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15 Apr 2026

Film Piracy in India - Legal Provisions and Enforcement Challenges

Why in the News?

  • The leak of the Tamil film Jana Nayagan before its theatrical release has highlighted legal and enforcement challenges related to film piracy in India.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Film Piracy (Background, Legal Framework, Enforcement Challenges, Scope of Liability, Response Measures, Judicial Tools, etc.)

Film Piracy and Its Nature

  • Film piracy refers to the unauthorised copying, distribution or sharing of copyrighted audio-visual content such as movies and web series. It can occur through:
    • Illegal downloads and torrent platforms.
    • Sharing via messaging apps and cloud links.
    • Recording in theatres or leaking from production pipelines.
  • The recent case is significant because the film was leaked in high quality even before its theatrical release, indicating internal access misuse.

Legal Framework on Film Piracy in India

  • India has a multi-layered legal framework to address piracy.
  • Copyright Act, 1957
    • The Copyright Act forms the primary legal basis for protecting creative works.
    • Section 63 provides for imprisonment up to 3 years.
    • It also allows fines up to Rs. 2 lakh.
    • Section 63A deals with repeat offenders, imposing similar penalties for each violation.
    • The Act covers films, books, music and other intellectual property.
  • Cinematograph Act, 1952 (Amended in 2023)
    • The 2023 amendment strengthened anti-piracy provisions.
    • It introduces a penalty of up to 5% of the audited gross budget of the film.
    • This significantly increases financial deterrence for piracy.
    • In high-value productions, this can result in extremely large fines.

Enforcement Challenges in India

  • Despite strong laws, enforcement remains weak.
    • India is often labelled a “notorious market” for piracy due to limited enforcement action.
    • Investigations are rarely pursued rigorously.
    • Legal action often targets distributors rather than individual infringers.
  • However, in the current case, strong political and industry support may lead to stricter enforcement.

Scope of Liability in Piracy Cases

  • Liability in piracy is not limited to the original leaker.
    • Individuals who forward links can also face penalties.
    • Cloud sharing and digital dissemination expand the chain of liability.
    • Early recipients of leaked content may face harsher punishment.
  • This reflects the evolving nature of digital piracy, where distribution networks are decentralised.

Mechanisms Used by Studios to Prevent Piracy

  • Restricted Access and Encryption
    • Films are distributed to theatres in encrypted formats.
    • Access is limited to authorised personnel only.
  • Digital Rights Management (DRM)
    • OTT platforms use DRM technologies to prevent copying.
    • However, advanced piracy tools can bypass DRM protections.
  • Watermarking Techniques
    • Invisible and visible watermarks are embedded in film prints.
    • These help identify the source of a leak.
    • This acts as a strong deterrent for insiders.

Post-Leak Response Measures

  • Once a film is leaked, complete removal is nearly impossible.
  • Key challenges include:
    • Constantly changing piracy websites.
    • Distribution through torrents and encrypted messaging platforms.
    • Rapid replication across multiple platforms.
  • However, studios still attempt mitigation through:
    • Copyright takedown notices to platforms.
    • Collaboration with anti-piracy firms such as AiPlex.
    • Blocking of infringing websites.

Judicial Tools to Combat Piracy

  • Courts have developed innovative legal tools.
    • Dynamic injunctions: Allow continuous blocking of new piracy links.
    • John Doe orders: Issued in anticipation of piracy even before release. It is used to combat digital piracy, trademark, and copyright infringement where the infringer's identity is unknown.
  • These tools enhance proactive enforcement.

 

Polity & Governance

Article
15 Apr 2026

Delimitation and Women's Reservation Bills - A Structural Reset of India’s Electoral Framework

Why in News?

  • The Union government has introduced three key Bills, including the Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026, to operationalise 33% reservation for women in the Lok Sabha and State Assemblies.
  • These Bills also propose a major overhaul of the delimitation process, which has remained frozen since the 1970s.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • The Legislative Package
  • Key Provisions
  • The North-South Divide - A Political Fault Line
  • Structural Shift in Delimitation
  • Challenges
  • Way Forward
  • Conclusion

The Legislative Package:

  • The Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026 — proposes expansion of Lok Sabha and amends Articles 81 and 82.
  • The Delimitation Bill, 2026 — establishes a new Delimitation Commission framework.
  • A third Bill facilitating women's reservation in State Assemblies and Union Territory (UT) legislatures.

Key Provisions:

  • Expanding the Lok Sabha:
    • From the current strength from the current 543 seats to up to 850, by revising the cap to 815 MPs from States and 35 from UTs.
    • This represents a 50% increase over existing strength — and aligns with the seating capacity of 888 members in the new Parliament building (expandable to 1,272 for joint sittings). Larger membership would technically mean smaller constituency sizes geographically.
  • Women's reservation (The 2029 target):
    • Although the Constitution (106th Amendment) Act, 2023 had already legislated 33% reservation for women, its implementation was tied to a post-Census delimitation.
    • Since the 2021 Census remains ongoing with no clear completion timeline, the government now proposes conducting delimitation on the basis of the 2011 Census (the "latest Census").
    • Hence, the central government is targeting implementation from the 2029 Lok Sabha elections onwards.
  • Redefining "Population" under Article 81:
    • Shifting from "the last preceding Census" to "population as ascertained at such Census as Parliament may by law determine".
    • This grants Parliament the discretion to choose which Census data underpins any given delimitation exercise, introducing political flexibility into a previously constitutional-mechanical process.

The North-South Divide - A Political Fault Line:

  • Delimitation - a politically sensitive issue:
    • Southern states — TN, Kerala, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana — achieved lower population growth rates by successfully implementing family planning policies.
    • A straight population-based delimitation would therefore reduce their share of Lok Sabha seats relative to high-growth northern states.
    • This concern led Parliament to freeze delimitation twice (in 1976 and 2001) — postponing seat readjustment until after the first Census post-2026.
  • New mechanism:
    • The new Bills propose removing this time-linked freeze, replacing it with a Parliament-triggered process.
    • However, the constitutional principle (Article 81) that the population-to-seat ratio must be "as far as practicable, the same for all States" — directly conflicts with the commitment to preserve current regional seat proportions.
    • Reconciling these two positions is expected to be the sharpest point of parliamentary debate.

Structural Shift in Delimitation:

  • Renaming Article 82: From "Readjustment after each Census" to "Readjustment of constituencies", simultaneously removing the mandatory link between delimitation and decadal Census cycles.
  • From two-thirds to simple majority:
    • Historically, any deferral of delimitation required a two-thirds constitutional majority — precisely to prevent political manipulation of electoral boundaries.
    • The proposed framework lowers this threshold to a simple parliamentary majority, potentially giving future ruling coalitions greater leverage to time delimitation exercises to political advantage.
  • Delimitation Commission:
    • The Delimitation Bill, 2026 provides for a Commission that will work on the basis of the "latest Census figures" and established criteria such as administrative boundaries, physical features, and public convenience.
    • However, no allocation formula is specified for distributing seats across states, leaving a visible gap between political assurance and legal architecture.

Challenges:

  • Constitutional tension: The "one person, one vote, one value" principle under Article 81 is difficult to reconcile with the promise of maintaining existing seat proportions for southern states.
  • Lowered constitutional safeguards: Moving delimitation from a constitutionally-triggered to a legislatively-triggered process reduces institutional protection against political misuse.
  • Census delay: The ongoing 2021 Census has already derailed one implementation cycle; relying on the 2011 Census is a workaround, not a structural fix.
  • Women's reservation timeline: The 2029 target remains contingent on the delimitation process running smoothly and on time.

Way Forward:

  • Parliament must debate and define a clear seat-allocation formula that satisfies both the constitutional requirement of equitable representation and the political commitment to regional fairness.
  • A transparent and independent Delimitation Commission with defined terms of reference — rather than broad legislative discretion — would strengthen public trust in the process.
  • Restoring some form of constitutional safeguard around the frequency and triggers of delimitation would prevent future politicisation of constituency boundaries.
  • The 2021 Census must be expedited, as continued delays will perpetuate uncertainty around future delimitations and reservation implementation.

Conclusion:

  • The proposed Bills mark a transformative moment in India’s electoral and constitutional framework.
  • While the intent to fast-track representation reform is evident, the shift from a rule-based to discretion-based system raises critical concerns about federal balance, electoral fairness, and constitutional integrity.
  • The success of these reforms will depend on transparency, institutional safeguards, and political consensus, ensuring that the democratic promise of inclusive and equitable representation is truly realised.
Polity & Governance

Article
15 Apr 2026

West Bengal SIR row: How the Right to Vote Affects the Right to Contest

Why in news?

The Supreme Court of India denied interim relief to over 34 lakh individuals removed from electoral rolls in West Bengal after the SIR exercise, barring them from voting in upcoming elections.

The case underscores the tension between procedural integrity and individual electoral rights, raising concerns about how voter exclusion can directly affect democratic participation and candidacy.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Background: Contrasting Case Outcomes
  • Court’s Position on Voting Rights
  • Legal and Procedural Constraints
  • Right to Vote vs Right to Contest: Legal Distinction
  • Implications for Candidates in SIR Deletions

Background: Contrasting Case Outcomes

  • Case of C. Geetha (Tamil Nadu)
    • C. Geetha filed her nomination on April 2, 2026 and began campaigning as an independent candidate.
    • She later discovered her name had been deleted from the electoral roll, allegedly after officials skipped her house during the SIR exercise.
    • The Election Commission of India (ECI) stated the challenge was filed too late, as: Nominations had closed; Electoral rolls were already frozen.
      • Inclusion was only possible via a supplementary list, which requires a prior tribunal order.
    • The Supreme Court rejected her plea on April 10, upholding the ECI’s position.
  • Case of Motab Shaikh (West Bengal)
    • Motab Shaikh, an INC candidate, had his name deleted due to inconsistencies in records. He appealed promptly.
    • The appellate tribunal examined documents (Aadhaar, passport, driving licence, family records) and confirmed his identity. It ordered his name to be added to the supplementary list the same day.
  • The contrasting outcomes highlight how delays in appeal and rigid electoral procedures can determine eligibility, raising concerns about fairness and due process in large-scale voter deletions.

Court’s Position on Voting Rights

  • The Court described the right to vote as a key expression of citizenship and patriotism. It refused to allow excluded individuals to vote while their appeals are pending, citing procedural consistency and fairness.
  • Reasoning Behind the Decision
    • Allowing excluded voters to vote could create precedent-based complications.
    • It may lead to similar demands from those challenging voter inclusions, disrupting electoral integrity.
    • The Court emphasised consistency in electoral processes.
  • Broader Electoral Implications
    • The ruling highlights the strict linkage between inclusion in electoral rolls and voting rights.
    • Individuals excluded from rolls lose immediate electoral participation, even if their appeals are ongoing.
    • The situation highlights a key issue: pending appeals do not restore voting rights, leaving both voters and candidates in legal limbo during elections.
  • Impact on Candidates
    • A key concern arises for candidates whose names are deleted from voter rolls.
    • Such individuals face uncertainty, as their eligibility to contest elections is tied to their status as registered voters.
    • The controversy underscores a critical democratic dilemma: the right to vote directly affects the right to contest elections, raising questions about fairness, timing, and due process in electoral roll management.

Legal and Procedural Constraints

  • Supplementary List Requirement - Under Rule 23(5) of the Registration of Electoral Rules, 1960, names can be added only after a tribunal allows the appeal. Without such a decision, no immediate correction is possible.
  • No Interim Relief During Appeals - Rule 23(3) does not allow temporary restoration of names while appeals are pending. Courts cannot order inclusion mid-process, even if sympathetic.
  • Procedural Deviations in SIR Exercise - The appellate process showed deviations from Rules 19 and 20, which require: Prior notice; Opportunity to be heard before deletion.

Right to Vote vs Right to Contest: Legal Distinction

  • Not Fundamental Rights - The Supreme Court, in Ram Chandra Choudhary v Roop Nagar Dugdh Utpadak Sahakari Samiti Ltd (2024), reiterated that neither the right to vote nor the right to contest elections is a fundamental right, but both are statutory in nature.
  • Key Distinction Between the Two Rights - The right to vote allows a person to exercise franchise as per the statutory framework. The right to contest is a separate and additional right, subject to eligibility conditions, qualifications, and disqualifications.
  • Eligibility vs Disqualification - Eligibility is a threshold condition required to enter the electoral process. Lack of eligibility is not a punishment, but merely delays participation until conditions are fulfilled. This is distinct from disqualification, which carries legal consequences.

Implications for Candidates in SIR Deletions

  • Loss of Elector Status - Candidates whose names were removed from electoral rolls under the SIR exercise are not legally disqualified, but they lose their status as electors, which is essential to contest elections.
  • Legal Requirement Under Election Law - Under the Representation of the People Act, a candidate must be registered as a voter in any constituency within the relevant State to be eligible to contest.
  • Judicial Precedents Reinforcing the Principle
    • In Jyoti Basu v Debi Ghosal, the Supreme Court held that the right to contest is purely statutory.
    • In K Krishna Murthy v Union of India, it affirmed that political participation rights are subject to statutory limitations.
  • Emerging Concern: Scale of Administrative Impact
    • While the legal framework is well established, the current situation is unusual due to the large-scale administrative deletions under SIR, which have affected candidates who were often unaware of their exclusion.
    • The issue highlights how loss of voter registration, even without formal disqualification, effectively bars candidates from contesting, raising concerns about procedural fairness and electoral participation.
Polity & Governance

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15 Apr 2026

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15 Apr 2026

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Article
15 Apr 2026

Rising Costs, Stagnant Wages: Why Workers Are Protesting in India

Why in news?

Thousands of factory workers in Noida protested—turning violent—over demands for minimum wage hikes, better working conditions, and overtime pay, amid rising living costs.

The immediate trigger was a 35% minimum wage hike in Haryana following protests in Manesar. Workers in neighbouring regions demanded similar wage revisions, sparking unrest in Noida.

The protests reflect growing distress due to rising living expenses, especially amid the West Asia war-induced inflation. Workers argue that wages have not kept pace with increasing costs of living.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Delay in Minimum Wage Revisions
  • Rising Cost of Living and Worker Distress
  • Labour Codes and Worker Expectations
  • Uncertainty in Implementation of Labour Codes
  • Concerns Raised by Experts and Workers

Delay in Minimum Wage Revisions

  • Minimum wage has two components:
    • Base wage – Revision supposed to take place every five years
    • Cost of living allowance [Consumer Price Index-Industrial Workers (CPI-IW) linked] - This variable component is supposed to be revised twice a year.
  • However, base wage revisions have been delayed significantly:
    • Haryana revised after 10 years
    • Uttar Pradesh last revised in 2012, now offering only interim hikes
  • While most states carried out half-yearly revisions, they have missed out on the base minimum wage revisions, especially in the years after Covid-19.
  • The protests highlight a widening gap between inflation-driven expenses and delayed wage revisions, underscoring structural issues in India’s wage policy and labour welfare system.

Rising Cost of Living and Worker Distress

  • According to CPI-IW data (base year 2016), inflation for industrial workers rose by 24.8% nationally between February 2021 and February 2026.
    • In key industrial regions, inflation was even higher—27.9% in Gurugram, 27.2% in Faridabad, and 27.4% in Ghaziabad, Noida, and Delhi.
  • However, minimum wage growth has not kept pace with rising prices: Haryana (rose only 15%); Uttar Pradesh (rose 24.6%); Delhi (rose only 20.6%).
  • This mismatch shows that real incomes of workers have declined, especially in Delhi-NCR.
  • Rising input costs due to US tariffs and disruptions like the Strait of Hormuz crisis have strained industries. This has led to delayed wage payments and job insecurity for workers.
  • Rising Household Expenses for Workers
    • Workers, many of whom are migrants, face increasing living costs:
      • LPG cylinders in black markets costing up to ₹4,000
      • Rising room rents and food prices
    • These pressures have significantly worsened their financial burden.
    • The widening gap between inflation and wage growth, combined with industrial and global disruptions, has intensified economic stress for workers, fuelling protests and labour unrest.

Labour Codes and Worker Expectations

  • A key concern among protesting workers in Noida and Manesar was the expectation of higher wages following the notification of the four Labour Codes in November 2025.
  • However, no such uniform wage increase materialised.
  • Claims of a ₹20,000 minimum wage were clarified by the Uttar Pradesh government as misleading, since such rates applied only to central sphere establishments, not all factories.
  • The confusion stemmed from a 2024 Union government release indicating ₹783 per day (₹20,358 per month) for unskilled workers in certain sectors.
  • Workers interpreted this as a universal minimum wage, while in reality, state-level rules determine wages for most establishments.

Uncertainty in Implementation of Labour Codes

  • The four labour codes—Code on Wages, Code on Social Security, Industrial Relations Code, and Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions (OSH) Code—came into effect in November 2025.
  • However, final rules are yet to be notified by the Centre and most states. Draft rules were issued in December 2025, creating uncertainty.
  • Working Hours and Flexibility Debate
    • The new codes define 8 hours per day and 48 hours per week, aligned with international norms.
    • However, daily work hours, rest intervals, and spread-over limits are yet to be formally specified.
    • This flexibility allows employers to introduce models like 12-hour shifts with extended weekly breaks, but has led to confusion and potential overwork.
  • Shift from Earlier Legal Framework
    • Under the Factories Act, 1948, daily working hours were capped at 9 hours, and spread-over hours at 10.5 (extendable to 12).
    • The new codes shift regulatory power from Parliament to the executive, allowing states to decide details through rules.

Concerns Raised by Experts and Workers

  • Risk of Exploitation - Experts argue that flexibility without clear safeguards is being misused by employers, leading to longer working hours in some sectors.
  • Lack of Uniformity Across States - Since states will notify their own rules: There may be regional disparities in wages and working conditions; Implementation may vary widely, creating confusion for workers and employers alike.
  • Weakening of Collective Bargaining - The new codes leave trade union recognition and collective bargaining largely to states, raising concerns about lack of a credible and uniform process for labour reforms.
  • While the Labour Codes aim to simplify regulations and standardise labour practices, delayed implementation, lack of clarity, and excessive flexibility have created confusion, unmet expectations, and concerns about worker protection.
Economics

Article
15 Apr 2026

Mapping the Legislative Vacuum in India’s Heat Crisis

Context

  • The phenomenon of extreme heat in India has undergone a significant transformation, evolving from a seasonal inconvenience into a widespread national crisis.
  • Once largely confined to the arid northwestern and central regions, heatwaves now affect coastal and temperate zones, with over 57% of districts classified as heat-prone.
  • Despite its broad geographic spread, the impact of extreme heat is unevenly distributed, revealing deep-rooted inequalities based on class, caste, and gender.
  • For millions of informal workers, heat is not merely discomfort, it is a fundamental threat to life and livelihood.

Changing Geography of Heatwaves

  • India’s heatwave patterns have expanded beyond their traditional boundaries.
  • Regions previously considered relatively immune, such as coastal and temperate areas, are now increasingly vulnerable.
  • This shift reflects broader climatic changes, making extreme heat a persistent and pervasive issue rather than a seasonal anomaly.
  • The result is a nationwide thermal canopy that affects all regions, albeit with unequal consequences.

Socio-Economic Dimensions of Thermal Inequality

  • While extreme heat affects everyone, its burden is disproportionately borne by the poor.
  • Affluent populations can mitigate heat exposure through private cooling systems, but nearly 400–490 million informal workers lack such cooling autonomy.
  • For them, survival depends on continued outdoor labour under hazardous conditions.
  • Even slight increases in temperature significantly reduce productivity, leading to income loss.
  • Consequently, workers are forced into a difficult choice between protecting their health and securing their livelihoods.

Frontline Realities: Evidence of Harm

  • Ground-level evidence reveals the harsh realities faced by vulnerable workers.
  • Sanitation workers and waste pickers operate in environments where heat is intensified by toxic emissions from unsegregated waste, creating dangerous micro-climates.
  • Reports of burns from handling heated waste without protective gear highlight the severity of these conditions.
  • This situation reflects a climate-caste nexus, where marginalised communities engaged in stigmatised occupations face the highest exposure to environmental hazards.

Sector-Wise Vulnerabilities

  • Gig Workers: Delivery personnel face algorithmic pressures that discourage rest, even during extreme heat alerts.
  • Construction Workers: High physical exertion combined with heat from materials like steel and concrete increases health risks.
  • Street Vendors: They suffer both physically and economically, as heat reduces customer activity and spoils perishable goods.

Legal and Institutional Gaps

  • India’s current legal framework is inadequate to address the challenges posed by extreme heat.
  • The Factories Act of 1948 provides protections only for indoor workers, leaving outdoor labourers unprotected.
  • Similarly, the Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions (OSHWC) Code of 2020 lacks mandatory provisions for heat safety, relying instead on discretionary measures.
  • Additionally, the exclusion of heatwaves from the Nationally Notified Disaster list limits states’ financial capacity to respond effectively.
  • This creates a fiscal vacuum, restricting the allocation of resources for relief and adaptation.

Towards Addressing Thermal Injustice

  • Recognition as a National Disaster: Including heatwaves in the National Disaster list would unlock funding and enable stronger administrative action.
  • Adoption of the Heat Index: Using a combined measure of temperature and humidity would provide a more accurate assessment of risk.
  • Strengthening Labor Protections: Mandatory work-rest cycles and provision of protective equipment should be enforced under existing labour laws.
  • Right to Cool: Recognising access to cooling as a fundamental right would ensure the establishment of public cooling shelters and water facilities.
  • Protection for Gig Workers: Legal safeguards must prevent platforms from penalising workers during extreme heat conditions.
  • Income Compensation Mechanisms: Financial support systems, including innovative insurance models, should be implemented to offset income loss.

Conclusion

  • Extreme heat in India is no longer just an environmental issue; it is a reflection of systemic social and economic inequalities.
  • The concept of thermal injustice highlights how vulnerable populations bear the brunt of climate impacts while lacking the means to adapt.
  • Addressing this crisis requires a shift from fragmented, advisory-based responses to a comprehensive framework grounded in rights, equity, and accountability.
  • Ensuring thermal safety must become an integral part of the social contract, reinforcing the constitutional promise of justice and dignity for all.
Editorial Analysis

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15 Apr 2026

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Article
15 Apr 2026

Food Worth ₹1.55 Lakh Cr. Wasted Annually

Context:

  • The International Day of Zero Waste, observed on March 30, highlights the urgent issue of food waste.
  • This year’s focus underscores the stark contradiction of massive food wastage alongside widespread hunger and malnutrition.
  • In India, such waste also reflects the loss of farmers’ and workers’ hard-earned produce and effort.
  • This article highlights the scale and implications of food waste in India and globally, examining its economic, environmental, and ethical dimensions while outlining systemic challenges and actionable pathways to reduce food loss.

Global Food Waste Crisis: A Moral and Systemic Failure

  • According to the United Nations Environment Programme Food Waste Index Report 2024, the world wastes 1.05 billion tonnes of food annually, with households contributing 60%, food services 28%, and retail 12%.
  • This massive wastage reflects systemic inefficiencies in supply chains, policy gaps, and consumption patterns, even as 783 million people face hunger and over 3.1 billion cannot afford a healthy diet.

India’s Paradox: Waste Amid Hunger

  • India ranks second globally in food waste, losing 78–80 million tonnes annually worth ₹1.55 lakh crore, behind China (108 million tonnes).
  • Despite lower per capita waste (55 kg annually compared to 73 kg in the U.S. and 75 kg in Germany), India ranks 111th in the Global Hunger Index, with about 194 million people undernourished.
  • This highlights a stark contradiction between food surplus and widespread hunger.
  • Punjab Case Study: Production Without Efficiency
    • Punjab produces surplus food but suffers heavy losses due to extreme weather and poor infrastructure.
      • Around 20% of fruits and vegetables are lost post-harvest.
      • Over 8,200 tonnes of foodgrains were damaged in FCI storage (2019–2024) — the highest in India.
      • Key issues include inadequate storage, weak cold-chain systems, lack of mechanisation, and poor packaging and grading, as highlighted by NITI Aayog.

Environmental Consequences

  • Food waste contributes 8–10% of global greenhouse gas emissions.
  • If it were a country, it would be the third-largest emitter after China and the U.S.
  • Decomposing food releases methane, a highly potent greenhouse gas. Additionally, wasted food implies loss of critical resources—water, land, energy, and labour.
  • For instance, producing 1 kg of rice requires ~5,000 litres of water, intensifying concerns like groundwater depletion in Punjab.

Structural Causes of Food Loss

  • Food waste is driven by:
    • Post-harvest inefficiencies at the farm level
    • Inadequate storage and cold-chain infrastructure
    • Fragmented logistics and supply chains
    • Cultural normalisation of waste in consumption patterns

Pathways to Reduce Food Waste

  • Strengthen Cold-Chain Infrastructure - India processes only 8% of its produce, compared to 65% in the U.S. A national cold-chain mission, especially in key agricultural states, is essential for reducing losses.
  • Legal Framework for Food Redistribution - Inspired by European models, India should enact laws to prevent destruction of surplus food and promote donation through tax incentives and food banks.
  • Empower Farmers at the Source - Post-harvest losses begin at the farm gate. Solutions include:
    • Mechanised drying and storage systems
    • Hermetic storage bags and mobile cold units
    • Reforming laws like the Jute Packaging Materials Act to allow modern storage solutions
  • Improve Data and Accountability - India lacks a national database on food waste. Mandatory measurement and public reporting for businesses, caterers, and institutions can improve accountability and efficiency.
  • Cultural and Behavioural Change - Reviving the traditional ethos of “Anna (food) as sacred” can drive responsible consumption. Awareness must translate into collective civic responsibility through education and community initiatives.

Conclusion: From Awareness to Action

  • Food waste is not just inefficiency—it is a moral, economic, and environmental crisis.
  • Addressing it requires systemic reforms, infrastructure investment, policy intervention, and a cultural shift towards valuing food as a precious resource.
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