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08 Jul 2026

Hyderabad's Char Kaman: Restoration and Historical Significance

Why in news?

The Telangana government has announced that the Char Kaman — four ornamental gateways near Hyderabad's Charminar — will soon undergo restoration.

The project has received a major boost, with administrative sanction granted to invite tenders and appoint a consultant for the work.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • What Is the Char Kaman?
  • How the Present Names Came About?
  • Historical Role of the Gateways
  • What Does the Restoration Plan Involve?

What Is the Char Kaman?

  • While Hyderabad's Charminar is widely known as a symbol of the Qutb Shahi dynasty's architectural legacy, fewer people are aware of the four ornamental gateways surrounding it, collectively called the Char Kaman.
  • These arches once marked the entrances to the old city of Hyderabad.
  • Basically, the Char Kaman public square enclosed by four large archways was built as a garden at the entry to the Qutb Shahi Palace complex to the north of the Charminar area with Dad Mahal inside the enclosure.
  • The Char-Su-Ka-Houz (tank of four directions) or Gulzar Houz was the freshwater fountain in the centre of this square.
  • The four Kamans are namely Kali Kaman to the east, Sher-e-Batil ki Kaman to the west, Machili Kaman to the north and Charminar Kaman to the south of Gulzar Houz.
  • There are three floors on each end of the arch, originally constructed as chambers for royal guards.
  • Historical Background
    • The Charminar was built between 1589 and 1591 by Muhammad Quli Qutb Shah, the fifth ruler of the Qutb Shahi dynasty.
    • According to Hyderabad historian Mohammed Safiullah, the Char Kaman were likely constructed a few years later, around 1594.
    • Historian Syed Ali Asghar Bilgrami, in his 1927 book Landmarks of Deccan, notes that after completing the Charminar, Shah commissioned these four surrounding arches.
  • Original Names and Their Meanings
    • The four gateways originally had different names from what they're known by today:
      • West ArchDaulat Khanae Ali: Meant "the gate of the royal residence."
      • East ArchNaqqar Khana: Meant "gate of the palace where drums are beaten."
      • The central area enclosed by all four arches was called Jilau Khana, or the royal vestibule.

How the Present Names Came About?

  • North Arch — Machli Kaman (Fish Arch): This arch was tall enough for "a huge elephant with a canopied litter" to pass through. It got its name because a large bamboo-and-paper fish, resembling a miniature aeroplane, was suspended at its centre every lunar new year.
  • South Arch — Charminar Kaman
  • East Arch — Kali Kaman (or Kaman of Shambhoo Pershad): Meaning the "black arch."
  • West Arch — Kaman Sher Dil (or Sihr Batil): Meaning "gateway for the lion-hearted" or "magic breaker."
  • These names continue to be used in Hyderabad today. Historians also note that the Qutb Shahi palaces were originally located near the western arch, though these structures have since been lost to time.

Historical Role of the Gateways

  • During the Qutb Shahi period, the Char Kaman witnessed heavy traffic and served an important administrative function.
  • Nearby outhouses served as sitting areas for nobles and officials. Each morning, noblemen would arrive with their retinue and attendants.
  • Upon reaching the royal vestibule at the centre of the four arches, they would leave their attendants behind and proceed alone for an audience with the king.

What Does the Restoration Plan Involve?

  • The restoration work will primarily focus on:
    • Structural repairs
    • Conservation of heritage features
  • The broader goal is to improve the overall physical condition of the monuments while carefully preserving their historical character.
  • Heritage conservationists have long advocated for this restoration, citing damage caused over the years by growing urbanisation and the resulting pollution in the area.
History & Culture

Article
08 Jul 2026

Beyond Three Cs, The New Lexicon of India-Australia Ties

Context:

  • In May 2023, when the India-Australia Comprehensive Strategic Partnership was nearly three years old, PM Modi described the relationship as having entered "T-20 mode."
  • He noted that the ties had moved beyond the traditional three Cs — Commonwealth, Cricket, and Curry — and even beyond the later three Ds — Democracy, Diaspora, and Dosti.
  • As PM Modi undertakes his third visit to Australia, the relationship has expanded into new areas, adding fresh dimensions like Development, Defence, Energy, and Education to this evolving partnership.

Growing Trade and Investment Ties

  • Bilateral economic cooperation has delivered strong results for both nations. Under the Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement (ECTA), all Indian exports to Australia now enjoy duty-free access.
  • This benefits key Indian sectors like textiles, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, engineering goods, and gems and jewellery.
  • In return, Australia gets preferential access to 90% of its trade value with India, helping it export critical minerals, resources, wool, avocados, and macadamia to India.
  • Both countries now share an ambitious target: raising bilateral trade from $33 billion in 2025 to $100 billion by 2030.
  • On the investment front, cumulative two-way investment is approaching $50 billion.
    • Australia's AirTrunk has announced plans to invest $30 billion by 2030 in India's digital infrastructure and AI-ready data centres.
    • At the same time, India is investing in Australia too — notably, Perdaman Chemicals & Fertilizers, founded by an Indian entrepreneur, is building Australia's largest urea plant in Western Australia with a $4.5 billion investment.
    • Interestingly, over 98% of this plant's modules are being manufactured in India itself, creating substantial employment back home.

Defence: The Fastest-Growing Pillar

  • Defence cooperation is currently the fastest-growing area of this partnership. Australia's Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Richard Marles chose India for his first foreign visit in both his terms under the Albanese government — a clear signal of India's importance as a reliable partner.
  • Last year, Marles hosted Indian Defence Minister Rajnath Singh in Australia — the first visit by an Indian Defence Minister to Australia in 12 years.
  • Regular exchanges between military leadership, along with participation in joint military exercises like AUSINDEX, Malabar, and Talisman Sabre, are strengthening operational coordination, particularly in the maritime domain.
  • New opportunities are also emerging in defence industry cooperation, covering cyber security, AI, drones, and shipbuilding.

The Energy Partnership

  • Beyond trade and defence, energy cooperation is deepening too.
  • The India-Australia Renewable Energy Partnership operates through a dedicated Solar Taskforce and a Green Hydrogen Task Force, both guided at the ministerial level.
  • India's ambitious renewable energy targets offer huge potential for collaboration — spanning critical minerals, manufacturing, research, and solar rooftop deployment.
  • Notably, arrangements for future Australian uranium exports to India may be finalised soon.
  • This could significantly boost India's civil nuclear programme, while also benefiting Australia's uranium export industry.

Education and Skills Cooperation

  • The education and skills partnership between the two countries is building a strong foundation for future-ready youth and innovators.
  • Currently, over one lakh Indian students are enrolled in Australian institutions. At the same time, Australian universities are setting up campuses in India, making world-class education more accessible and affordable at home.
  • Joint research collaboration in priority areas like advanced computing, energy, healthcare, space, and defence is helping create valuable intellectual assets and professional networks.
  • Special visa programmes have also opened new employment pathways for skilled Indian youth in Australia.
  • Australia's global expertise in vocational training is being tapped in India too, particularly in solar rooftop installation and mining skills, in states like Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh, and Odisha — helping address Australia's workforce shortages while boosting skill development in India.

Sport as a New Frontier

  • Sport has emerged as a new area of cooperation.
  • Both countries can collaborate on sports education, training, medicine, equipment, and infrastructure, especially with major upcoming events like the 2030 Commonwealth Games and the 2032 Brisbane Olympics on the horizon.
  • With the Indian diaspora in Australia now exceeding ten lakh people — rightly called a "living bridge" between the two nations — traditional Indian sports like kabaddi and khokho are gaining popularity even beyond the diaspora community.

Building Multilateral Partnerships

  • The strength of this bilateral relationship is increasingly extending into multilateral formats too.
  • India and Australia now cooperate through trilateral partnerships like India-Indonesia-Australia and India-France-Australia.
  • Other notable initiatives include the Australia-Canada-India Technology and Innovation Partnership (launched November 2025) and the India-Japan-Australia Supply Chain Resilience Initiative.
  • A possible new grouping with the United Arab Emirates could also help counter disruptions and dominance in critical areas like rare earths, semiconductors, and emerging technologies.
  • Both countries share a common vision for a free, open, safe, peaceful, and prosperous Indo-Pacific region.
  • This vision plays out through platforms like the Quad and the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA).
  • Their combined engagement with Pacific Island countries also creates opportunities for cooperation in education, health, technology, fintech, capacity building, and disaster relief.

Conclusion

  • From Commonwealth and cricket to critical minerals and cutting-edge technology, India-Australia ties have matured into a genuinely multidimensional partnership.
  • Anchored in mutual trust and shared Indo-Pacific vision, this relationship exemplifies how historical goodwill can evolve into strategic depth across trade, defence, energy, and education.
Editorial Analysis

Article
08 Jul 2026

India’s Economic Prospects After the West Asian Crisis’

Context

  • India enters 2026–27 with strong economic momentum but faces significant external and domestic challenges.
  • The preliminary MoU between the United States and Iran, leading to the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, is expected to stabilise global crude oil supplies and lower prices.
  • This provides India with an opportunity to strengthen economic growth while addressing structural concerns such as energy dependence, agricultural vulnerability, and geopolitical uncertainty.

2026–27 Growth Prospects and Challenges

  • Strong Economic Performance
    • India recorded GDP growth of 7.7% in 2025–26, following robust growth in the previous two years.
    • Gross Value Added (GVA) expanded even faster, driven by manufacturing, trade, transport, and financial services.
    • A low Implicit Price Deflator (IPD) reflected moderate inflation and balanced economic expansion.
  • Challenges to Growth
    • Growth in 2026–27 may slow due to higher crude oil prices during the first quarter and the expected El Niño-induced rainfall deficiency.
    • Weak monsoon conditions threaten both kharif and rabi crops, increasing the risk of lower agricultural output and higher food inflation.
    • Potential fertiliser shortages may further reduce farm productivity.
  • Policy Priorities
    • To minimise these risks, India should build adequate fertilizer reserves, review crop-specific trade policies, and strengthen agricultural preparedness.
    • The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) projects real GDP growth of 6%, indicating continued resilience despite global and climatic challenges.

Fiscal Prospects, Petroleum Economy

  • Fiscal Outlook
    • Higher inflation is expected to increase nominal GDP growth to about 12.4%, resulting in stronger tax revenues.
    • The substantial RBI dividend strengthens government finances, making it likely that the fiscal deficit target of 4.3% of GDP will be achieved or only marginally exceeded.
    • Although subsidy expenditure may rise, stronger revenues are expected to offset much of the additional burden.
  • India's Petroleum Economy
    • India's dependence on imported crude oil has increased to over 90%, while domestic crude production has steadily declined.
    • Rising demand for petroleum products reflects rapid industrialisation, urbanisation, and economic growth.
  • Long-Term Energy Strategy
    • India has developed significant refining capacity, reducing refining costs and supporting energy security.
    • Improvements in energy efficiency have lowered the energy intensity of economic growth.
    • However, long-term sustainability requires expanding domestic oil exploration, promoting renewable energy, investing in nuclear power, and reducing excessive dependence on imported crude. 

The Way Forward

  • Strategic Commodity Reserves
    • Lower global oil prices provide an opportunity to expand strategic reserves of crude oil, fertilizers, and other essential commodities.
    • Strengthening storage infrastructure will enhance preparedness against future supply disruptions.
  • Diversification of Energy Sources
    • India should diversify crude import sources and reduce reliance on the Strait of Hormuz to improve supply security and minimise geopolitical risks.

Conclusion

  • India's economic outlook for 2026–27 remains favourable due to stabilising oil markets, strong macroeconomic fundamentals, and prudent fiscal management.
  • Nevertheless, climate variability, dependence on imported energy, and geopolitical uncertainty continue to pose significant risks.
  • Strengthening strategic reserves, expanding domestic energy production, accelerating the transition to clean energy, improving agricultural resilience, maintaining fiscal stability, and diversifying energy imports will enhance India's long-term resilience and support sustainable, high-quality economic growth.
Editorial Analysis

Article
08 Jul 2026

Childcare as Critical Public Infrastructure - Building a Safe and Accountable Care Ecosystem

Context:

  • The alleged abuse of toddlers at Capgemini's on-campus daycare centre in Bengaluru has highlighted serious gaps in India's childcare ecosystem.
  • The incident underscores the need to treat childcare as an essential component of social and economic infrastructure rather than merely a workplace welfare measure.

Why Childcare Matters?

  • A robust childcare system delivers multiple social and economic benefits:
    • Ensures children's physical safety, nutrition, emotional well-being, and early learning.
    • Supports women's participation and retention in the workforce.
    • Recognises childcare as skilled, professional work deserving training, standards, and fair wages.
    • Promotes inclusive economic growth and gender equality.
  • India still has nearly 86 million children below six years without access to quality early childhood care, despite the fact that nearly 85% of brain development occurs during these formative years.

The Development Challenge:

  • India's low female labour force participation, particularly in urban areas, is closely linked to inadequate childcare support.
  • Many women are compelled to leave employment due to caregiving responsibilities, leading to:
    • Loss of household income.
    • Reduced labour productivity.
    • Slower economic growth.
    • Persistent gender inequality.
  • Thus, childcare is both a social necessity and an economic imperative.

Global Best Practices:

  • Countries such as Singapore have integrated childcare into national development strategies by:
    • Expanding preschool and childcare capacity.
    • Providing subsidies to childcare centres.
    • Enforcing strict safety and quality standards.
    • Improving wages and professional standards for childcare workers.
  • These measures have strengthened workforce participation while supporting child development.

India's Existing Legal Framework:

  • India already possesses a policy framework for workplace childcare. For example, the Maternity Benefit (Amendment) Act, 2017 mandates crèche facilities in establishments meeting prescribed criteria -
    • Any establishment with 50 or more employees to provide crèche facilities.
    • Employers must permit mothers -
      • Up to four visits to the crèche daily, including standard rest intervals.
      • To visit a nearby approved location if an on-site facility isn't available.
    • Crèche guidelines prescribe standards relating to staffing, safety, monitoring, training, and infrastructure.
    • However, weak implementation, poor monitoring, and inadequate enforcement have limited their effectiveness, particularly for women employed in the informal sector.

Challenges in India's Childcare Ecosystem:

  • Several structural issues continue to undermine childcare services.
  • For example,
    • Poor regulation and weak accountability.
    • Inadequate enforcement of existing norms.
    • Childcare is viewed as low-status, unpaid domestic work.
    • Low wages and limited skill development for caregivers.
    • Lack of family-friendly workplace policies.
    • Insufficient childcare services for both formal and informal sector workers.

Way Forward:

  • The triple dividend of investing in childcare: Expanding childcare services can generate a triple dividend by -
    • Enhancing child health, learning, and long-term human capital.
    • Increasing women's labour force participation and economic empowerment.
    • Creating skilled employment opportunities within the care economy.
  • Features of a quality childcare:
    • A crèche should not function merely as a supervision centre.
    • Quality childcare must integrate safe and secure environments, adequate nutrition, health and hygiene, early childhood education, and emotional care and cognitive stimulation.
    • Children require responsive, trained caregivers rather than passive supervision.
  • Need of the hour: To build a trustworthy childcare ecosystem, India should -
    • Treat childcare as essential public infrastructure under the vision of Viksit Bharat.
    • Shift from voluntary compliance to strict regulatory enforcement.
    • Strengthen Crèche Monitoring Committees with active parent participation.
    • Conduct regular inspections and surprise audits.
    • Hold employers accountable for maintaining quality childcare facilities.
    • Professionalise the childcare workforce through standardised certification; training in child development, nutrition, hygiene, behavioural care, and emergency response; fair wages; and career progression opportunities.
    • Expand maternity, parental leave, crèche facilities, and family-friendly workplace policies to reduce women's unpaid care burden. 

Conclusion:

  • The Bengaluru daycare incident should become a catalyst for systemic reform rather than a temporary controversy.
  • A safe, accessible, and accountable childcare ecosystem is indispensable for child development, women's empowerment, and inclusive economic growth.
  • Recognising childcare as public infrastructure—not merely a private family responsibility—is essential for achieving the goals of Viksit Bharat, gender equality, and sustainable human capital development.
Editorial Analysis

Article
08 Jul 2026

School Dropout Rate Falls, Teacher Strength Crosses 1 Crore

Why in the News?

  • The Union Ministry of Education has released two key reports on school education, the UDISE+ 2025-26 report and the Performance Grading Index (PGI) 2.0 for 2025-26, showing a decline in dropout rates, improved teacher strength, and continued challenges in learning retention.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • About UDISE+ and PGI (Key Findings of the Reports, Significance, Concerns, etc.)

About UDISE+ and PGI

  • The Unified District Information System for Education Plus (UDISE+) is the government of India's official digital database for the education sector.
  • Maintained by the Ministry of Education, it collates real-time statistics on:
    • School infrastructure
    • Student enrolment
    • Teacher metrics
    • Facilities and amenities
    • Learning environment
  • The database is populated through voluntary uploading of data by schools with active UDISE+ codes.
  • The Performance Grading Index (PGI) 2.0 assesses states and Union Territories across six domains:
    • Learning Outcomes
    • Access
    • Infrastructure and Facilities
    • Equity
    • Governance Process
    • Teacher Education and Training
  • The PGI uses a 10-tier ranking system to grade states based on their performance in these domains.

Key Findings from UDISE+ 2025-26

  • Decline in Dropout Rates
    • The academic year 2025-26 witnessed a notable reduction in dropout rates across preparatory and secondary levels compared to previous years:
      • Preparatory level: Dropout rate declined from 2.3% in 2024-25 to 1.8% in 2025-26.
      • Secondary level: Dropout rate declined from 8.2% in 2024-25 to 7.0% in 2025-26.
    • However, the highest dropout rates at the secondary level were recorded in Ladakh, Gujarat, Chhattisgarh, and Karnataka.
  • The report attributes the improvement to:
    • An increased number of schools offering secondary education
    • Enhanced accessibility
    • Targeted interventions
    • More supportive and responsive school environments
  • Improvement in Student Retention
    • Student retention has shown a positive trend at higher levels:
      • Middle level: Retention increased from 82.8% (2024-25) to 83.7% (2025-26).
      • Secondary level: Retention increased significantly from 47.2% (2024-25) to 51.9% (2025-26).
    • However, a marginal decline was observed at the foundational and preparatory levels in 2025-26, following three consecutive years of improvement.
  • Concerning Retention Reality
    • Despite improvements, only about half of Class I students make it to Class XII, highlighting the persistent challenge of student attrition at higher levels of schooling.
  • Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER)
    • The GER at the secondary level improved considerably:
      • From 68.5% in 2024-25 to 71.7% in 2025-26.
    • This reflects greater accessibility and continued enrolment at higher levels.
  • Teacher Strength Crosses One Crore
    • For the first time in any academic year, the total number of school teachers crossed 1.02 crore during 2025-26, an increase of 8.3% compared to 2022-23.
    • Women continue to account for the majority of the workforce at 54.9%.
    • Rising teacher numbers are seen as critical for improving student-teacher ratios and ensuring quality education.
  • Pupil-Teacher Ratios (PTR)
    • PTRs have continued to improve, comfortably surpassing the NEP target of 30:1:
      • Foundational stage: 10
      • Preparatory: 12
      • Middle: 17
      • Secondary: 21
  • School Rationalisation
    • Zero-enrolment schools fell by 29% to 5,663.
    • Single-teacher schools declined by 3% to 100,843.
  • Girls' Enrolment
    • Girls accounted for 48.4% of total enrolment in 2025-26, marginally up from 48.3% in the previous year.
  • Digital Access and Infrastructure
    • Significant improvements were reported in digital access
      • Computer access in schools increased from 64.7% to 69.9%.
      • Internet connectivity improved from 63.5% to 67.4%.
    • Basic amenities showed near-universal availability:
      • Safe drinking water: 99.5%
      • Girls' toilets: 98.5%
      • Boys' toilets: 97.2%
      • Grid electricity: 95%
    • However, playground availability declined from 83% to 81.9%.
  • Inclusion
    • Schools with disability-accessible ramps and handrails increased from 54.9% to 58.2%.
  • Enrolment Composition
    • Minority communities account for over 20% of total enrolment.
    • Among minority students: Muslims 79.4%, Christians 10.1%, Sikhs 7.1%, Buddhists 2.0%, Jains 1.3%, Parsis 0.1%.
    • Social category breakdown: OBC 44.9%, General 27.5%, SC 17.7%, ST 10%.

Performance Grading Index 2.0 Findings

  • State-Wise Performance
    • The PGI 2025-26 revealed that no state or Union Territory achieved any of the top three grades (71%-100%) in the 10-tier ranking system.
  • Top Performers
    • Chandigarh: The only UT to reach the fourth-highest grade, 'Uttam-3'.
    • 'Prachesta-1' category (51%-60%): Delhi, Dadra & Nagar Haveli and Daman & Diu, Kerala, and Punjab.
  • Middle Performers
    • 'Prachesta-2' category (41%-50%): Himachal Pradesh, Goa, Maharashtra, Odisha, and Lakshadweep.
    • 'Prachesta-3' (31%-40%) and 'Akanshi-1' (21%-30%): Most states fall in these categories, with 13 states in each grade.
  • Aspirational Category
    • The 'Akanshi' category (lower end of rankings) includes:
      • Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, West Bengal, Madhya Pradesh, Jharkhand, Jammu & Kashmir
      • Northeastern states: Nagaland, Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, Mizoram, Meghalaya
  • Domain-Wise Leaders
    • Learning Outcomes: Punjab tops, followed by Kerala.
    • Access: Kerala leads along with Puducherry.
    • Teacher Education & Training: Kerala and Lakshadweep share the top position.
    • Equity: Tamil Nadu leads.
  • Decliners
    • States showing a decline in PGI scores compared with 2024-25:
      • Madhya Pradesh, Manipur, Odisha, and Uttarakhand
  • Inter-State Gaps
    • Highest score: Chandigarh at 766.0
    • Lowest score: Meghalaya at 525.7
    • Gap: 31.4% between the top and bottom performers
    • Encouragingly, the gap has narrowed from 51% in 2017-18, indicating some progress in reducing inter-state disparities in school education quality.

Significance and Concerns

  • Positive Trends
    • Falling dropout rates signal improved retention and school responsiveness.
    • Rising teacher strength and improving PTR indicate better educational conditions.
    • Digital access improvements reflect the growing integration of technology in schools.
    • Near-universal basic amenities show progress in school infrastructure.
  • Persisting Challenges
    • Only half of Class I students reach Class XII, reflecting continued attrition at higher levels.
    • No state has achieved the top three PGI grades, indicating significant room for improvement.
    • Marginal decline in retention at foundational and preparatory levels needs attention.
    • Wide inter-state disparities in performance, especially in aspirational states.
    • Aspirational category states, particularly in the northeast and Hindi-belt, require focused intervention.
  • Structural Concerns
    • Playground availability declining raises concerns about physical education.
    • Learning outcomes remain a challenge, especially in aspirational states.
    • Gender parity improvements remain marginal.
    • Regional disparities in teacher availability and school infrastructure persist.

 

Social Issues

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07 Jul 2026

E20 Petrol: Why Ethanol Blending Is Reducing Mileage and Raising Concerns

Why in news?

India completed its transition to E20 petrol (20% ethanol blended with 80% petrol) last year. This target was achieved five years ahead of the original 2030 deadline.

In June 2026, Union Minister for Petroleum and Natural Gas Hardeep Singh Puri launched E85 fuel (85% ethanol, 15% petrol) in New Delhi.

This rapid push toward higher ethanol blending has left many motorists worried about reduced mileage and possible engine damage, especially owners of older vehicles.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Background: India's Ethanol Blending Journey
  • Why Do Indians Care So Much About Mileage?
  • Three Key Problems With Higher Ethanol Blends
  • The Chemistry Behind Ethanol Blending
  • The Road Ahead: E25 and E85
  • Lessons From Brazil's Ethanol Model

Background: India's Ethanol Blending Journey

  • The idea of ethanol blending in India isn't new. The first National Policy on Biofuels in 2009 had set an indicative target of 20% ethanol blending by 2017. This target got delayed for various reasons over the years.
  • More recently, the blending level jumped rapidly. Ethanol content in petrol doubled from 10% (E10) to 20% (E20) within just three years.
  • This was originally planned to happen gradually over eight years. This fast transition, especially for older vehicles certified only for E10 fuel, came without adequate consumer warnings, leaving many motorists feeling short-changed.

Why Do Indians Care So Much About Mileage?

  • Fuel efficiency has always been central to Indian car buying decisions. Popular advertising taglines like "fill it, shut it, forget it" captured this obsession for decades.
  • Even as India's car market shifts toward premium vehicles, mileage remains a key consideration, especially since growth in disposable incomes remains uneven across the country.

Three Key Problems With Higher Ethanol Blends

  • Drop in Fuel Economy: There is a genuine and measurable drop in mileage when using higher ethanol blends, particularly in vehicles not originally designed for them.
    • This is rooted in basic chemistry — ethanol has a lower calorific value than petrol, causing roughly 30% less mileage in unadapted vehicles.
    • The impact also isn't linear; as blending levels increase, the drop in performance intensifies further.
  • Risk of Vehicle Part Damage: Ethanol is hygroscopic — meaning it attracts and holds water molecules from its surroundings. This property raises concerns about corrosion in older vehicle parts.
    • Ethanol also burns at a higher temperature than petrol, making cars harder to start on cold winter mornings.
  • No Fuel Choice for Consumers: Unlike in Brazil, where consumers can choose between different ethanol blends at different price points, Indian motorists currently have no such choice at the pump.
    • In Brazil, law mandates a price discount for higher ethanol blends. In India, motorists have had to accept the switch without any corresponding price benefit.

The Chemistry Behind Ethanol Blending

  • Ethanol (C2H5OH) has a much simpler carbon chain compared to petrol (which ranges between C8 and C12).
  • This means burning ethanol produces less carbon dioxide compared to burning an equivalent amount of petrol — making it more environment-friendly.
  • Ethanol also has a very high-octane number (around 108 Research Octane Number, or RON), enabling a cleaner burn inside engines.
  • This is why ethanol has traditionally been favoured in high-performance sports cars, thanks to its anti-knock properties, higher power potential, and better cooling effect from its high latent heat of vaporisation.
  • Indian carmakers say this high RON value could eventually allow them to design engines with higher compression ratios, extracting better mileage from higher ethanol blends — but this remains a future possibility, not a current reality.

The Road Ahead: E25 and E85

  • The government now plans to move beyond E20, towards E25, alongside promoting E85 fuel for flex-fuel vehicles (vehicles designed to run on multiple fuel blends).
  • Interestingly, even in flex-fuel vehicles, running standard E20 fuel currently works out cheaper than E85, since E85's fuel efficiency loss (over 25%) isn't sufficiently offset by its lower price.
  • E85 is expected to cost around Rs 20 per litre less than E20. For comparison, in Brazil, a similar fuel switch only becomes economically viable when the higher ethanol blend is at least 30% cheaper.
  • Auto industry insiders privately suggest that the jump from E20 to E25 could have a bigger impact than the E10 to E20 transition, especially for older engines and two-wheelers that don't use high-grade aluminium or steel casts.
  • This transition will require carmakers to undertake fresh engineering work around engine calibration, fuel-system durability, corrosion resistance, and material compatibility, along with fresh homologation — the official certification process confirming a vehicle meets safety, environmental, and roadworthiness standards.

Lessons From Brazil's Ethanol Model

  • Brazil offers a useful comparison. Its ethanol programme began in the 1970s in response to global oil market uncertainties. Over five decades, Brazil built a genuine alternative fuel ecosystem using sugarcane-based ethanol.
  • Today, at almost every Brazilian fuel pump, consumers can choose between blended petrol (containing 27-35% ethanol) and E100 (pure hydrous ethanol).
  • Brazil also successfully promoted flex-fuel cars, allowing consumers to fill up with whichever fuel option is cheaper on a given day. E100 is often 25-35% cheaper than lower blended petrol, thanks to strong government price support.
  • This price incentive made flex-fuel cars hugely popular in Brazil. By the late 1980s, nine out of every ten new cars sold there could run entirely on ethanol. Ethanol's ability to improve acceleration made it further attractive in a country where motorsport enjoys a passionate following.
  • In India, by contrast, consumers currently have no such choice or price differential at the pump — a key structural difference that experts believe India could learn from as it moves toward higher ethanol blends.
Economics

Article
07 Jul 2026

Bar Associations and the Right to Legal Representation: The Ayodhya Case Explained

Why in news?

Recently, the Ayodhya (Faizabad) Bar Association announced that none of its lawyers would defend eight persons accused in an alleged embezzlement of Ram Temple donation funds. The association went further, saying it would impose a Rs 5 lakh fine on any lawyer who chose to represent the accused.

This is not an isolated event — bar associations across India have passed similar resolutions before, despite repeated Supreme Court rulings declaring such actions illegal and unconstitutional.

This makes it an important issue from both a constitutional and criminal justice standpoint.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • What Does the Constitution Say About an Accused's Right to Legal Defence?
  • What Have Bar Council Rules Said?
  • The Landmark Supreme Court Judgment: A.S. Mohammed Rafi v. State of Tamil Nadu (2010)
  • Fair Trial as a Core Constitutional Value
  • Conclusion

What Does the Constitution Say About an Accused's Right to Legal Defence?

  • India's Constitution provides strong protection for an accused person's right to be defended:
    • Article 22(1) guarantees every arrested person the fundamental right to consult and be defended by a legal practitioner of their choice.
    • Article 14 ensures equality before law and equal protection of laws for everyone in India.
    • Article 21 — the Supreme Court has recognised the right to a fair trial as part of the right to life and personal liberty.
    • Article 39A, a Directive Principle of State Policy, requires the state to ensure justice is not denied to any citizen due to economic or other disabilities. This is the constitutional basis for free legal aid.
  • Together, these provisions form the foundation of an accused person's right to legal representation — regardless of the nature or gravity of the alleged crime.

What Have Bar Council Rules Said?

  • The Bar Council of India's "Standards of Professional Conduct and Etiquette" state that an advocate is bound to accept any brief in courts or tribunals, at a fee suited to their standing and the nature of the case.
  • The rules do allow refusal in "special circumstances" — but courts have clarified what this actually means.
  • In Kuldeep Agarwal v. State of Uttarakhand (2019), the Uttarakhand High Court held that "special circumstances" apply only to an individual advocate deciding not to take up a case personally.
  • It does not give a Bar Association the power to collectively ban all its members from representing a particular accused.

The Landmark Supreme Court Judgment: A.S. Mohammed Rafi v. State of Tamil Nadu (2010)

  • This is the most significant precedent on this issue. The case arose from a 2006 confrontation between a lawyer and police personnel in Coimbatore.
  • Following this, a local bar association passed a resolution that none of its members would represent the accused police personnel.
  • The Madras High Court called this "unprofessional," and the matter reached the Supreme Court.
  • The apex court delivered a strongly worded verdict: Such resolutions are "wholly illegal, against all traditions of the bar and against professional ethics."
  • The judgment cited historical precedents to reinforce this principle — including how Indian revolutionaries against British rule, the alleged assailants of Mahatma Gandhi and Indira Gandhi, and even Nazi war criminals at the Nuremberg trials were provided legal defence.

Fair Trial as a Core Constitutional Value

  • In J. Jayalalithaa v. State of Karnataka (2014), the Supreme Court reiterated that a fair trial is the central objective of criminal procedure.
  • It held that fair trial protects the interests of the accused, the victim, and society together, and must be conducted in the spirit of the right to life and personal liberty.
  • Other Notable Cases
    • Bar associations have passed such resolutions multiple times in high-profile cases:
    • Ajmal Kasab (2008 Mumbai attacks): A legal aid lawyer initially refused to represent him; another lawyer who agreed faced political threats before one was eventually appointed with police protection.
    • December 16, 2012 Delhi gangrape case: Saket court lawyers passed a similar resolution.
    • 2019 Hyderabad veterinary doctor rape-murder case: The bar association refused representation to the accused, who were later killed in an alleged police encounter.
    • 2017 Gurugram (Pradyuman Thakur murder case): The Gurgaon Bar Association tried to bar representation for an accused school official; the Supreme Court intervened, stating "for the rule of law to be upheld, it is essential that the right to counsel is zealously protected."

Why This Matters?

  • The Bar is not a trade union; it is an institution of constitutional significance.
  • Courts have consistently held that such resolutions violate the rights of both the accused and the victims of crime, since they compromise the fairness of the trial process itself.
  • The right to legal representation is treated as a core, non-negotiable feature of a fair trial — one that cannot be denied based on the nature of the allegation, however serious or unpopular it may be.

Conclusion

Despite a clear and consistent line of Supreme Court and High Court judgments declaring such bar association resolutions illegal, unconstitutional, and unethical, they continue to recur across India — as seen once again in the Ayodhya Ram Temple funds case.

This reflects a persistent tension between institutional professional conduct and the constitutional guarantee of a fair trial, reaffirming that the right to counsel must remain inviolable regardless of public sentiment or the nature of the accusation.

Polity & Governance

Current Affairs
July 7, 2026

Key Facts about Ulhas River
The Ulhas river recently crossed the warning level at Mohane and Jambhulpada following continuous heavy rainfall, prompting the district administration to issue an alert for residents living close to the banks.
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About Ulhas River:

  • It is a prominent west-flowing river located entirely within Maharashtra.
  • Course: Originating from the Sahyadri hill ranges in the Raigad district, the river travels westward and eventually drains into the Arabian Sea near Vasai Creek, north of Mumbai.
  • The river basin is bounded by the main Sahyadri hill range on the east, its offshoots to the north and south, and opens narrowly to the Arabian Sea in the west.
  • It passes through cities such as Kalyan, Thane, and Navi Mumbai.
  • Along its route, the Ulhas River forms several distributaries and creeks, which are vital for irrigation, drinking water supply, and local ecosystems.
  • Important Tributaries: Pej, Barvi, Bhivapuri, Murbari, Kalu, Shari, Bhatsa, Salpe, Poshir, and Shilar.
  • Major Dams: Barvi Dam and Bhatsa Dam.
  • The estuary of Ulhas houses several historical ports of Kalyan, Kopri, and Shurparaka.
Geography

Current Affairs
July 7, 2026

National Highways Logistics Management Limited (NHLML)
The Union Minister for Road Transport and Highways recently reviewed the progress of key infrastructure projects being implemented by the National Highways Logistics Management Limited (NHLML).
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About National Highways Logistics Management Limited (NHLML):

  • NHLML, (formerly known as Cochin Port Road Company Limited), is a 100% owned company of the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) formed under the guidance of the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways (MoRTH).
  • NHLML is responsible for spearheading pivotal initiatives aimed at improving transport logistics, infrastructure, and asset monetization.
  • It is at the forefront of transformative projects across the country in various domains. These include
    • The development of Multimodal Logistics Parks (MMLPs)
    • Construction of ropeways
    • Deployment of Optical Fibre Cable networks
    • Establishment of Wayside Amenities
    • Facilitation of port connectivity roads
    • Creation of warehousing zones
    • Enhancement of passenger transport terminal infrastructure
    • Deployment of solarization on highways
    • Development of other allied infrastructure facilities.
Polity & Governance
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