Wednesday, September 2, 2020

Comprehensive Current affairs 2 September 2020

India inks Rs.2,580 crore contracts to supply Army regiments with Pinaka missiles.

Indian Ministry of Defence has signed a contract to supply six Pinaka regiments, a system of rocket launchers, to the Indian Army. The approximate cost of the missiles is Rs.2,580 crore by 2024.

The contract has been approved by the Defence and Finance Ministers of India.

The contract is signed with the Bharat Earth Movers Ltd, Tata Power Company Ltd and Larsen & Toubro. In this project, atleast 70% of indigenous content will be used.

The 6 Pinaka regiments are expected to be made operational along the country's Northern and Eastern borders.

The aim is to enhance the Indian Army's preparedness in the region against the increased provocative military movements of the Chinese troops. 

Pinaka:

Pinaka is a multi-barrel rocket launch (MBRL) system produced in India for the Indian Army. It is developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO). These missiles have a guidance kit bolstered by an advanced navigation and control system. It has an extended range of 70 to 80 km. It has 6 launcher vehicles, each has 12 rockets with 6 loader-replenishment vehicles. Pinaka has 2 command post vehicles with fire control computer and a DIGICORA MET radar. It has the ability to fire all the rockets at a time or only a few in a different direction with the help of its control computer. Pinaka saw service during the Kargil War, where it was successful in neutralizing enemy positions on the mountain tops.

Kerala to set up First International Womens Trade Centre in India.

Kerala State Government aims to set up India’s first International Women’s Trade Centre (IWTC), in consonance with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) at Angamaly. The aim is to accelerate women entrepreneurship.

IWTC:

The Centre will secure gender parity and provide women with a safe place away from home to start new businesses, set up or expand, and get their products marketed globally.

Scaling up opportunities for MSME Women Entrepreneurs in Kerala is organized by the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce & Industry (FICCI) Kerala State Council.

Resource Enhancement Academy for Career Heights (REACH) is aimed to empower women with the required skills to ensure success in life.

It aims to scale up the women-led endeavours through comprehensive support measures.

It aims to enhance its competitiveness to tap market opportunities.

IWTC will enable women entrepreneurs to come forward and participate in international trade, enjoy greater economic benefits.

Jal Jeevan Mission to measure and monitor water supply.

Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM) aims to create a smart rural water supply eco-system to measure and monitor the service delivery of the water supply in rural areas. The National JJM has constituted a Technical Expert Committee. The aim is to prepare a road map for measurement and monitoring of the water service delivery system in rural areas. The committee constitutes members from academia, administration, technology, and specialists from the water supply sector.

National Jal Jeevan Mission and Ministry of Electronics & Information Technology (MeitY) is to conduct an ICT Grand Challenge.

The ICT grand challenge is to bring an innovative, modular, and cost-effective solution to develop a ‘Smart Water Supply Measurement and Monitoring System’ to be deployed at the village level.

The ICT grand challenge will invite proposals from Indian Tech start-ups, the Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs), Indian Companies, Indian LLPs.

JJM has partnered with State Governments and sector partners and started facilitating a sensor-based water supply system on a pilot basis in various villages.

Gujarat State govt. has begun navigating the sensor-based rural water supply systems in 1,000 villages spread across five districts.

Pilot projects have been started in other States.

The project will ensure to minimize service delivery outage and water loss and monitor the quantity and quality on a long-term basis.

India, Japan, Australia agree to launch a resilient supply chain initiative in the Indo-Pacific region.

Australia-India-Japan Economic Ministers’ Joint Statement on Supply Chain Resilience was held on 1st September. The virtual meeting comprised of India’s Minister of Commerce and Industry

Piyush Goyal, Australia’s Minister for Trade, Tourism and Investment, Senator Simon, and Japan’s Minister of Economy, Trade, and Industry, Kajiyama Hiroshi.

Highlights:

India-Japan-Australia has agreed to launch an initiative to build a resilient supply chain in the Indo-Pacific region.

The aim is to create a free and transparent trade & investment environment.

The Ministers reaffirmed their agreement to take a lead in delivering a free, fair, transparent, inclusive, non-discriminatory, predictable, and stable trade and investment environment and in keeping their markets open.

During the meeting, the Ministers shared their intention to work toward the launch of a new initiative to achieve the objective through cooperation.

GoI had taken the call at the highest levels to become part of the global supply chain and is emerging as an alternative to China.

Common Voters List.

In a move that ties in with the idea of simultaneous elections in the country, the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO), earlier this month, held a meeting to discuss the possibility of preparing a common voters’ list for elections to all local bodies, state assemblies and Lok

Sabha.

Common voters List:

• Common Voters list means single electoral roll for all Elections in the country.

• Articles 243K and 243ZA deal with elections to Panchayats and Municipalities in the states. These give the power of superintendence, direction and control of preparation of electoral rolls and the conduct of these elections to the State Election Commission (SEC).

• Article 324(1) of the Constitution empowers the EC to supervise, direct, and control the preparation and revision of electoral rolls for all the elections to Parliament and state legislatures.

• State Election Commission are free to prepare their own electoral rolls for local body elections, and this exercise does not have to be coordinated with the EC.

• Currently, a majority of the states use the EC’s voters list, instead of their own, to elect their municipalities and panchayats. However, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Odisha, Assam, Madhya Pradesh, Kerala, Odisha, Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland and the

Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir have their own electoral rolls for local body polls.

Issues with Multiple Voters List:

• The Law Commission recommended single voters list in its 255th report in 2015. The EC too adopted a similar stance in 1999 and 2004. It had noted that the non-conformity of preparation of electoral rolls by the EC and the SECs causes duplication of the same task between two different agencies.

• Further, the EC pointed out that it adds to the confusion among voters, since they may find their names Present in one roll, but Absent in Another.

Benefits:

• The incumbent government has pitched a common electoral roll and simultaneous elections as a way to save an enormous amount of effort and expenditure. A common Electoral Roll would save the exchequer money and the election conducting agencies effort.

Challenges:

• First, a constitutional amendment to Articles 243K and 243ZA that would make it mandatory to have a single electoral roll for all elections in the country.

• Second, to persuade the state governments to tweak their respective laws and adopt the Election Commission’s (EC) voters list for municipal and panchayat polls. However, the change would

require a massive consensus-building exercise, which may not be easy given the suspicion between the states and the Centre.

• Having a Common Electoral roll doesn’t end with convincing the state governments to adopt EC’s voters list. The boundaries of the EC’s polling station may not necessarily match that of the wards. So the EC’s voters list has to be Fashioned in a way to fit the SEC’s

Wards.

Biological control of rodents by Barn Owls.

The Lakshadweep Administration had embarked on the ‘Pilot project on

Biological Control of Rodents (Rats) by Using Barn Owls (Tyto alba) in Kavaratti Island’ after studies revealed the shocking extent of damage caused by rats to the island's coconut Yield and Economy.

Highlights:

• Its scientific name is Tyto alba and its Common name is barn owl.

• It is the most widely distributed species of owl. It is found almost everywhere in the world except polar and desert regions, in Asia north of the Himalayas, most of Indonesia, and some Pacific islands.

• The plumage on head and back is a mottled shade of grey or brown, the underparts vary from white to brown and are sometimes speckled with dark markings.

• The face is characteristically heart-shaped and is white in most subspecies.

• Barn owls specialise in hunting animals on the ground and nearly all of their food consists of small mammals which they locate by sound, their hearing being very acute.

• Its IUCN red list status is Least Concern.

• The Barn Owl is respected as the acolyte of the Goddess Chamunda in Karnataka. In Bengal, it is revered as the carrier of Lakshmi, the deity of wealth.

• The biocontrol measure is spearheaded by the Lakshadweep Administration, with the Krishi Vigyan Kendra (KVK) at Kavaratti providing the technical knowhow.

• Coconut is an important cash crop for the islands, but the rodents account for 30 to 40% of the yield loss. Total production stood at 8.76 crore nuts in 2017-18.

• Barn owls have been recruited instead of other rat hunters like cats or rat snakes because the rats in the Lakshadweep Islands practically live on treetops.

• The islands have no other natural predators of rodents. Using chemical agents is impossible since Lakshadweep Practises Organic Agriculture.

7). CSIR-CMERI develops Worlds Largest Solar Tree.

Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR)-Central Mechanical Engineering Research Institute (CMERI) has developed the World’s Largest Solar Tree at Durgapur, West Bengal. The capacity of the installed Solar Tree is above 11.5 kilowatts peak (kWp). It has the annual capacity to generate 12,000-14,000 units of Clean and Green Power.

Solar Tree:

The Solar Tree is designed in a way that it will ensure maximum exposure of each Solar photo-voltaic (PV) Panel to Sunlight. It creates the least amount of shadow area beneath.

A total of 35 Solar PV Panels are there in each tree with a capacity of 330 wp each.

The unique feature is that the inclination of the arms holding the Solar PV Panels are flexible and can be adjusted as per requirement. This is not available in Roof-Mounted Solar facilities.

The data of the energy generated can be monitored either in real-time or on a daily basis.

The design of the Solar Trees potentially makes it available for widespread usage in Agricultural activities such as High Capacity Pumps, e-Tractors, and e-Power Tillers.

The solar trees should be aligned with Agriculture for substituting price-volatile fossil fuels as the Solar Tree has the potential to save 10-12 tons of CO2 emissions being released into the atmosphere as Greenhouse Gases (GHG) when compared with fossil fuel-fired energy generation.

Each Solar Tree will cost Rs 7.5 lakhs and the interested MSMEs can align their Business Model with the Pradhan Mantri Kisan Urja Suraksha evem Utthan Mahabhiyan (PM KUSUM) Scheme for farmers, for developing a Renewable Energy based Energy Grid.

8).Tele-robotic Surgery: Replicating Surgeon’s Hands Minus the Tremors.

The cutting-edge of remote medical practice can be seen in the emerging field of telerobotic surgery where a surgeon in high demand can perform procedures in multiple distant locations on the same day. Robotic Surgery is a method of performing surgery using very small tools attached to a robotic arm.

The surgeon controls and manipulates the arm from a computer console. An electronic eye in the robot arm sends back a high definition 3-D image, magnified 10 times, which the surgeon can view on the computer screen: something not possible in conventional surgery. The surgeon uses controls in the console to manipulate special surgical instruments that are smaller and more flexible than the human hand. The robot replicates the surgeon’s hand movements and eliminates human shortcomings like hand tremors.

The first robotic surgery (of the prostate) was performed at AIIMS, Delhi, in July 2006, using the Da Vinci robotic system.

The world’s first-in-human robotic coronary surgery using a system from the US-based Corindus Vascular Robotics was performed in India on December 4 and 5, 2018. Five patients in the Apex Heart Institute in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, underwent procedures performed by Dr Tejas Patel, Chief

Interventional Cardiologist of the Apex Heart Institute, from inside the Swaminarayan Akshardham temple in Gandhinagar, 32 km away.

Says Dr Patel: “The first human case of remote robotic PCI represents a landmark event for interventional medicine. The application of telerobotics in India has the potential to impact a significant number of lives by providing access to care that may not otherwise have been possible. For the first time in cardiology’s history, India will shine for this ground-breaking innovationinnovation".

Focus on mains..

Rules for administration in the Union Territory of J&k framed.

The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has notified new rules for administration in the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir that specify the functions of the Lieutenant Governor (LG) and the Council of Ministers.

What are the Roles and Powers of LG?

• Police, public order, All India Services and anti-corruption, will fall under the executive functions of the LG, implying that the Chief Minister or the Council of Ministers will have no say in their functioning.

• Proposals or matters which affect or are likely to affect the peace and tranquillity of the UT or the interest of any minority community, the Scheduled Castes, the Scheduled Tribes and the Backward Classes “shall essentially be submitted to the Lieutenant Governor through the Chief Secretary, under intimation to the Chief Minister, before issuing any orders.”

• In case of difference of opinion between the LG and a Minister when no agreement could be reached even after a month, the “decision of the Lieutenant Governor shall be deemed to have been accepted by the Council of Ministers.

What is the Role of the President?

• In case of difference of opinion between the Lieutenant Governor and the Council with regard to any matter, the Lieutenant Governor shall refer it to the Central Government for the decision of the President and shall act according to the decision of the President.

• The LG of J&K has been empowered to pass directions in such situations that action taken by the Council of Ministers will be suspended for as long as it takes the President of India to decide on the cases referred to her.

What is the Role of Council of Ministers, led by the Chief Minister?

• They will decide service matters of non-All India Services officers, proposal to impose new tax, land revenue, sale grant or lease of government property, reconstituting departments or offices and draft legislations.

• Any matter which is likely to bring the Government of the Union territory into controversy with the Central Government or with any State Government, shall, as soon as possible, be brought to the notice of the LG and the Chief Minister by the secretary concerned through the Chief Secretary.

What is the Role of the Central Government?

• The Lieutenant Governor shall make a prior reference to the Central government with respect to proposals of the following kinds:

those affecting the relations of the Centre with any state government, the Supreme Court of India or any other high court;

proposals for the appointment of Chief Secretary and Director General of Police;

important cases which affect or are likely to affect the peace and tranquillity of the Union Territory; and

Cases which affect or are likely to affect the interests of any minority community, Scheduled Castes or the Backward Classes.

What are the Implications of the New Rules?

• In the erstwhile state of Jammu and Kashmir, when it had special status, the chief minister was the most powerful person in the decision-making process.

• With the new rules, CM has been reduced to an ornamental figure. He would not even have the power to transfer a constable of the Jammu & Kashmir Police.

National Register of Citizens (NRC)

A year after the publication of the complete National Register of Citizens (NRC), the fate of 19, 06,657 people excluded from the updated list in Assam continues to hang in the Balance.

What is NRC?

• The NRC is the list of Indian citizens and was prepared in 1951, following the census of 1951.

• The process of NRC update was taken up in Assam as per a Supreme Court order in 2013.

• In order to wean out cases of illegal migration from Bangladesh and other adjoining areas, NRC updation was carried out under The Citizenship Act, 1955, and according to rules framed in the Assam Accord.

• The Assam government released the final draft of NRC on July 30, 2018. The list incorporates names of 2.89 crore people out of 3.29 crore applicants. The names of 40.07 lakh people have been left out.

Why it was Carried Out?

• Crisis of identity: Influx of immigrants has created a crisis of identity among the indigenous. Locals fear that their cultural survival will be affected,political control weakened and employment opportunities undermined because of immigrants. Environmental degradation: Large areas of forest land were encroached upon by the immigrants for settlement and cultivation. The state experienced declining percent of land area under forest from 39% in 1951-52 to about 30% now.

• Increase financial burden: Immigration has increased pressure on the part of state government, as the government has to increase the expenditure on education and health facilities to the immigrants.

Why is this Worrisome?

• The official presumption that people residing in Assam areas are foreigners has reduced several million of these highly impoverished, mostly rural, powerless and poorly lettered residents to a situation of helplessness and extreme poverty, destitution, hardship.

• It has also caused them abiding anxiety and uncertainty about their futures. They are required to convince a variety of usually hostile officials that they are citizens, based on vintage documents which even urban, educated, middle-class citizens would find hard to muster.

• Women are especially in danger of exclusion from the citizenship register. Typically, they have no birth certificates, are not sent to school, and are married before they become adults.

• UN experts are warning continuously that the National Register of Citizens (NRC) in Assam could render millions of citizens stateless and create instability in India.

What can the Left out do Now?

• According to the Centre’s standard operating procedures, a rejected person would have 120 days from the date of receiving the rejection slip to approach a Foreigners’ Tribunal (FT) for judging their citizenship status.

About Foreigners Tribunals in Assam:

• The tribunals are quasi-judicial bodies, to determine if a person staying illegally is a “foreigner” or not.

• Every individual, whose name does not figure in the final National Register of Citizens (NRC), can represent his/her case in front of the appellate authority i.e. Foreigners Tribunals (FT).

• Assam has set up FTs, specifically to handle the cases of 19.06 lakh people left out of the updated NRC.

• Under the provisions of Foreigners Act 1946 and Foreigners (Tribunals) Order 1964, only Foreigners Tribunals are empowered to declare a person as a foreigner.

• The Assam Police Border Organisation, a wing of the State police tasked with detecting foreigners, readies the cases for the tribunals to decide who is a foreigner and who is not.

Way Ahead:

• A person’s citizenship is a basic human right. Declaring people foreigners in haste without judicially verifying their Credentials can leave many Human beings Stateless.

• The need of the hour is that Union Government should clearly chart out the course of action regarding the fate of excluded people from final NRC data and political parties should refrain from colouring the entire NRC process through electoral prospects that may snowball in to communal violence.

• There is a need for a robust mechanism of legal support for the four million who have to prove their citizenship to India with their limited means.

Tuesday, September 1, 2020

Comprehensive Current affairs 1 September 2020


 Census and NPR may get delayed due to COVID.

The first phase of the Census and the exercise to update the National Population Register (NPR), scheduled for this year but deferred due to the coronavirus outbreak, may be delayed by a year as there is no sign of slowdown of the pandemic.

The Indian census is one of the largest administrative and statistical exercises in the world, with the involvement of more than 30 lakh officials who would visit each household across the length and breadth of the country.

According to the earlier schedule, the census would have its reference date as March 1, 2021, and in the snow-bound areas of Jammu and Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand, it would be October 1, 2020.

With a history of more than 130 years, this reliable, time tested exercise has been bringing out a veritable wealth of statistics every 10 years, including on the rich diversity of the people, and has become one of the tools to understand and study India.

The objective of the NPR is to create a comprehensive identity database of every usual resident in the country.The database would contain demographic as well as biometric particulars.

For the NPR, a usual resident is defined as a person who has resided in a local area for the past six months or more or a person who intends to reside in that area for the next six months.

States to work out on new industrial plans for labour welfare.

States have started working on new industrial policies with detailed plans for labour welfare, particularly with regard to housing of migrant workers in industrial clusters, in line with an advisory from the Centre.

The Centre had in the first week of August written to all states, specifically asking them to include labour welfare measures in their investments and industrial policies, or at least have a plan in place, labour ministry officials told

The 18-point advisory detailed steps to provide “improved living conditions to workers coming back from states” by ensuring “decent working conditions, occupational safety and social security benefits”.

The government has asked "both the origin and destination states" of migrant workers to ensure the enrolment of eligible migrant workers in Ayushman Bharat scheme and insurance schemes provided by the Centre. It has also asked states to “encourage employers to follow all laws when dealing with the workers, particularly with regard to their wages, living conditions and safety”

Export Preparedness Index 2020 released by NITI Aayog.

Niti Aayog in partnership with the Institute of Competitiveness has released the first Export Preparedness Index (EPI) 2020.

• The EPI intends to identify challenges and opportunities and encourage a facilitative regulatory framework.

• The index ranked states on four key parameters – policy; business ecosystem; export ecosystem; export performance.

• The index also took into consideration 11 sub-pillars — export promotion policy; institutional framework; business environment; infrastructure; transport connectivity; access to finance; export infrastructure; trade support; R&D infrastructure; export Diversification; and Growth Orientation.

States Performance:

• Gujarat has topped the index followed by Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu.

• The other States that have made it to the top 10 include Rajasthan, Odisha, Telangana, Haryana, Chhattisgarh, Karnataka and Kerala.

• Himalayan states: Uttarakhand topped the chart, followed by Tripura and Himachal Pradesh.

• Union Territories: Delhi has performed the best, followed by Goa and Chandigarh.

• Landlocked States: Rajasthan performed the best, followed by Telangana and Haryana.

• Coastal States emerged as the best performers, with six out of eight coastal States featuring in the Top 10 Rankings.

Concerns Raised:

• Report highlighted India’s inability to take advantage of China’s falling export capacity during 2014-16, and losing out to nations like Vietnam due to delayed action. This “vital period” had served as an opening for other developing economies to enter and subsume lines of production from where China had either been weakened or its influence toned down.

• “India did bring in reforms in late 2017 to ensure that the export sector remained competitive and attracts potential investors. However, Bangladesh and Vietnam had made the most of the situation before India and enhanced their export competitiveness by targeting their strengths,” it stated.

Solutions:

• Short-term solutions to these “significant” bottlenecks, ranges from facilitating joint development of export infrastructure to collaborating with academic institutions.

• By creating convergence for building export infrastructure, facilitating robust industry-academia-government linkages to build trade-support networks, promoting state-level engagements for economic diplomacy, and an emphasized focus on designs and standards, India would be able to develop some of the key learnings of this analysis.”

• Report signifies that States will not only have to focus on increasing and diversifying exports but also need to focus on ensuring forward and backward integration to global value chains, which would allow the states to export higher value-added goods and services.

Women in Peacekeeping operations.

Recently, India has co-sponsored a Security Council resolution that calls for full, effective and Meaningful Participation of Women Personnel in Peacekeeping Operations.

• The resolution was put forth by Indonesia.

• India is one of the largest troop contributors to UN peacekeeping operations.

• India was elected non-permanent member of the Security Council for a two-year term beginning January 1, 2021.

• India has a long tradition of being associated with UN Peacekeeping since its inception.

The country made history in 2007 when she deployed the first all-women Police Unit in the UN Mission in Liberia.

• India is the fifth largest contributor of uniformed personnel to the UN Peacekeeping Forces.

Mustapha Adib to be designated as new Lebanese PM.

Lebanon's ambassador to Germany Mustapha Adib is on course to become the country's next prime minister after securing major political backing.

Mr.Adib was named by four former prime ministers on the eve of binding consultations between the president and parliamentary blocs on their choice for the post.

The announcement came a day before French President Emmanuel Macron is due to arrive for a two day-visit, during which he is expected to press Lebanese officials to formulate a new political pact to lift the country out of its multiple crises.

The government, led by Hassan Diab, quit this month amid anger over an explosion in the capital Beirut.

Meanwhile Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah said on Sunday that his powerful Iran-backed Shia movement is “open” to a French proposal for a new political pact for Lebanon.

His comments came a day before French President Emmanuel Macron was due in blast-hit Beirut for his second visit in less than four weeks to press for political reform and reconstruction in tandem with the start of political consultations to name a new Lebanese Premier.

World Urdu Conference 2020.

• Recently, the World Urdu Conference 2020 is being organised by the National Council for Promotion of Urdu Language (NCPUL) from 27th-28th August 2020.

Highlights:

• Urdu is one of the languages mentioned in the 8th Schedule to the Constitution.

• The Constitutional provisions relating to the 8th Schedule are articles 344(1) and 351.

• Presently, 8th Schedule consists of the 22 languages namely (1) Assamese, (2) Bengali, (3)Gujarati, (4) Hindi, (5) Kannada, (6) Kashmiri, (7) Konkani, (8)Malayalam, (9) Manipuri,

(10) Marathi, (11) Nepali, (12) Oriya, (13) Punjabi, (14) Sanskrit, (15) Sindhi, (16) Tamil, (17) Telugu, (18) Urdu (19) Bodo, (20) Santhali, (21) Maithili and (22) Dogri.

• It is one of the official languages in states like Kashmir, Telangana, UP, Bihar, New Delhi and West Bengal.

• Urdu is a language of composite culture and interfaith bonds in India.

• Hindu-Muslim composite culture is a constructed concept of the 20th century that describes amalgams of Hindu and Islamic elements in South Asian culture.

• Article 51A(f) of the Constitution declares a solemn fundamental duty of every citizen to value and preserve the rich heritage of our composite culture.

• The Urdu speakers in India number almost 44 million. The largest numbers are in the state of Uttar Pradesh, followed by Bihar, Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra and Karnataka.

• These states together account for 85% of the national Urdu-speaking population.

• Delhi is the major centre of Urdu literature and publishing.

About National Council for Promotion of Urdu Language:

• It has become the biggest Urdu networking hub in the world.

• It started functioning as an autonomous body in 1996. It comes under the Ministry of Education.

• It is the National Nodal Agency for Promotion of Urdu.

• It has also been assigned the responsibility of promotion of Arabic and Persian.

Finance ministry asks PSB’s to monitor insolvency proceedings with respect to individual guarantors.

The Finance Ministry has asked public sector banks to monitor cases where insolvency proceedings could be initiated against individuals who are guarantors of corporate debtors that have defaulted on loans.

The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) provides for a time-bound and market-linked resolution of stressed assets.

The Code also provides for initiation of insolvency proceedings against personal guarantors of corporate debtors, even though the provision has not been used much by lenders to recover dues.

In an advisory, the Department of Financial Services has asked Public Sector Banks (PSBs) to consider putting in place a mechanism for monitoring the cases which may require initiation of individual insolvency process before the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) against personal guarantors to corporate debtors.

Recently, the NCLT's Mumbai bench allowed State Bank of India (SBI) to initiate insolvency proceedings against Anil Ambani as a personal guarantor to recover Rs. 1,200 crore dues from two companies promoted by him.

India reports an all-time record acreage of Kharif (summer sown) crops this year.

In what should spell good news for the rural economy, India has reported an all-time record acreage of Kharif (summer sown) crops this year despite the Covid-19 pandemic and flood situation in many states. The development indicates that the farm sector, which remained largely free of restrictions during lockdown, may continue to register growth despite a shrinking GDP.

India had reported its previous record for Kharif crop sown area in 2016 when the acreage was 1,075 lakh hectares. The country’s average sown area in the past five years has been 1,066 lakh hectares. The higher acreage can be attributed to a good monsoon rainfall and proactive measures, taken by farmers and governments during the lockdown period, to beat the impact of Covid-19 on agriculture.

NASA finds asteroid pass by at a closer distance to earth.

An asteroid with diameters between 22 and 49 metres will shoot pass Earth in a distance closer than Earth from the Moon on September 1, according to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).

NASA estimates the asteroid's relative speed at around 8.16 kilometres per second.

The last time asteroid 2011 ES4 fly by the Earth was visible from ground for four days. This time, it will be closer to our planet than before with an estimated distance of 1.2 lakh kilometres, closer than that of the Moon, which is 3.84 lakh kilometres away from the Earth.

The asteroid, listed as a potentially hazardous asteroid, was first discovered in the spring of 2011 and passes by Earth by Earth every nine years.

Djokovic wins master’s crown.

Novak Djokovic tied Rafael Nadal’s record by earning his 35th title at a Masters 1000 tournament, overcoming a sluggish start to beat Milos Raonic 1-6, 6-3, 6-4 in the Western & Southern Open final on Saturday and improve to 23-0 this season.

Djokovic was listless in the first set.It took all of 30 minutes for Raonic, a Canadian ranked No. 30, to take that set. But Djokovic asserted himself in the second set, breaking to lead 3-2 with a backhand passing shot and raising his right fist.

In the third, Djokovic broke twice more, and eventually the 33-year-old from Serbia was raising his arms to mark his 80th career title and 61st on hard-courts.

Focus on mains.

Genetically Modified Bt Brinjal.

Experts have slammed a recent move of the Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee (GEAC) giving its green light for bio safety research-level-II (BRL-II) field trials for Event 142, a new variety of genetically modified brinjal (Bt brinjal).

Why this is a Matter of Concern?

• This new variety of genetically modified brinjal was quietly given approval without any data in the public domain. This variety got approved even before the second season BRL-II and the bio safety report was out.

• This paved the way for crop developers and applicants to seek permission for commercial cultivation.

• There was no transparency in the manner when it came to reports regarding the bio safety of this variety of Brinjal.

What is a GM Crop?

• A GM or transgenic crop is a plant that has a novel combination of genetic material obtained through the use of modern biotechnology.

• For example, a GM crop can contain a gene(s) that has been artificially inserted instead of the plant acquiring it through pollination.

• The resulting plant is said to be “genetically modified” although in reality all crops have been “genetically modified” from their original wild state by domestication, selection, and controlled breeding over long Periods of Time.

What is the Legal Position of Genetically Modified Crops in India

• In India, the Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee (GEAC) is the apex body that allows for commercial release of GM crops.

• Penalty: Use of the unapproved GM variant can attract a jail term of 5 years and fine of Rs 1 lakh under the Environmental Protection Act, 1989.

About GEAC:

• The Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee (GEAC) is a statutory body constituted under the ‘Rules for the Manufacture, Use /Import /Export and Storage of Hazardous Microorganisms/Genetically Engineering Organisms or Cells, 1989’ notified under the

Environment (Protection) Act, 1986.

• It was formed as the Genetic Engineering Approval Committee and was renamed to its current name in 2010.

• It functions under the Ministry of Environment, Forests & Climate Change.

• The body regulates the use, manufacture, storage, import and export of hazardous microorganisms or genetically-engineered organisms and cells in India.

Why are Farmers Rooting for GM Crops?

• Reduced costs: Cost of weeding goes down considerably if farmers grow Ht Bt cotton and use glyphosate against weeds. In case of Bt brinjal, the cost reduces as the cost of production is reduced by cutting down on the use of pesticides.

Concerns:

• Environmentalists argue that the long-lasting effect of GM crops is yet to be studied and thus they should not be released commercially. Genetic modification, they say, brings about changes that can be harmful to humans in the long run.

ALL ABOUT ASEAN


 

endangered species

 








detailed syllabus for UPSC CSE

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