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Article
13 Apr 2026
Context
- India’s rise as a global textile hub reflects shifting trade patterns, as instability in traditional centres like Bangladesh pushes buyers toward clusters such as Tiruppur and Bengaluru.
- While this shift signals economic opportunity, it also exposes a deeper climate crisis rooted in the thermodynamic limits of human labour.
- The expansion of production is colliding with rising temperatures, revealing a fragile balance between global supply chains, human endurance, and industrial growth.
The Human Cost of Heat
- At temperatures around 40°C, a textile worker can lose nearly half of her work capacity, resulting in a direct loss of daily wages due to the absence of labour protections like cooling breaks or paid leave.
- This creates an invisible economic inequality, where workers absorb the cost of maintaining supply chain efficiency.
- The human body becomes the first site of breakdown, as heat stress forces a trade-off between survival and productivity, exposing the vulnerability of informal labour systems.
A Structural Productivity Collapse
- Between 2001 and 2020, India lost an estimated 259 billion labour hours annually due to heat stress, with losses intensifying in recent years.
- This represents a massive productivity loss and signals a systemic economic threat.
- At the factory level, the effects are severe. In regions like Palghar, production capacity has declined by up to 50%, with working hours reduced due to unbearable conditions.
- Rising temperatures increase the risk of workplace injuries, heatstroke, and dehydration, while also causing machine overheating and frequent shutdowns.
- Indoor temperatures in textile factories often exceed safe limits, weakening both human and mechanical efficiency.
- Scientific evidence reinforces this decline. At 33–34°C, worker output is effectively halved, and each degree rise in temperature reduces annual output by about 2%.
- For an industry employing millions and dominating cotton production, this reflects a critical structural weakness driven by climate change.
The Supply Chain Paradox
- Rigid global supply chains intensify the crisis. International brands impose strict deadlines and penalties, forcing factory managers into an impossible choice between meeting targets and protecting workers.
- This creates a thermodynamic bottleneck where rising demand clashes with declining human capacity.
- The burden is unevenly distributed. Global brands mitigate risk through supply chain diversification, shifting production across countries, while local manufacturers lack such flexibility.
- As a result, risk is pushed downward, creating a regressive tax on vulnerable workers. Informal labourers, without social protection, face the harshest consequences when production slows or stops.
- Past disruptions reveal this pattern. During crises, brands often withdraw or cancel orders, leaving workers without income.
- This highlights a persistent imbalance where labour absorbs shocks while capital remains insulated, reinforcing structural supply chain inequality.
A Looming Economic Breakdown
- Future projections indicate a worsening scenario. By 2030, India may lose 5.8% of daily working hours due to extreme heat, equivalent to millions of full-time jobs.
- This is not a gradual decline but a potential tipping point, where production becomes physically unsustainable.
- The risk lies in a sudden breakdown rather than slow deterioration. Once human limits are reached, orders cannot be fulfilled regardless of demand.
- This threatens India’s position as a competitive manufacturing hub, as industrial resilience weakens under environmental stress.
- The crisis underscores that economic systems cannot override the laws of thermoregulation and human biology.
The Way Forward: Toward a Climate-Smart Supply Chain
- Addressing this challenge requires systemic change. Policymakers must integrate climate risk into industrial and trade strategies, recognising heat stress as a core economic issue.
- Mandatory heat-action plans should enforce safe temperature limits, provide cooling breaks, and ensure worker health monitoring.
- Financial systems must also adapt. Access to concessional finance can support investments in cooling infrastructure, water systems, and heat-resilient technologies.
- At the same time, stronger labour laws are needed to guarantee access to drinking water, rest areas, and basic protections.
- Innovation is equally critical. Investments in R&D innovation can drive solutions such as wearable cooling devices, improved materials, and efficient manufacturing systems.
- However, responsibility must extend beyond national boundaries. International buyers should adopt fair pricing and flexible timelines, sharing the costs of adaptation rather than transferring them downward.
Conclusion
- The assumption that production costs remain fixed is increasingly untenable in a warming world.
- Rising temperatures are redefining the limits of labour and industry, exposing the hidden costs of global manufacturing.
- The crisis is not only economic but also human, rooted in the physical constraints of the body and environment.
- Ignoring these realities will lead to declining productivity, widening inequality, and long-term damage to workers’ well-being.
- Sustainable growth depends on recognising these limits and building systems that prioritise both efficiency and human survival.
Online Test
13 Apr 2026
CAMP-CSAT-55
Questions : 40 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Online Test
13 Apr 2026
CAMP-CSAT-55
Questions : 40 Questions
Time Limit : 60 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Online Test
13 Apr 2026
CAMP-HINDI-STIA
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 60 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Online Test
13 Apr 2026
CAMP-HINDI-STIA
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Article
13 Apr 2026
Why in news?
High-stakes negotiations between the United States and Iran aimed at securing a ceasefire and a broader diplomatic framework collapsed after nearly 21 hours of intense discussions in Islamabad.
The talks, mediated by Pakistan, ended without an agreement, with US Vice President JD Vance confirming that American negotiators returned home empty-handed.
Despite the failure, the meeting itself was historically significant — marking the first high-level political contact between the US and Iran since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Core Issues That Led to the Breakdown
- Positions of Each Side
- The Deadlock — and the Silver Lining
- Pakistan's Mediating Role
- Impact on India
Core Issues That Led to the Breakdown
1. The Nuclear Question — The Central Sticking Point
- The US demand for an unambiguous commitment from Iran to not pursue nuclear weapons — or the tools that would enable rapid acquisition of nuclear capability — remained the fundamental obstacle.
- Tehran insists that uranium enrichment is its sovereign right as a signatory of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), which commits it to never building a nuclear weapon but does not prohibit civilian enrichment.
- Before the war began, Iran had offered to suspend nuclear operations for a few years — but refused to surrender its stockpile of 440+ kg of highly enriched uranium or permanently give up enrichment capability.
- The war has only hardened Iran's position.
2.Strait of Hormuz
- The US has demanded that Iran immediately reopen the Strait of Hormuz to all international maritime traffic.
- Iran, after 39 days of conflict, has come to recognise that the Strait — through which one-fifth of the world's energy supply passes — is its single greatest strategic leverage, far more powerful than drones, missiles, or nuclear stockpiles.
- It is deeply reluctant to surrender this leverage without substantial concessions in return.
3. Mutual Distrust
- Iran's foreign ministry combined resolve with deep scepticism, stating that Iran has "not forgotten and will not forget the experiences of America's breaches of promise."
- This underlying trust deficit complicated even procedural progress.
4. Iran's Frozen Assets and Reparations
- Iran has demanded the release of approximately $27 billion in frozen revenues held in Iraq, Luxembourg, Bahrain, Japan, Qatar, Turkey, and Germany for post-war reconstruction.
- Additionally, Tehran has sought war reparations for damage caused by six weeks of airstrikes.
- The Americans have refused both demands. This has been Iran's consistent position even from the pre-war negotiating period.
Positions of Each Side
- United States
- Immediate priority: Preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons capability.
- Unwilling to move forward without an affirmative Iranian commitment on the nuclear question.
- Characterised the failure as "bad news for Iran more than for the USA."
- Iran
- Insists on recognition of its legitimate rights, including uranium enrichment.
- Demands sanctions relief, war reparations, and a complete cessation of hostilities in the region.
- Accuses the US of maximalist and unlawful demands.
- Views diplomacy as a tool to secure national interests — alongside all other available means.
The Deadlock — and the Silver Lining
- Despite the collapse, neither side has walked away entirely.
- Vance left the door ajar, indicating that the US proposal remains "a final and best offer" for Iran to consider.
- The fact that Iran's maximalist 10-point plan has been whittled down to three core sticking (Strait of Hormuz; Nuclear and Issue of Frozen Assets) points itself suggests some underlying progress.
- Iran has indicated it will consult with the IRGC, clergy, and the Supreme Leader before any further movement.
- Both sides retain a two-week ceasefire window to negotiate, and the willingness to talk — even without agreement — signals that diplomacy is still alive.
Pakistan's Mediating Role
- Pakistan elevated its diplomatic profile significantly by hosting the talks.
- However, the lack of a breakthrough — and the apparent disconnect between the two sides — has raised questions about Pakistan's effectiveness as a message carrier, given that Vance and Iranian negotiators appeared to be working from fundamentally different frameworks.
Impact on India
- India has been watching the negotiations with acute concern, given the severe economic impact of the conflict on its domestic economy.
- Key pressure points include gas shortages affecting LPG supply, potential petrol price hikes, disruption to sectors ranging from ceramics, plastics, and textiles to fertilisers, helium, agriculture, healthcare, and semiconductors.
- India has navigated the diplomatic space carefully — maintaining continuous engagement with Iran over six weeks and expressing concern over Israeli strikes on Lebanon without naming Israel.
- India has managed to secure passage for about eight to nine vessels through the Strait of Hormuz, highlighting just how dependent India is on the free flow of energy through this critical chokepoint.
Article
13 Apr 2026
Why in news?
The recent West Asia conflict and resulting fuel disruptions have highlighted India’s vulnerability as an import-dependent energy economy, leading to LPG shortages and rising prices.
This has triggered a shift in households toward electric cooking options like induction and infrared cooktops, with sales surging significantly. The government is also exploring measures to boost production of such appliances.
While this transition may reduce reliance on LPG, it is likely to increase electricity demand, potentially adding strain to an already stressed power grid during peak periods.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Induction Cooktops as an Alternative to LPG
- Infrared Cooktops: Working Mechanism and Rising Adoption
- Challenges of Infrared Cooktops
- Electric Cooking and Stress on Power Grid Infrastructure
Induction Cooktops as an Alternative to LPG
- A basic induction cooktop costs around ₹3,000–4,000, comparable to the price of an LPG cylinder in the black market.
- This makes it an affordable entry point for households considering a shift to electric cooking.
- Working Mechanism
- Induction cooktops do not use an open flame.
- They generate a rapidly changing electromagnetic field, which heats the vessel directly.
- Heat is produced through electrical resistance, converting energy into thermal heat efficiently.
- Direct heating of the vessel ensures higher energy efficiency. Absence of flame makes induction cooktops safer and cleaner compared to gas stoves.
- Compatibility Constraints
- Induction cooktops require ferromagnetic cookware such as cast iron or magnetic stainless steel.
- Not all traditional utensils are compatible due to differences in electrical resistance.
- Induction-compatible cookware is generally more expensive, making it less attractive for households planning only a temporary or partial transition from LPG.
Infrared Cooktops: Working Mechanism and Rising Adoption
- Infrared cooktops are gaining popularity despite higher costs due to their versatility and compatibility with all types of cookware.
- How Infrared Cooktops Work?
- Electricity heats a coil or halogen element beneath a ceramic glass surface.
- The element becomes red-hot, similar to a toaster coil.
- It emits infrared radiation, an invisible form of electromagnetic energy.
- Infrared radiation passes through the glass surface and is absorbed by the cookware.
- This causes molecules in the vessel to vibrate and generate heat, cooking the food.
- Growing Market Demand
- Unlike induction, infrared cooktops work with steel, aluminium, glass, and ceramic vessels. This eliminates the need for specialised cookware.
- Demand has surged significantly, with sales increasing nearly fourfold on platforms like Amazon India.
- The ease of use and flexibility are key factors behind this trend.
Challenges of Infrared Cooktops
- Lower Energy Efficiency - Infrared cooktops operate at 70–80% efficiency, compared to 85–95% for induction cooktops. Heat is generated in stages—coil → glass → vessel—leading to greater energy loss.
- Higher Electricity Consumption - Due to indirect heating, infrared cooktops consume more electricity than induction cooktops for the same cooking task.
- Heat Control Limitations - Induction cooktops use advanced power electronics (like pulse-width modulation) to maintain efficiency even at low heat. Infrared cooktops rely on phase-angle control, switching the coil on and off to regulate heat.
- Power Quality Issues - Phase-angle control distorts the electrical waveform and reduces the power factor. This causes extra current flow that does not contribute to useful heating, leading to inefficiencies.
- Impact on Power Grid - Widespread use of infrared cooktops can increase losses in the distribution system. It may place additional stress on local electricity infrastructure, especially in high-demand areas.
Electric Cooking and Stress on Power Grid Infrastructure
- Peak-Time Demand Pressure - Electric cooking demand is concentrated during morning and evening hours. Even a 3–5 GW increase during these periods can significantly strain local distribution networks.
- Localised Load Challenges - The impact is often highly localised, with clusters of households or businesses shifting to electric cooking. This can overload distribution transformers, causing outages and infrastructure stress.
- Infrastructure Limitations - Existing grid infrastructure in many areas is not designed for sudden demand spikes. Managing these sharp increases poses a major operational challenge for utilities.
- Long-Term Demand Implications - A sustained shift away from LPG to electric cooking could lead to a persistent rise in electricity demand. This would require significant upgrades in infrastructure and power supply capacity.
- Seasonal and Supply Pressures - With expectations of a hotter-than-normal summer, electricity demand is already rising. The government may rely more on coal-based power and emergency measures to meet peak demand.
Article
13 Apr 2026
Context:
- Budget 2026-27 announced integrated development of fisheries across 500 reservoirs and Amrit Sarovars to enhance fish farmers' income and strengthen market access through farmer-producer organisations and cooperatives.
- This initiative is rooted in India's remarkable growth as the world's second-largest fish producer, with national fish production reaching a record 197.75 lakh tonnes in 2024-25.
- This article highlights the growing importance of fisheries in reservoirs and Amrit Sarovars, examining their role in enhancing fish production, boosting rural livelihoods, and strengthening India’s Blue Revolution under the Viksit Bharat@2047 vision.
India's Fisheries Sector — A Snapshot
- India is the second largest fish producer and second largest aquaculture producer globally.
- Fish production has increased by 106% since 2013-14.
- 75% of fish production comes from inland fisheries — freshwater, brackish, and saline water resources.
- Reservoirs spread over 31.50 lakh hectares contribute approximately 18 lakh tonnes of fish production.
Reservoirs — The Backbone of Inland Fisheries
- Geographic Distribution
- Located primarily in eastern, central, and peninsular India.
- Madhya Pradesh has the maximum area under reservoirs (~6 lakh hectares).
- Tamil Nadu has the highest number of reservoirs (over 8,000).
- These reservoirs provide direct and indirect employment to millions of farmers, especially in economically backward and water-scarce regions.
- Classification of Reservoirs
- Small - Less than 1,000 hectares
- Medium - Up to 5,000 hectares
- Large - More than 5,000 hectares
Rise in Fish Productivity — Key Drivers
- Fish productivity in reservoirs has doubled from 50 kg/hectare (2006) to 100 kg/hectare This has been achieved through:
- Cage Culture Technology — Use of floating or stationary cages made of synthetic netting, allowing natural water flow for oxygen and nutrient exchange, and enabling easier feeding, monitoring, and disease management.
- Quality Seed Stocking — Indian major carps (Catla, Rohu, Mrigal) form the core species, supplemented by Tilapia and Pangasius based on local needs.
- Flagship Schemes — Blue Revolution (BR) and Pradhan Mantri Matsya Sampada Yojana (PMMSY) have provided budgetary support and capacity building.
- Success Story — Jharkhand
- Bimal Chandra Oran, a fish farmer from Saraikela district, adopted cage aquaculture in the Chandil reservoir under a cooperative society.
- With subsidised inputs and capacity-building training, he now produces three tonnes of fish annually, achieving a turnover of over ₹3 lakh.
Future Potential and the Value Chain Approach
- An ICAR-CIFRI study envisions aquaculture productivity can be tripled — from 100 kg to 300 kg per hectare.
- To achieve this, experts recommend a value chain approach encompassing:
- Setting up hatcheries, feed mills, and storage sheds
- Ice plants, berthing platforms, and auction centres
- Marketing retail outlets, refrigerated trucks, and boats
Cluster-Based Strategy by NFDB
- The National Fisheries Development Board (NFDB) is implementing a cluster-based strategy for end-to-end solutions in reservoir ecosystems.
- A reservoir cluster has been announced for Halalai and Indra Sagar dams in Madhya Pradesh as a pilot, focusing on identifying sectoral gaps in production, productivity, and processing, and aggregating farmers through cooperatives and Fish Farmer Producer Organisations (FFPOs).
- This model will be replicated across other states and UTs.
Mission Amrit Sarovar — Complementary Initiative
- Implemented with the vision of conserving surface and underground water through district ponds.
- Each Amrit Sarovar is designed with a minimum one-acre pondage area and a holding capacity of 10,000 cubic metres.
- A key innovation is community participation through user group mapping for pond management.
- Success Story: The Amrit Sarovar at Dine Dite Rijo, Upper Subansiri, Arunachal Pradesh has been successfully used for stocking and aquaculture of ornamental fishes.
Conclusion
- Harnessing fisheries in reservoirs and Amrit Sarovars supports the Viksit Bharat@2047 vision by empowering fishing communities and strengthening India’s Blue Revolution.
Online Test
13 Apr 2026
CAMP-CA-STIA
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Online Test
13 Apr 2026
CAMP-CA-STIA
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.