Tuesday, October 6, 2020

Comprehensive Current affairs 6 October 2020

India is going to focus on linking textile industry with latest technology.

Indian PM Modi has said that the textiles sector is a key sector that will help build an Atmanirbhar Bharat or self-reliant India and the government is particularly focussing on skills upgradation, financial assistance and integrating the sector with latest technology.

Indian textile sector has always brought opportunities and domestically, the sector is among the highest job providers in India. Internationally, textiles helped the country to build trade and cultural relations with the world. He said, Indian textiles are highly valued globally and have also got enriched with customs, crafts, products and techniques of other cultures.

•world over, the textile sector employs many women and thus, a vibrant textile sector will add strength to efforts of women empowerment. India need to prepare for future in challenging times.

The textile traditions of the country have showcased powerful ideas and principles like diversity and adaptability, self-reliance, skill and innovation and these principles have become even more relevant now.

 Importance of hygiene and immunity in our food habits.

As work and life adjust to a new normal, people are looking for long-term solutions that incorporate hygiene and mindful practices into food habits, according to insights drawn from a survey of 150 food experts across the country.

•The interactive session is part of the conversation series “Rise of the Culinary Explorer” and the survey was done for the third edition of the Godrej Food Trends Report.

•Moderator Ruth Dsouza, an ndependent food writer, opened the discussion on the changing practices during the pandemic.

•Health and hygiene are the primary concerns among consumers today, said Kamal Nandi, business head, Godrej Appliances.Appliances specially designed for fermentation and germination at home were being sought after

New Caledonia votes on referendum for independence.

The French South Pacific territory of New Caledonia votes in a referendum on independence on Sunday, with voters expected to reject breaking away from France after almost 170 years despite rising support for the move.

The referendum is part of a carefully negotiated de-colonisation plan agreed in 1998, known as the Noumea Accord, designed to put an end to a deadly conflict between the mostly pro-independence indigenous Kanak population, and the descendants of European settlers known as “Caldoches”.

Violence in the 1980s culminated in a drawn-out hostage crisis in 1988 that saw 19 separatists killed on one side, and six police and special forces on the other.

It will be the second time the archipelago goes to the polls to decide on its fate in two years, after a first referendum in 2018 resulted in status quo with 56.7% of the vote. But the result still marked a shift towards pro-independence sympathies, raising campaigners’ hopes that this time it could manage to break free.

 India-Myanmar discuss bilateral relations in foreign office consultations.

The 19th round of Foreign Office Consultations between India and Myanmar was held through virtual mode today. The Indian delegation was led by Foreign Secretary Harsh VardhanShringla and the Myanmar delegation was led by Permanent Secretary, U Soe Han.

•During the consultations, both sides reviewed the entire gamut of relations, including border cooperation and the ongoing restoration work on earthquake damaged pagodas in Bagan.

•Cooperation in regional and multilateral fora was also discussed. Both sides expressed satisfaction that despite the ongoing COVID pandemic, meetings in several areas, including power, energy etchave been held through virtual mode, reflecting the depth of the bilateral engagement.

•It was noted that the next Joint Trade Committee Ministerial Meeting to be held on October 20, will be useful in further strengthening bilateral trade and investment relations.

•Foreign Secretary reiterated the priority India attaches to its partnership with Myanmar in accordance with India’s Neighbourhood First and Act East policies.

Cengov. to waive off compound interest on loans upto 2crore.

In a relief to individual borrowers and medium and small industries, the Centre has agreed in the Supreme Court to waive compound interest (interest on interest) charged on loans of up to two crore rupees for a six-month moratorium period announced due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

•It said, the government will seek due authorization from Parliament for making appropriate grants in this regard and the endeavour shall be over and above the support of 3.7 lakh crore rupees to MSMEs, 70,000 crore rupees for home loans already extended through the GaribKalyan and Atmanirbhar packages announced by the government earlier.

•In an affidavit filed by the Finance Ministry, it said, the government has decided that the relief on waiver of compound interest during the six-month moratorium period shall be limited to the most vulnerable category of borrowers.

 •This category of borrowers, in whose case, the compounding of interest will be waived, would be MSME loans and personal loans of up to two crore rupees, it said.

•The loans were categorized into eight categories by the government including MSME (Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises), education, housing, consumer durable, credit card dues, auto, personal, and consumption.

C & I ministry moots quality improvement to boost exports.

Ministry of Commerce and Industry stressed that quality, technology and scale of production would help India take its annual exports to $1 trillion and not government subsidies.

•It exhorted exporters and the industry as a whole to target $1 trillion worth of shipments.

•“Why can’t we aim for $1 trillion exports from India. We certainly can. I see no reason, [why] we cannot. For that we need to be clear on actionable items [and] subsidies are never going to get us there, I am very very clear about that,” said Indian Commerce minister.

•“At least in my six years of engagement, I have not found subsidies to be the solution for India’s problems. I think it’s quality, technology, growth, scale; and sometimes for a short period you may need to give a little thrust or support.

Study finds three foldincrease in leopard capture and translocation.

A study conducted across Karnataka indicates that the policy guidelines brought out by the government to mitigate human-leopard conflict and discourage translocation of the animal have had little impact on the ground.

The number of leopards captured per month increased more than threefold (from 1.5 to 4.6) after the human-leopard policy guidelines were brought out in 2011. Similarly, there was a threefold increase in the number of leopards translocated per month (from 1 to 3.5).

Sanjay Gubbi of the Nature Conservation Foundation, who led the study in the State, said the guidelines for human-leopard conflict management were brought out in April 2011 to reduceconflict with leopards, discourage their translocation, and suggest improved ways of handling emergency conflict situations.

These findings have been published in a paper, ‘Policy to on-ground action: Evaluating a conflict policy guideline for leopards in India’, in the Journal of International Wildlife Law and Policy.

Taking Karnataka as a case study, the researchers analysed pre- and post-guidelines leopard captures, reasons for the captures, and the outcome for the captured leopards.

The study indicated that of the 80 leopards translocated to reserved/State/minor forests, most releases were to the Kemphole Reserved Forest (16.2%), followed by the Devarayanadurga State Forest (7.5%) and the Bukkapatna State Forest (5%).

Though eight reasons were attributed to capture and translocation of leopards, the main justification was livestock depredation (38.1%), said Mr.Gubbi.

NASA’s Sonification Project

NASA’s Chandra X-Ray Center (CXC) has gone a step further by unveiling a new ‘sonification’ project that transforms data from Astronomical Images into Audio.

Data Sonification:

• Data sonification refers to the use of sound values to represent real data. Simply put, it is the auditory version of data visualisation.

• For example, In NASA’s recent Chandra project, data is represented using a number of musical notes. With this data sonification project, users can now hear the birth of a star, a cloud of dust or even a black hole as a high- or low-pitched Sound.

Sonification Project:

• NASA’s sonification project is led by the Chandra X-ray Center in collaboration with NASA’s Universe of Learning Program (UoL), which aims to incorporate NASA science content into the learning environment for Learners of all ages.

 • Sonification projects like this allow audiences, including visually-impaired communities, to experience space Through Data.

How did NASA Translate Astronomical Images into Sound?

• NASA’s Chandra X-Ray Observatory, Hubble Space Telescope and Spitzer Space Telescope in space collect digital data, in the form of ones and zeroes, before converting them into images. The images are visual representations of light and radiation of different wavelengths.

• So far, the astronomers behind Project Chandra have released three examples made using data collected from some of the most distinct features in the sky — the Galactic Centre, Cassiopeia A, and Pillars of Creation Nebula.

• Galactic Centre: It is the rotational centre of the Milky Way galaxy. It comprises neutron, white dwarf stars, clouds of dust and gas, and a supermassive black hole called

Sagittarius A*.

• Cassiopeia A: It is one of the most well-known remnants of a once-massive star that was destroyed by a supernova explosion around 325 years ago.

• The Pillars of Creation: It is located in the centre of the Eagle Nebula, which is also known as Messier 16.

Focus for UPSC Mains

How Remunerative is Farming in India

The government’s push to reform India’s agriculture sector has divided opinions and Triggered a debate about the state of Indian Agriculture.

Highlights:

• In the context of this debate, two long-standing characteristics of Indian agriculture are Noteworthy

 

Indian Agriculture is Highly Unremunerative:

• It has been heavily Regulated by the Government and Protected from the free play of Market Forces

Why are the New Legislation Introduced?

• According to the government, the new Bills passed by Parliament attempt to make it easier for farmers to sell to and produce for the private sector.

• The hope is that liberalizing the sector and allowing greater play for market forces will make Indian agriculture more efficient and more remunerative for the farmers.

• In this context, it is important to understand some of the basics of Indian agriculture.

Basics of Indian Agriculture:

1. Workforce Engaged:

At the time of Independence, about 70% of India’s workforce (a little less than 100 million) was employed in the agriculture sector.

Even at that time, agriculture and allied activities accounted for around 54% of India’s national income.

Over the years, agriculture’s contribution to national output declined sharply. As of 2019-20, it was less than 17% (in gross value added terms).

And yet, the proportion of Indians engaged in agriculture has fallen from 70% to just 55% (Chart 1).

As the Committee on Doubling Farmers’ Income (2017) observes, “the dependence of the rural workforce on agriculture for employment has not declined in proportion to the falling contribution of agriculture to GDP”.

2. Land Holdings:

While the number of people dependent on agriculture has been burgeoning over the years, the average size of landholdings has become reduced sharply — even to the extent of being unviable for efficient production.

Data shows that 86% of all landholdings in India are small (between 1 and 2 hectares) and marginal (less than 1 hectare — roughly half a football field).

The average size among marginal holdings is just 0.37 ha which hardly provides Enough Income to stay above the Poverty line.

3. Debts:

The combined result of several such inefficiencies is that most Indian farmers are Heavily Indebted (Chart 2).

The data shows that 40% of the 24 lakh households that operate on landholdings smaller than 0.01 ha are indebted. The average amount is Rs 31,000.

A good reason why such a high proportion of farmers is so indebted is that Indian agriculture — for the most part — is unremunerative.

Chart 3 provides the monthly income estimates for an agriculture household in four very different states as well as the all-India number.

Some of the most populous states like Bihar, West Bengal and Uttar Pradesh have very low levels of income and Very high Proportions of Indebtedness.

4. Buying & selling:

Another way of understanding the plight of the farmers relative to the rest of the economy is to look at the Terms of Trade between farmers and non -farmers.

  Terms of Trade is the ratio between the prices paid by the farmers for their inputs and the prices received by the farmers for their output.

As such, 100 is the benchmark. If the ToT is less than 100, it means farmers are worse off. As Chart 4 shows, ToT rapidly improved between 2004-05 and 2010-11 to breach the 100-mark but since then it has worsened for Farmers.

5. MSP:

A key variable in the debate is the role of minimum support prices. Many protesters fear governments will roll back the system of MSPs.

MSPs provide “guaranteed prices” and an “assured market” to farmers, and save them from price fluctuations. This is crucial because most farmers are not adequately informed.

But although MSPs are announced for around 23 crops, actual procurement happens for very few crops such as wheat and rice.

Moreover, the percentage of procurement varies sharply across states (Chart 5). As a result, actual Market prices — what the farmers get — are often Below MSPs.

Chandra X-Ray Center (CXC) and Data Sonification.

Recently, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s (NASA) Chandra X-Ray Center (CXC) has unveiled a new ‘sonification’ project that transforms data from Astronomical Images into Audio.

About Chandra X-ray Project:

• The Observatory was launched by Space Shuttle Columbia in 1999. It is part of NASA's fleet of "Great Observatories" along with the Hubble Space Telescope, the Spitzer Space Telescope.

• The "X-ray universe" refers to the universe as observed with telescopes designed to detect X-rays. X-rays are produced in the cosmos when matter is heated to millions of degrees.

Such temperatures occur where high magnetic fields, or extreme gravity, or explosive forces exist in space.

• It is named after the Nobel Prize-winning Indian astrophysicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar.

• The Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar 's work implied that stars more massive than the so-called Chandrasekhar limit would eventually collapse to become objects so dense that not even light could escape it. Chandrasekhar limit is the theoretical maximum mass a white dwarf star can have and still remain a white dwarf.

• Although this finding was received with some skepticism at the time, it went on to form the foundation of the theory of black holes, eventually earning him a Nobel Prize in physics for 1983.

Data Sonification:

• It refers to the use of sound values to represent real data. It is the auditory version of data visualisation.

• It is a project, for Instance, data is represented using a Number of Musical Notes.

• The birth of a star, a cloud of dust or even a black hole can be ‘heard’ as a high- or low-Pitched Sound.

• Telescopes in space collect digital data, in the form of ones and zeroes (binary), before converting them into images.

• The images are visual representations of light and radiation of different wavelengths in space, that can’t be seen by the human eye.

• The Chandra project has created a celestial concert by translating the same data into sound. Pitch and volume are used to denote the brightness and position of a celestial object or phenomenon.

• Pitch is related to frequency of sound waves. Changing the number of vibrations per second changes the pitch.

• Volume, or loudness, is related to the strength, intensity, pressure, or power of the sound.

 Bigger/amplified vibrations result in bigger/louder sounds.

• The data has been collected by NASA’s Chandra X-Ray Observatory, Hubble Space Telescope and Spitzer Space Telescope.

• Thus far, Project Chandra has released three examples - the Galactic Centre, Cassiopeia A, and Pillars of Creation Nebula.

The Galactic Centre is the rotational centre of the Milky Way galaxy.

• It comprises a collection of celestial objects are Neutron and white dwarf stars, Clouds of dust and gas and A supermassive black hole called Sagittarius A*(weighs four million times the mass of the sun).

• Cassiopeia A is Located around 11,000 light years away from Earth in the northern Cassiopeia constellation. It is a well-known remnant of a once-massive star that was destroyed by a supernova explosion around 325 years ago.

• The iconic Pillars of Creation is located in the centre of the Eagle Nebula (it is a constellation of stars), which is also known as Messier 16.

Significance:

• The sonification project was led by the Chandra X-ray Center in collaboration with NASA’s Universe of Learning Program (UoL), which aims to “incorporate NASA science content into the learning environment effectively and efficiently for learners of all ages”.

• NASA has been working towards making data about space accessible for a larger audience.

• It like this allows audiences - including visually-impaired communities - to experience space through Data.

About the Hubble Space Telescope:

• It is one of the largest and most versatile telescopes in service. It is a space telescope that was launched into low Earth orbit (540km above Earth) in 1990.

  Hubble’s four main instruments observe in the near ultraviolet, visible, and near infrared spectra.

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