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Article
20 May 2026
Why in news?
The Supreme Court has dismissed all challenges related to stray dog management and strongly criticised states for remaining passive while citizens face increasing dog attack risks in public spaces.
The Court observed that India’s stray dog crisis has reached alarming levels due to poor implementation of the Animal Birth Control (ABC) framework, introduced in 2001. It noted a serious lack of infrastructure, irregular sterilisation and vaccination drives, and weak institutional mechanisms.
Linking the issue to Article 21, the Court held that the right to life includes the right to move freely in public spaces without fear of attack, stressing that children and elderly citizens cannot be left vulnerable. It also warned authorities that failure to follow court directions and Animal Welfare Board of India (AWBI) guidelines could invite contempt proceedings and disciplinary action.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- What Triggered the Supreme Court’s Intervention?
- Key Arguments in Previous Supreme Court Hearings
- Supreme Court’s Directions on Stray Dog Management
- What the ABC Rules Provide?
What Triggered the Supreme Court’s Intervention?
- The Supreme Court took up the stray dog issue suo motu in July 2025 after reports of a 6-year-old girl in New Delhi dying from a dog bite and suspected rabies infection.
- The Court described the rise in dog attacks and rabies-related deaths as a serious public safety concern.
- Initial Directions by the Court
- The case was first heard by a bench of Justices J.B. Pardiwala and R. Mahadevan, which in August 2025 directed civic authorities in Delhi-NCR to:
- Remove stray dogs from public spaces
- Shift them to shelters
- Avoid releasing them back onto the streets
- The Court emphasised that citizens should be able to move freely without fear of dog attacks.
- The order triggered protests from animal welfare organisations and dog feeders, who argued that the directions violated the ABC Rules, 2023. Under these rules:
- Stray dogs must be sterilised and vaccinated
- They should then be released back into the same area from where they were picked up
- Following petitions seeking recall of the order, the matter was referred to a three-judge bench led by Justice Vikram Nath.
- The case was first heard by a bench of Justices J.B. Pardiwala and R. Mahadevan, which in August 2025 directed civic authorities in Delhi-NCR to:
- Modified Position of the Court
- The Supreme Court later softened its earlier stance and:
- Restored the existing sterilisation-and-release policy under the ABC Rules
- Allowed authorities to keep rabid or aggressive dogs in shelters
- Prohibited feeding stray dogs in public places outside designated feeding zones
- The Supreme Court later softened its earlier stance and:
Key Arguments in Previous Supreme Court Hearings
- Resident welfare groups and families of dog bite victims argued that authorities had failed to control the rising stray dog menace.
- Animal welfare organisations opposed large-scale removal of stray dogs, arguing that such a strategy would be ineffective and unsustainable.
- Expansion of the Court’s Review and Interim Direction
- Over time, the hearings expanded beyond immediate dog attack incidents into a broader review of how states and municipal bodies were implementing sterilisation, vaccination, and shelter management policies.
- In November 2025, the Supreme Court issued an interim order directing:
- States and the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) to remove stray animals from highways
- Removal of stray animals from schools, hospitals, and other institutional premises
- Fencing of such sensitive premises to improve public safety
Supreme Court’s Directions on Stray Dog Management
- The Supreme Court directed every district in India to establish at least one fully functional ABC centre.
- States and Union Territories have been asked to further expand this infrastructure based on population density and local needs.
- The Court ordered authorities to:
- Ensure adequate availability of anti-rabies medicines
- Strengthen veterinary services
- Improve vaccination infrastructure for effective stray animal management
- The Court directed the NHAI and state governments to develop a coordinated mechanism for handling stray animals on highways and expressways.
- This should include: Transport vehicles for animal relocation; Shelter facilities; Coordination with animal welfare organisations.
- Action Against Dangerous Animals
- The Court clarified that authorities may take legally permitted action, including euthanasia, in cases involving:
- Rabid dogs
- Incurably ill animals
- Demonstrably dangerous or aggressive dogs posing a threat to human life
- Such measures must strictly comply with the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act and the ABC Rules.
- To ensure implementation, the Supreme Court directed all High Courts to initiate suo motu continuing proceedings for regular monitoring of compliance with these directions.
- The Court clarified that authorities may take legally permitted action, including euthanasia, in cases involving:
What the ABC Rules Provide?
- The Animal Birth Control (ABC) Rules, 2023, framed under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960, identify sterilisation and anti-rabies vaccination as the primary methods for controlling stray dog populations.
- The Rules require that stray dogs, after sterilisation and vaccination, be released back into the same area from where they were picked up, based on the understanding that stray dogs are territorial animals.
- The ABC Rules prohibit: Indiscriminate killing of stray dogs; Arbitrary relocation of stray dogs.
- Euthanasia is permitted only in specific cases involving: Rabid dogs; Terminally ill animals; Fatally injured animals.
- Constitutional Dimensions of the Debate
- Animal Welfare Perspective - Animal welfare groups relied on Article 51A(g) of the Constitution, which places a fundamental duty on citizens to show compassion towards living creatures.
- Public Safety Perspective - Unchecked stray dog populations violate citizens’ rights under: Article 19 (Right to move freely) and Article 21 (Right to life and personal safety).
Article
20 May 2026
Context:
- The recent high-level visits between India and South Korea highlight the growing strategic importance of their bilateral partnership.
- What started as limited defence cooperation has expanded into a broader partnership covering defence manufacturing, technology transfer, and military modernisation.
- A key symbol of this collaboration is the K9 Vajra-T artillery programme, developed under the Make in India initiative, which has emerged as the flagship project and opened the door for deeper defence cooperation between the two countries.
- This article highlights the rapid transformation of India–South Korea defence relations from limited defence engagement into a broader strategic partnership encompassing defence manufacturing, technology transfer, military modernisation, and Indo-Pacific security cooperation.
Expanding India–South Korea Defence Cooperation
- India–South Korea defence ties are expanding rapidly, with several new strategic projects under discussion.
- Submarine Cooperation
- Submarine collaboration has become a major focus area, leveraging South Korea’s strengths in: Conventional submarines; Lithium-ion battery systems; Air-independent propulsion (AIP) technologies.
- Companies such as Hanwha Ocean are central to this potential partnership.
- Aerospace Collaboration
- South Korea’s growing aerospace capabilities, including the KF-21 fighter programme and FA-50 light combat aircraft, have opened possibilities for cooperation in: Fighter aircraft technologies; Engines; Avionics etc.
- Maritime and Naval Cooperation
- As a global shipbuilding leader, South Korea can support India’s maritime ambitions in the Indo-Pacific through collaboration in: Destroyers; Logistics vessels; Submarine support systems; Smart shipyards.
- Expanding Defence Industrial Partnerships
- Discussions are progressing in several defence sectors, including: Light tanks; Utility helicopters; Future-ready combat vehicles; Military lithium batteries, etc.
- Defence firms from both countries are exploring joint ventures and industrial partnerships.
- The partnership is moving beyond conventional arms collaboration toward defence innovation.
- The proposed Korea-India Defence Accelerator (KIND-X) reflects this forward-looking approach.
- Strategic and Military Engagement
- Military exchanges and strategic cooperation are also deepening through:
- Naval exercises
- Coast guard cooperation
- Defence dialogues
- Interoperability-building measures
- Military exchanges and strategic cooperation are also deepening through:
- Mutual Strategic Benefits
- For India: Access to advanced technology, manufacturing expertise, and defence modernisation support
- For South Korea: Access to India’s large market, strategic location, and long-term industrial opportunities
- Beyond Defence Industry
- While defence industrial cooperation reflects growing strategic maturity, limiting the partnership only to defence production would be a strategic mistake, given the broader potential of bilateral ties.
India–South Korea Defence Ties in a Changing Indo-Pacific
- The rapidly changing Indo-Pacific geopolitical environment requires India and South Korea to expand defence cooperation beyond industrial collaboration into a broader strategic partnership focused on regional stability, shared security, and resilience.
- The next phase of engagement should involve a formal, forward-looking defence framework that addresses emerging security challenges across the wider Indo-Pacific.
- This partnership must move beyond its current defence-manufacturing emphasis and evolve into a multidimensional strategic relationship grounded in common security interests.
Security Challenges Around the Korean Peninsula
- North Korean Threat - North Korea’s expanding missile and nuclear capabilities continue to pose a major security threat to South Korea.
- Russia–North Korea Cooperation - Growing military cooperation between Russia and North Korea is reshaping the security architecture of Northeast Asia, adding to regional uncertainty.
- China’s Strategic Assertiveness - China’s increasing naval presence around the Korean Peninsula has created new strategic concerns for South Korea. Its expanding influence in the South China Sea is also significant, as a large share of South Korea’s energy imports and maritime trade passes through these waters.
South Korea’s Internal Strategic Challenges
- Demographic Decline - South Korea’s falling population and shrinking pool of military recruits are weakening the long-term sustainability of its conventional defence capabilities.
- Strategic Vulnerability - These internal pressures, combined with a rapidly evolving external threat environment, create a complex security situation that demands deeper long-term strategic cooperation with trusted partners like India.
Need for India–South Korea Strategic Convergence
- India’s strategic planners and defence thinkers need to closely monitor the changing geopolitical situation in South Korea, as ignoring these shifts could affect both South Korea’s security and India’s wider Indo-Pacific interests.
- If India aims to significantly deepen defence-industrial cooperation with South Korea, it must recognise that such cooperation depends on South Korea’s strategic stability, security, and resilience.
- Strengthening Seoul’s ability to manage emerging security challenges should therefore become an important component of the bilateral partnership.
- The Indian Defence Minister’s visit to Seoul should mark the beginning of a new phase in India–South Korea relations, moving beyond defence manufacturing cooperation toward a broader strategic partnership based on shared security interests and Indo-Pacific stability.
Article
20 May 2026
Context:
India’s local bodies continue to suffer from poor performance and limited effectiveness. Quoting Jawaharlal Nehru’s 1925 criticism of municipal governance, analysts suggest that little has changed over time.
They highlight that the third tier of government—rural and urban local bodies—remains largely ignored in debates on Indian federalism, which focus mainly on the Centre and states.
They describe local governments as the “stepchild” of Indian federalism, with state governments acting as controlling intermediaries that restrict their autonomy and functioning.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Dependence of Local Governments on States
- Land Monetisation and the Weakness of Local Governments
- The Way Forward for Empowering Local Governments
Dependence of Local Governments on States
- Weak Administrative Capacity - India’s urban local bodies (ULBs) suffer from severe neglect in terms of manpower and institutional capacity.
- Low Share of Government Employees - In countries such as the United States and China, nearly two-thirds of government employees work under local governments, enabling them to deliver most public services directly.
- In contrast, in India, just over 10% of government employees work for local governments, significantly weakening their service delivery capacity.
- Poor Financial Autonomy - Financial independence is essential for effective governance, but India’s urban local bodies remain heavily constrained.
- Stagnant Revenue Generation
- While the Centre and states have significantly increased their self-generated revenues over the past six decades:
- Centre: around 2 times increase
- States: around 2.5 times increase
- The urban third tier’s own tax revenue has stagnated at just 0.3% of GDP.
- Due to weak revenue generation, expenditure by local governments remains extremely low.
- ULB expenditure is less than 1% of GDP
- State governments spend roughly 15 times more
- The Centre spends nearly 20 times more
- While the Centre and states have significantly increased their self-generated revenues over the past six decades:
- Dependence on State Governments
- Because local bodies generate very little of their own revenue, even their limited spending depends heavily on external transfers, primarily from state governments.
- This dependence undermines their autonomy, decision-making power, and governance effectiveness.
- Missed Opportunity Despite Constitutional Status
- This continued weakness is particularly striking given:
- Rapid urbanisation in India
- The 73rd and 74th Constitutional Amendments (1993), which granted constitutional status to local governments with the aim of strengthening decentralised governance.
- This continued weakness is particularly striking given:
Land Monetisation and the Weakness of Local Governments
- The weaknesses of India’s local governments are linked to a deeper structural issue: the inability to effectively monetise land, despite rapid economic growth increasing land and property values.
- In land-scarce economies, rising land values can become a major source of public revenue.
- India vs China: A Sharp Contrast
- China successfully converted rising land values into public revenue, largely through land sales and taxation.
- Land revenue rose from less than 1% of GDP to over 10% at its peak
- Per urban resident, China’s land revenue was:
- 15 times higher than India’s in 1999
- 225 times higher at its 2020 peak
- This significantly expanded China’s fiscal capacity for urban development.
- India’s land-related revenues remained stagnant at around 1% of GDP, despite similar economic growth and rising urban land values.
- China successfully converted rising land values into public revenue, largely through land sales and taxation.
- Reasons for India’s Failure
- Legacy of Socialist Policies - Socialist-era laws such as the Urban Land Ceiling Act, 1976 fragmented land ownership without meaningfully enabling public land acquisition or monetisation.
- Failure to Monetise Public Land - Large tracts of land held by: Public sector enterprises; Ports; Defence establishments; State-managed temples. It remained vacant, encroached upon, or underutilised, without being monetised.
- Distorted Land Markets and Black Money - Restrictive land use regulations, building by-laws, and flawed policies created severe distortions in land and rental markets. This contributed to - Rent-seeking; Informal transactions; Massive generation of black money, especially in the real estate sector.
- Low-Equilibrium Trap for Urban Local Bodies
- Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) are stuck in a weak political economy cycle:
- Higher tiers (Centre and states) control fiscal devolution
- Local bodies lack independent revenue sources
- They are reluctant or unable to tax local citizens
- This creates chronic resource shortages and dependency
- Administrative Dependence on States
- The problem is worsened by weak institutional autonomy.
- City governments often lack authority over:
- Appointment of municipal commissioners
- Senior administrative staff
- Promotions, transfers, and disciplinary control
- Even when functions are formally transferred to local bodies, the personnel remain accountable to state governments, severely limiting local autonomy and governance effectiveness.
- Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) are stuck in a weak political economy cycle:
The Way Forward for Empowering Local Governments
- Beyond competitive federalism between Centre and states, competition among cities and local governments (competitive sub-federalism) could become a major driver of reform, efficiency, and innovation.
- Growing urban populations may strengthen local governance politically.
- The upcoming Census and intra-state delimitation could increase the electoral weight of urban voters, creating stronger incentives for better urban governance.
Conclusion
Debates on Indian federalism must move beyond Centre-state relations to include the third tier of governance.
Empowering cities with greater autonomy, accountability, and resources is essential for India’s future growth, innovation, and livability—as reflected in chronic urban crises such as Delhi’s pollution and Bengaluru’s congestion.
Article
20 May 2026
Why in the News?
- Escalating geopolitical tensions in West Asia have renewed attention on critical maritime chokepoints such as the Strait of Hormuz, Bab-el-Mandeb, and the Malacca Strait.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Maritime Chokepoints (Strait of Hormuz, Bab-el-Mandeb, Malacca Strait)
- News Summary (Significance of the Chokepoints)
Strategic Maritime Chokepoints in the Indian Ocean
- Maritime chokepoints are narrow sea routes through which a substantial volume of global trade and energy supplies pass.
- Any disruption in these routes can significantly affect global shipping, oil prices, supply chains, and energy security.
- The Indian Ocean region hosts some of the world’s most important chokepoints, particularly for oil and container trade.
Strait of Hormuz
- The Strait of Hormuz lies between Iran and Oman and connects the Persian Gulf with the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea.
- It is one of the most critical energy chokepoints in the world because:
- Around 20-25% of the global oil trade passes through it.
- Major Gulf oil exporters such as Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait, UAE, and Qatar depend on this route.
- India, China, Japan, and European countries rely heavily on oil shipments passing through the strait.
- Any blockade or military disruption in the Strait of Hormuz can trigger sharp increases in global crude oil prices and disrupt international trade.
Bab-el-Mandeb Strait
- The Bab-el-Mandeb Strait lies between Yemen on the Arabian Peninsula and Djibouti/Eritrea in Africa. It connects the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden, ultimately linking maritime traffic to the Suez Canal.
- Its importance lies in the fact that:
- It serves as a key route for Europe-Asia trade.
- Nearly 10% of the global seaborne oil trade passes through this route.
- It is essential for container shipping between Asia and Europe.
- Recent attacks by Houthi rebels in the Red Sea region have increased security concerns and disrupted shipping routes, forcing vessels to take longer alternate routes.
Malacca Strait
- The Malacca Strait, located between Malaysia, Singapore, and Indonesia, connects the Indian Ocean with the Pacific Ocean.
- It is one of the busiest shipping routes globally because:
- Nearly one-fourth of global trade passes through it.
- Around 80% of China’s oil imports transit through this route.
- It is vital for energy imports of India, China, Japan, and South Korea.
- Due to its strategic significance, the Malacca Strait is often viewed as a potential geopolitical vulnerability, especially in the context of Indo-Pacific competition.
News Summary
- While global attention remains focused on the Strait of Hormuz, two additional chokepoints in the Indian Ocean, Bab-el-Mandeb and the Malacca Strait, are equally critical for global commerce and energy movement.
- Concerns Over Strait of Hormuz
- Amid rising tensions between Iran and Israel/US, concerns have emerged regarding possible disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz.
- The Strait handles nearly one-fifth of global oil supply, making it indispensable for global energy markets. Even temporary disruptions can raise freight costs, fuel inflation, and affect energy-importing countries like India.
Red Sea Crisis and Bab-el-Mandeb Risks
- Shipping through the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait has already faced disruptions due to attacks by Houthi rebels in the Red Sea region. As a result:
- Several shipping companies diverted vessels around the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa.
- Shipping time increased significantly.
- Freight and insurance costs rose sharply.
- This demonstrates how instability in one chokepoint can disrupt global supply chains.
Limited Alternatives to Chokepoints
- Experts underline that there are few practical alternatives to these narrow maritime passages. For example:
- Ships bypassing Bab-el-Mandeb through the Cape of Good Hope face higher transport costs and delays.
- Alternative pipelines to bypass the Strait of Hormuz have limited capacity.
- Thus, uninterrupted functioning of these chokepoints remains essential for global economic stability.
Article
20 May 2026
Context:
- India and Italy are witnessing a major transformation in bilateral relations, with both countries elevating their engagement into a Special Strategic Partnership.
- Against the backdrop of geopolitical flux, technological disruption, energy transition, and supply chain restructuring, the partnership reflects a convergence of democratic values, economic priorities, and strategic interests.
A Partnership Shaped by a Changing Global Order:
- The prosperity and security in the 21st century will increasingly depend upon innovation, resilient supply chains, technological leadership, and sustainable development.
- India and Italy view each other as reliable democratic partners capable of contributing to a more stable and multipolar world order amid the contemporary international system of geopolitical rivalries.
Expanding Economic Cooperation:
- A key pillar of the partnership is economic integration driven by complementarities between:
- Italy’s industrial and manufacturing expertise, and
- India’s scale, skilled workforce, digital ecosystem, and entrepreneurial dynamism.
- Italy is recognised globally for high-quality manufacturing, design, machinery, and engineering capabilities under the globally respected “Made in Italy” brand.
- India, on the other hand, offers rapid economic growth, expanding domestic market, strong start-up ecosystem, competitive engineering talent, more than 100 unicorns and nearly 200,000 start-ups.
- The partnership is not a simple trade relationship, but a process of co-creation of value, where the industrial strengths of both nations amplify each other.
EU–India Free Trade Agreement (FTA):
- The proposed European Union (EU)–India FTA is expected to significantly deepen trade and investment flows.
- Italy and India aim to surpass the target of €20 billion bilateral trade by 2029. Priority sectors include -
- Defence and aerospace,
- Clean technologies,
- Machinery and automotive components,
- Chemicals and pharmaceuticals,
- Textiles,
- Agri-food sector,
- Tourism and hospitality.
- The growing presence of over 1,000 Indian and Italian companies in each other’s markets reflects increasing supply chain integration and mutual confidence.
Technology and Innovation at the Core:
- Technological transformation: It is the defining feature of future global politics and economics. India and Italy seek cooperation in strategic and emerging technologies such as:
- AI and quantum computing,
- Advanced manufacturing,
- Critical minerals,
- Digital infrastructure,
- Supercomputing
- Synergy in innovation ecosystems:
- India’s strength lies in digital public infrastructure (DPI), large-scale digital adoption, skilled IT workforce, and innovation-driven entrepreneurship.
- Italy contributes advanced industrial capabilities, research excellence, precision manufacturing, and ethical technological frameworks.
- Collaboration between universities, research institutions, and innovation centres is expected to further institutionalise this technological partnership.
Advocates of Ethical and Inclusive AI Governance:
- India and Italy advocate a human-centred approach to AI, combining -
- India’s vision of MANAV (technology centred on human welfare), and
- Italy’s concept of “algor-ethics”, rooted in European humanist traditions.
- The partnership seeks to ensure that AI -
- Promotes social empowerment,
- Protects human dignity,
- Does not undermine democratic institutions,
- Avoids manipulation of public opinion,
- Bridges digital divides instead of deepening inequalities.
- This approach assumes special relevance for -
- The Global South, where accessible and multilingual digital technologies can accelerate inclusive development.
- Italy’s leadership during the G7 Presidency, and the outcomes of the AI Impact Summit 2026 held in New Delhi.
Cooperation in High-Technology Strategic Sectors:
- Space:
- India’s achievements in satellite technology, space exploration, and cost-effective space missions, complement Italy’s strengths in aerospace engineering, precision technologies, etc.
- This opens opportunities for joint missions, satellite applications, and next-generation aerospace technologies.
- Security and defence cooperation:
- Both nations recognise that economic prosperity depends on security and stability.
- Therefore, cooperation is increasing in defence manufacturing, maritime security, cybersecurity, counter-terrorism, and combating organised crime.
- The focus on securing critical maritime routes is especially important in the context of growing geopolitical contestation in the Indo-Pacific and adjoining regions.
Energy Transition and Green Partnership - A Strategic Pillar:
- India and Italy are collaborating in renewable energy, green hydrogen, smart grids, sustainable infrastructure, and energy diversification.
- India’s ambition to emerge as a global hub for green hydrogen exports aligns with Italy’s expertise in renewable technologies and Europe’s energy requirements.
- This highlights cooperation under major India-led global initiatives such as International Solar Alliance, CDRI and Global Biofuels Alliance.
- These initiatives demonstrate India’s growing role in global climate governance and sustainable development diplomacy.
“Indo-Mediterranean” Geopolitical Space:
- The Indo-Pacific regions are no longer separate geopolitical theatres but interconnected corridors of trade, technology, energy, data flows, and supply chains.
- India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC): The proposed corridor is aimed at:
- Enhancing transport connectivity,
- Building resilient supply chains,
- Strengthening digital and energy networks,
- Promoting economic integration across continents.
- For India, IMEC serves as both a strategic alternative to existing connectivity architectures, and a platform to deepen engagement with Europe and West Asia. Italy’s participation adds strategic depth to this initiative.
Civilisational Values as the Foundation of Partnership:
- India’s philosophical concepts such as Dharma (responsibility and ethical conduct), and Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam (“the world is one family”), and Italy’s renaissance-inspired humanist traditions emphasise:
- Human dignity,
- Cultural dialogue,
- Social harmony.
- Thus, the India–Italy partnership is envisioned not merely as a transactional arrangement, but as a people-centric and values-based relationship.
Conclusion:
- If nurtured with sustained political commitment, institutional cooperation, and people-to-people engagement, this partnership can become a model of constructive collaboration between Europe and the Indo-Pacific.
- This combines economic ambition with ethical responsibility and strategic vision with human-centred development.
Article
20 May 2026
Context
- India’s transition toward electric vehicles (EVs) has gained momentum due to rising crude oil prices and recurring geopolitical tensions in the Strait of Hormuz, which repeatedly expose the country’s dependence on imported fuel.
- Electric two-wheelers are becoming increasingly popular among urban commuters because of their affordability, low maintenance costs, and immediate fuel savings.
- However, the larger challenge of electrification lies not in scooters or passenger vehicles, but in building a powerful and reliable electricity grid capable of supporting large-scale transport demand, especially from freight transportation.
The Arithmetic of a Second Power System
- Rising Electricity Demand
- India currently has nearly 420 million registered vehicles. Full electrification of this fleet would require an additional 900–1,100 TWh of electricity every year.
- Even if only half the fleet becomes electric by 2047, around 500 TWh of extra electricity generation would still be necessary, equivalent to nearly one-third of India’s present annual power production.
- Electrifying transport therefore means constructing a second large-scale power system alongside the existing one.
- Limited Grid Impact of Two-Wheelers
- Electric scooters and motorcycles dominate public attention because they are highly visible and politically attractive.
- Subsidies and increasing petrol prices have accelerated their adoption.
- Yet their actual burden on the grid remains relatively small. Even if all 309 million two-wheelers were electrified, they would require only 55–75 TWh annually, less than 7% of total projected EV electricity demand.
- Their visibility is therefore much greater than their actual impact on electricity consumption.
The Real Challenge: Freight Transport
- India has around 6.26 million heavy goods vehicles (HGVs), each operating with high energy intensity and covering nearly 60,000 km annually.
- Electrifying these vehicles alone would require approximately 450–565 TWh of electricity every year.
- When medium goods vehicles (MGVs) are included, total freight demand rises to nearly 500–600 TWh.
- Thus, a very small percentage of vehicles accounts for the majority of future EV-related electricity demand.
- Electrifying India’s roads therefore largely means electrifying its supply chains, logistics systems, and industrial transportation networks.
What Happens at Seven in the Evening?
- The Problem of Peak Demand
- If millions of EVs begin charging simultaneously during evening hours, the grid could experience severe stress, leading to power shortages, tariff increases, and supply instability.
- Across several states, operators seeking high-tension charging connections already face delays because financially stressed discoms lack the infrastructure and funding required for large-scale upgrades.
- Smart Charging Solutions
- Time-of-use pricing, workplace charging during daytime solar hours, battery-swapping networks, and large-scale energy storage systems can distribute electricity demand more efficiently throughout the day.
- However, India still lacks a national standard ensuring that EV chargers respond intelligently to grid conditions.
- Chargers installed today without smart-charging capability may become expensive retrofit liabilities in the future.
What the Grid Actually Needs?
- Need for Reliable and Clean Energy
- Transport electrification requires both massive additional electricity generation and uninterrupted reliability.
- Freight depots, highways, and urban charging hubs need continuous power throughout the day and night.
- Different energy sources offer different advantages. Solar power and wind energy provide scalable and low-cost clean electricity but depend heavily on weather conditions and operate at lower capacity factors.
- Nuclear power offers stable, low-carbon baseload energy, although it requires high investment and long construction periods.
- Role of Energy Storage and Diversification
- Pumped hydro, battery storage, and limited use of natural gas can help balance fluctuations between electricity generation and demand.
- A diversified and cleaner energy mix is therefore essential for sustaining EV growth.
- Expanding coal dependence would weaken the environmental benefits of electrification.
- Replacing imported oil with imported coal would merely shift India’s energy dependence while continuing high carbon emissions.
Steps to Take
- Strengthening Policy and Infrastructure
- Several policy measures are essential for a sustainable EV transition. EV demand projections must become central to national capacity planning.
- Smart-charging standards should be mandatory for all new charging infrastructure.
- Important freight corridors such as the Golden Quadrilateral and Dedicated Freight Corridors require coordinated power planning before electric trucking expands commercially.
- Institutional Coordination and Financial Reforms
- Strong coordination between ministries responsible for transport, power, and finance is necessary for effective implementation.
- Financial reforms under the Revamped Distribution Sector Scheme (RDSS) can strengthen discoms and improve last-mile electricity delivery.
Conclusion
- India’s EV transition is inevitable, but its long-term success depends on whether the country can build a resilient, clean, and technologically advanced power system.
- Electric scooters may symbolize the beginning of change, but the future of sustainable mobility will ultimately depend on the strength of the grid powering India’s roads, industries, and freight networks.
- Electrification is therefore not merely a transportation reform; it is a complete transformation of India’s energy and infrastructure systems.
Current Affairs
May 19, 2026
About Barda Wildlife Sanctuary:
- It is located in the Barda Hills of Gujarat, near the coastal city of Porbandar.
- Known locally as Jam Barda, it was once a private hunting ground for the royal families of Jamnagar and Porbandar.
- It is surrounded by agricultural fields, wastelands, and forest, and the terrain of Barda is almost hilly.
- Rivers: There are two waterways, the Bileshvary River and the Joghri River, and two dams, Khambala and Fodara.
- Tribes: Ethnic races such as Maldharis, Bharvads, Rabaris, and Gadhvis live in this region.
- The sanctuary is a significant biodiversity hotspot and a key area for the conservation of Asiatic Lions.
- To develop Barda as the second home for the Asiatic lion, the state government implemented the ‘Gir-Barda Project’ in 1979.
- It is the first fully protected satellite lion habitat in Gujarat.
- Flora:
- About 650 plant and tree species constitute the flora of the park, and that includes trees and plants like Babul, Bamboo, Amli, Jamun, Dhundhlo, Ber, Gorad, Rayan, Dhav, etc.
- Medicinal plants of great use grow profusely within the forested belt of the sanctuary.
- Fauna:
- It shelters species like leopards, wolves, sambar deer, chinkara, hyenas, and blue bulls (nilgai).
- The sanctuary is also a paradise for bird watchers, with numerous resident and migratory birds such as eagles, owls, crested serpent eagles, and partridges found here.
Current Affairs
May 19, 2026
About Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC):
- It is an emergency declaration formally announced by the World Health Organization (WHO) in response to a crisis of international proportions that can affect people’s health.
- It is the WHO’s highest level of global health alert.
- Such a declaration may require immediate action at a global level against the international spread of disease.
- A PHEIC is subject to the International Health Regulations (IHR), which require those states involved to promptly respond to the crisis at hand.
- PHEICs are decided upon by a governing body of international experts known as the IHR Emergency Committee, a group formed in the aftermath of the 2002–2004 SARS outbreak.
- The declaration is reviewed on a tri-monthly basis and renewed as needed.
- However, certain disease outbreaks can be declared a PHEIC without the approval of the IHR.
- Alongside infectious disease, a PHEIC can also be declared in response to outbreaks of public health hazards such as chemical agents or radioactive materials.
Key Facts about International Health Regulations (IHR):
- The IHR was adopted by the Health Assembly (decision-making body of WHO) in 1969 in an effort to prevent the spread of disease across national borders.
- Following the chaotic global outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) that lasted between 2002 and 2004, revisions were made to the IHR to account for such global emergencies.
- A new IHR was adopted at the 58th World Health Assembly in May 2005.
- The IHR 2005 was an international agreement among 196 countries committed to upholding global health security.
- WHO was deemed the coordinating body of this agreement.