron disease, and dementia.
- Human-Use: Cycads are grown as ornamental plants and valued for their starch-rich seeds, medicinal extracts, and fibrous materials used in traditional handicrafts.
- Cycad gum is traditionally used as an antidote for snake bites and to treat malignant ulcers.
{Prelims – Defence} INS Savitri
- Context (PIB): Indian Naval Ship INS Savitri recently arrived at Port Louis, Mauritius, during a Long-Range Operational Deployment to the South-West Indian Ocean Region.
About INS Savitri
- INS Savitri (P53) is an indigenously built Sukanya-class offshore patrol vessel of the Indian Navy, commissioned on 7 June 1990.
- The ship serves under the Eastern Naval Command, based in Visakhapatnam.
- The INS Savitri undertakes multiple offshore patrol roles, including maritime surveillance, coastal security, search and rescue, and exclusive economic zone (EEZ) monitoring.
- It has participated in several long-range operational deployments, including patrols off the Maldives, Seychelles, and Mauritius, strengthening maritime cooperation.