Sunday, January 17, 2021

comprehensive current affairs 17 jan 2021

Adultery can’t be decriminalised for armed forces, govt. tells SC

 

The Supreme Court on Wednesday admitted a petition filed by the Ministry of Defense (MoD) seeking to exempt armed forces personnel from the ambit of a Constitution Bench judgment of 2018 that decriminalized adultery.

About:

A three-judge Bench led by Justice Rohint on Fali Nariman said the plea had to be considered by a Constitution Bench because the original verdict, striking down Section 497 (adultery) of the Indian Penal Code, was pronounced by a five-judge Bench in September 2018.

The court referred the case to the Chief Justice of India to pass appropriate orders to form a five-judge Bench to clarify the impact of the 2018 judgment on the armed forces.

The government said in the petition that personnel of the Army, Navy and the Air Force were a “distinct class”. They were governed by special legislations, the Army Act, the Navy Act and the Air Force Act.

Adultery amounted to an unbecoming conduct and a violation of discipline under these three Acts.

These special laws-imposed restrictions on the fundamental rights of the personnel, who function in peculiar situation requiring utmost discipline.

The three laws were protected by Article 33 of the Constitution, which allowed the government to modify the fundamental rights of the armed forces personnel. The judgment of 2018 created “instability”.

It allowed personnel charged with carrying on an adulterous or illicit relationship to take cover under the judgment. 

Special Marriage Act1954.

Allahabad High Court ruled that Couples can choose to not publish 30-day notice under Special Marriage Act.

Court stated that provision for mandatory publication of notice would invade in the fundamental rights ofliberty and privacy.

Special Marriage Act deals with inter-caste and inter-religious marriages, and allows people to get married without giving uptheir religion.

It requires couples intending to marry under the law to give a 30-day notice period to a marriage officer of thedistrict in which at least one of the parties has resided in last 30 days.

Difficult four countries.

On January 11, Chatham House published a report titled “Global Britain, Global Broker”, the report sketches a bold path ahead for the UK.

The Chatham House report groups India on the other side of a “new divide in international affairs — between open societies where citizens have the capacity to fight for their rights and those where these rights are denied”.

Along with Russia, Turkey and Saudi Arabia, India is classed as one of the “difficult four” countries, destined to count among the UK’s “rivals” or “awkward counterparts” as it pursues its global goals.

The report also states that India is a reluctant supporter of liberal democracy, is “ambivalent” about human rights abuses within other states, and possesses “a long and consistent record of resisting being corralled into a ‘Western camp’”.

New Foreign Trade Policy to come .

Union Ministry of Commerce and Industry said that India’s new Foreign Trade Policy 2021-2026.

 

It will come into effect from April 1, 2021, for five years and will strive to make the country a leader in international trade.

The Parliamentary Consultative Committee of the Ministry of Commerce and Industry held a meeting on the subject New Foreign Trade Policy 2021-26.

It was chaired by the Minister of State for Commerce and Industry, and attended by Members of Parliament (MPs) and senior officers of the ministry.

It was informed that the District Export Hubs Initiative will form an important component of the new FTP.

The Department of Commerce through the Regional Authorities of Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT) has engaged with state/Union Territory governments to take forward this initiative in the districts and enable its implementation in a phased manner, with the objective of mobilizing the potential of each district of the country to achieve its potential as an export hub.

Income-Tax department brings out ‘faceless penalty scheme’

The income-tax department has come out with a ‘faceless penalty scheme’.

Under the scheme national and regional centres will be set up to facilitate conduct of faceless penalty proceedings in income tax cases.

National Centre will facilitate conduct of faceless penalty proceedings in a centralised manner and hasbeen vested with the jurisdiction to impose penalty.

As part of tax reforms, government last year launched faceless tax assessment scheme.

It aims to make tax administration free of any bias and to remove any subjectivity that personal interface between taxpayer and officials could introduce. 

National Innovation Foundation

Union Science and Technology. Minister dedicated to the country an innovation portal developed by the National Innovation Foundation (NIF).

The NIF, an autonomous body of the Department of Science and Technology (DST), is currently home to about 1.15 lakh innovations scouted from common people of the country.

In terms of domain areas, presently the innovations cover energy, mechanical, automobile, electrical, electronics, household, chemical, civil, textiles, farm/cultivation practice, storage practice, plant variety, plant protection, poultry, livestock management, nutraceuticals.

Union Minister emphasised on the growing importance of traditional knowledge, particularly herbal practices which stem from tribal areas, and is one of the key highlights of the innovation portal.

He said that this innovation portal will help institutionalise new ideas by common people towards finding solutions to local problems.

The innovation portal will create an ecosystem where the institutions will stand behind all those who can convert their ideas and innovations into entrepreneurship.

The innovation portal will help create local entrepreneurs out of grassroots ideas and will help bring ideas to the market.

Saturday, January 16, 2021

comprehensive current affairs 16 jan 2021

Sugarcane farmers demand timely payment of FRP, SAP from mills.

Farmers in Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh are gearing up to agitate against mills demanding timely payment of Fair and Remunerative Price (FRP) and State Advised Price (SAP).

The sugar millers claimed that higher FRP and SAP leads to rising cane price payment arrears.

Sugarcane farmers in Maharashtra have demanded that sugar mills must pay FRP in one go.

About:

According to the Indian Sugar Mill Association (ISMA), one of the main reasons for cane price payment arrears is high FRP set by the Centre.

Millers said that they are facing a tough financial situation, as there is no correlation between the revenue generated by mills and the cost incurred in the production of sugar.

The FRP is based on the cost of production of sugarcane and an element of assured profit as to cover the risk of sugarcane farmers.

According to ISMA, the mark up above the cost of production of sugarcane, at an all-India average basis, is as high as 100 per cent over the cost of producing sugarcane.

Millers claimed the Minimum Selling Price (MSP) has been revised only once back in February, 2019 to ₹31/kg. The government has increased the FRP for sugarcane from October, 2020 but not the MSP.

The Centre increased the FRP by ₹10 to ₹285 per quintal for a basic recovery of 10 per cent for the current season.

NITI Aayog, along with various States, have requested for a hike in the MSP to ₹33-36 per kilo, to facilitate timely payment to farmers.

 Some States including Uttar Pradesh declare SAP for sugarcane considering the cost of production and productivity levels. The SAP is generally higher than the FRP.

National Youth Day.

12th January is celebrated as National Youth Day to commemorate Swami Vivekananda’s birth anniversary.

He became an inspirer of India’s dormant national consciousness owing to his address at the Parliament of the World’s Religions, 1893.

He established the Ramakrishna Math in Belur (1897) to spread the teachings of Vedanta (monism) and to improve the social conditions of commoners.

Kalaripayattu.

Kalaripayattu is set to see a surge in popularity with the establishment of an academy in the Kerala capital.

Kalaripayattu is a Martial art which originated as a style in Kerala during 3rd century BC to the 2nd century AD.

There are also plans to link the academy with the Dance Training College that is also part of the Crafts Village.

Classes will be organised in such a way that training in Kalaripayattu will help those learning dance.

Other martial arts of India:

Tamil Nadu: Silambam&KuttuVarisai;

Manipuri: Thang-Ta (HuyenLanglon) andSarit Sarak ;

Himachal Pradesh: Thoda;

Punjab: Gatka;

Bengal: Lathi Khela;

Maharashtra: Mardaani Khel,Mallakhamba;

J&K: Squay.

India proposed an 8-point action plan at the UNSC.

Indian foreign minister S Jaishankar Tuesday proposed an 8-point action plan at the UNSC.

The objective is aims to ensure effective action against the menace of terrorism. Even without naming either Pakistan or China, the minister slammed the former for aiding terrorism and took a dig at the latter as he said that there can be no double standards on the issue of terrorism and that the practice of blocking requests for designation of terrorists "without any rhyme or reason" had to end.

China had earlier at least on 4 occasions blocked a UN ban on JeM chief Masood Azhar even though he headed an organisation already designated by a UNSC sanctions committee.

In an intervention at a UNSC debate on combating international terrorism, Indian foreign minister called upon the Council to first summon up the political will to combat terrorism, saying there must be no ifs and buts in this fight. "Nor should we allow terrorism to be justified and terrorists glorified.

All member States must fulfill their obligations enshrined in international counter terrorism instruments and conventions.

It was important to not countenance double standards in this battle as there are no good or bad terrorists. He said those who propagate this distinction have an agenda and those who cover up for them are just as culpable.

 He called for a reform of the working methods of committees dealing with sanctions and counter terrorism, saying transparency, accountability and effectiveness were the need of the day. He said blocking listing requests only eroded the collective credibility of the members.

It must firmly discourage exclusivist thinking that divides the world and harms our social fabric.

US, India differ in 3D printing adoption.

A new study finds that while US firms tend to acquire 3D printing technologies more than Indian ones, they fall behind in the actual application of these methods in production.

About the study:

The study, by Mengli Zhao and others from China’s Jiao Tong University, is based on a 2017 survey of over 600 professionals in product development and 27 firm managers.

The use of 3D printing in manufacturing is picking up as it improves sustainability.

The technology uses less energy and produces less waste than traditional methods. It also allows manufacturing to be done on demand, so less space is needed to store inventory.

One reason why US firms are keener on acquiring 3D printing technology is that they are more aware of it.

Only 30% of Indian executives in the survey knew about 3D printing, compared to 77% of American executives.

RBI forms working group on digital lending.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has constituted a working group on digital lending — including online platforms and mobile apps — to study all aspects of digital lending activities in the regulated financial sector as well as by unregulated players.

This is to ensure that an appropriate regulatory approach is put in place.

 Digital lending has the potential to make access to financial products and services more fair, efficient and inclusive.

The working group consists of both internal and external members.

The working group will evaluate digital lending activities and assess the penetration and standards of outsourced digital lending activities in RBI regulated entities; identify the risks posed by unregulated digital lending to financial stability, regulated entities and consumers; and suggest regulatory changes to promote orderly growth of digital lending.

It will also recommend measures for expansion of specific regulatory or statutory perimeter and suggest the role of various regulatory and government agencies. It will also recommend a robust fair practices code for digital lending players.

Scientists produce electron gas with ultra-high mobility.

Recently, Institute of Nano Science and Technology (INST), an autonomous institution of Department of Science and Technologyhave produced electron gas with ultra-high mobility. 2d-electron gas (2DEG) is an electron gas with ultra-high mobility, which can speed up transfer of quantum information and signal from one part of a device to another and increase data storage and memory.

Strong spin-orbit coupling and relativistic nature of the electrons in the 2DEG resulted in Rashba field.

Rashba effect consists of splitting of spin-bands in an electronic system, might play a key role in spin tronic devices.

Due to the high mobility of the electron gas, electrons do not collide inside the medium for a long distance and hence, do not lose the memory and information.

Thursday, January 14, 2021

comprehensive current affairs 14 jan 2021

 

 North East Venture Fund.

The North East Venture Fund (NEVF)is the first and the only dedicated Venture Fund for the North Eastern Region.

About:

It was introduced by the NDA government.

It is gaining popularity among Start-Ups and young entrepreneurs.

The Venture Fund Scheme launched by the Ministry of Development of North Eastern Region (DoNER).

It aims to promote growth of business ventures and skill development in the region.

The main focus of the fund is for mostly the enterprises involved in Food Processing, Healthcare, Tourism, segregation of services, IT, etc.

The investment size with the Venture Fund Scheme ranges between Rs.25 lakhs and Rs. 10 crores with a long-term horizon of five to ten years.

NHAI begins planning for Bharatmala Phase-II.

National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) has identified roads with a cumulative length of 5,000 kilometres tobe built under the Bharatmala Phase-II project.

Bharatmala Pariyojana under Ministry of Road Transport and Highways aims to construct around 65,000 km of national highways in the country.

 First phase of Bharatmala approved in 2017 included construction of 24,800 km of national highways, inaddition to ongoing 10,000 km of roads under National Highways Development Programme.

The project will improve connectivity particularly on economic corridors, border areas and far-flung areas.

India’s ‘Institutions of Eminence’ can set up campuses in foreign countries.

Indian universities and colleges with the Institutions of Eminence (IOEs) tag, will now be able to set up campuses in foreign countries with the University Grants Commission (UGC) issuing fresh guidelines on the same.

The Education Ministry had launched the IoE scheme in 2018 as per which 20 institutions were to be selected -- 10 public and 10 private ones -- that would enjoy complete academic and administrative autonomy.

The new guidelines have been issued in line with the new National Education Policy (NEP) as per which foreign universities will be allowed to set up campuses in India and top Indian institutes in foreign countries.

According to the norms, IoEs shall be permitted to start a maximum of three off-campus centres in five years, but not more than one in an academic year.

They will, however, require approval from as many as three ministries -- education, home and external affairs -- before they can venture out.

The IoEs shall be permitted to start an off-campus centre in an interim campus, subject to the condition that the permanent campus shall be ready “within a reasonable time period not exceeding five years”.

 

As Polar Vortex Stirs, Deep Freeze Threatens U.S. and Europe.

According to several western weather forecasts, Canada, Eurasia much of Western Europe and the US, spine chilling cold winter with heavy snow along the US East Coast will ensue.

The meteorologists have predicted that the polar vortex, which is splitting into two and swirling southward, will send the US and European countries into a chilling deep freeze.

A notorious swirl of ultracold winds around a low-pressure area due to the major stratospheric temperature spike expected to sweep across these countries causing an extreme dip in temperatures.

About:

A polar vortex is a low -pressure area- a wide expanse of swirling cold air -that is parked in polar regions.

The term “vortex” refers to the counter-clockwise flow ofair that helps keep the colder air near the Poles.

Dedicated Freight Corridors (DFCs)

Prime Minister has inaugurated a 351-km section between Khurja and Bhaupur in Uttar Pradesh for commercial operations of the Dedicated Freight Corridor (DFC).

Background of DFCs:

• The concept of Dedicated Freight Corridor (DFC) was mooted in 2006 to generate substantial capacity for freight traffic by developing separate tracks on identified routes.

 • The Dedicated Freight Corridor Corporation of India Ltd (DFCCIL) was incorporated as a separate company under the Ministry of Railways.

What is the DFC?

• Under the Eleventh Five Year Plan (2007–12), Railways started constructing a new DFC in two long routes, namely the Eastern and Western freight corridors.

• The section recently launched is part of the 1,839-km Eastern DFC that starts at Sohnewal

(Ludhiana) in Punjab and ends at Dankuni in West Bengal.

• The other arm is the around 1,500-km Western DFC from Dadri in Uttar Pradesh to JNPT in Mumbai, touching all major ports along the way.

• There is also a section under construction between Dadri and Khurja to connect the Eastern and Western arms.

Why is it Important?

• Around 70% of the freight trains currently running on the Indian Railway network are slated to shift to the freight corridors, leaving the paths open for more passenger trains.

• Tracks on DFC are designed to carry heavier loads than most of the Indian Railways.

• DFC will get track access charge from the parent Indian Railways, and also generate its own Freight Business.

What Trains will use the New Section?

• Freight trains plying on this section from now on will help decongest the existing Kanpur-

Delhi main line of Indian Railways, which currently handles trains at 150% of its line capacity.

• The new Section means on the Indian Railway mainline, more passenger trains can be pumped in and those trains can, in turn, achieve better punctuality.

 • Foodgrain and fertilizers from the northern region are transported to the eastern and Northeast regions.

• From East and Northeast, coal, iron ore, jute and petroleum products are transported North and West.

RBI Financial Stability Report.

Reserve Bank of India releases Financial Stability Report (FSR).

According to the report, Banks’ gross non-performing assets may rise to 13.5% by September 2021, from 7.5% in September 2020 under the baseline scenario.

The report said, If the macroeconomic environment worsens into a severe stress scenario, the GNPA ratio may escalate to 14.8%.

The stress tests indicate that the GNPA ratio of all scheduled commercial banks (SCBs) may increase from 7.5% in September 2020 to 13.5% by September 2021 under the baseline scenario.

Among the bank groups, public sector banks’ (PSBs) GNPA ratio of 9.7% in September 2020 may rise to 16.2% by September 2021 under the baseline scenario, it noted.

The gross non-performing asset (GNPA) ratio of private sector banks (PVBs) and foreign banks (FBs) may increase from 4.6% and 2.5% to 7.9% and 5.4%, respectively, over the same period.

In the severe stress scenario, the GNPA ratios of PSBs, PVBs and FBs may rise to 17.6%, 8.8% and 6.5%, respectively, by September 2021.

These GNPA projections are indicative of the possible economic impairment latent in banks’ portfolios, with implications for capital planning.

 Parler.

Apple, Amazon and Google have suspended the social network called Parler.

That because, the platform has not taken enough measures to make sure that content inciting violence remains in check.

What is Parler?

It is a social media platform that is considered to be an alternative to Twitter and is popular with conservatives.

The platform describes itself as being the world’s “premier free speech platform”. “Speak freely and express yourself openly, without fear of being “deplatformed” for your views,” the website of the platform says.

TiHAN: India’s First Testbed for Autonomous Navigation Systems.

• Union Minister of Education laid the foundation stone of ‘TiHAN-IIT Hyderabad’, India’s

first Testbed for Autonomous Navigation Systems (Terrestrial and Aerial).

TiHAN:

• TiHAN is an acronym for Technology Innovation Hub on Autonomous Navigation and

Data Acquisition Systems (UAVs, RoVs etc.).

• It is a multi-departmental initiative, including researchers from Electrical, Computer Science, Mechanical and Aerospace, Civil, Mathematics, and Design at IIT Hyderabad.

• It would focus on addressing various challenges hindering the real-time adoption of unmanned autonomous vehicles for both terrestrial and aerial applications.

 Why need TiHAN?

• One major requirement to make unmanned and connected vehicles more acceptable to the consumer society is to demonstrate its performance in real-life scenarios.

• However, it may become dangerous. Especially in terms of safety, to directly use the operational roadway facilities as experimental test tracks for unmanned and connected vehicles.

• In general, both UAV and UGV testing may include crashes and collisions with obstacles, resulting in damage to costly sensors and Other Components.

• Hence, it is important to test new technologies developed in a safe, controlled environment before Deployment.

Kolar Leaf-Nosed Bat.

• Recently, the Karnataka Forest Department has getting prepared to save the Kolar leaf-Nosed bat from extinction.

Highlights:

•Its scientific Name is Hipposideros hypophyllus

• It is endemic to India. It is presently known only from one cave in Hanumanahalli village in Kolar district, Karnataka.

• Habitat loss from land use change, hunting, and stone quarrying in the region.

• The Kolar Leaf-Nosed Bat was found in only two caves in the village of Hanumanahalli.

For reasons that are still unknown, the bat became locally extinct in one of the two caves.

• Its Protection Status IUCN Red List: Critically Endangered; Wildlife Protection Act, 1972:

 It has not been accorded legal protection under the Act.

Conservation Efforts:

• The government had notified the 30 acres around the caves as a protected area.

• Any development work here, including construction of new infrastructure, will need the permission of the National Board for Wildlife.

• The Bat Conservation Indian Trust has been awarded a grant to conduct further research on this species of bats.

• It is running an intensive awareness campaign in the nearby communities and they have come to understand the threat to the species and have started guarding this area from encroachers.

Concerns:

• Bats are one of the least studied mammals in the country, though there are 130 species in India.

• Bats are vital for the ecology as they are pollinators, their main diet being nectar.

• Bats also help in insect control and therefore, help in the protection of crops.

• They are very adaptable creatures and therefore can often be found near human habitation or even in urban settlements, which makes them vulnerable.

• They also have a bad image in the public eye, as carriers of diseases.

Monday, January 11, 2021

comprehensive current affairs 11 jan 2021

 

 

 World War Orphans Day is Observed on 6th January.

Every January 6th, World War Orphans Day is celebrated to raise people's awareness of the plight of war orphans and to resolve the painful conditions they face.

Highlights:

• According to UNICEF, children under 18 who have lost one or two parents due to any cause of death are considered orphans.

• According to UNICEF data, there were approximately 140 million orphans worldwide in 2015, including 10 million in Latin America and the Caribbean, 61 million in Asia, 7.3 million in Eastern Europe and Central Asia and 52 million in Africa.

• This day highlights the lives of children affected by the results of the war and aims to improve their future.

• According to UNICEF data, in the wars of the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries, nearly 50% victims were civilians, and this number gradually increased in 2001. Since that year, the figure has fallen by 0.7%. Per year.

• In World War II, about two-thirds of the victims were civilians, and by the end of the 1980s, this number had risen to 90%.

• Based on the above data, it is obvious that civilians in many countries around the world have become victims of wars. Among them, the child is the victim of silence. Millions of children grew up in war zones without family racial conflicts. Orphans are not only forced to take care of themselves, but also their young siblings (if any).

• Therefore, this day highlights the plight of orphans and reminds us that we must take care of every child.

Pravasi Bharatiya Divas Convention Organized on 9 January.

The PBD Convention is the flagship activity of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and provides an important platform for contact and contact with overseas Indians.

Although the Covid pandemic is still ongoing, the 16th Pravasi Bharatiya Divas Convention is being organized on January 9, 2021. Pravasi Bharatiya Divas (PBD) was celebrated on January 9th to commemorate the contribution of overseas Indian communities to the development of India (NRI).

Highlights:

• The PBD Convention is the flagship activity of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and provides an important platform for contact and contact with overseas Indians.

• Since 2003, the PBD Convention has been held every year. Since 2015, the format been revised to celebrate PBD every two years.

• The theme of Article 16 of the 2021 PBD Convention is: "Contribution to Aatmanirbhar Bharat".

• Since this day in 1915, Mahatma Gandhi, the greatest Pravasi, returned to India from South Africa, leading India’s struggle for freedom and changing the lives of Indians forever. Therefore, January 9th was set to celebrate this day. Days.

• These conventions provide a platform for overseas Indian communities to interact with their ancestral governments and local people to carry out mutually beneficial activities.

• These conventions are also very useful for connecting between overseas Indian communities living around the world and enabling them to share their experiences in various fields.

PMI Data Service Sector of India is at Slow Pace.

India's PMI was published by Japanese company Nikkei, but was written and constructed by IHS Markit, a global information provider based in London.

According to the latest PMI data, India’s service industry activity grew at a slower rate in December. The service industry PMI rose to 52.3 in December from 53.7 in November.

Purchasing Managers Index:

• The Purchasing Managers Index is an economic indicator that can indicate the business activities and economic health of the manufacturing and service industries.

• India's PMI was published by Japanese company Nikkei, but was written and constructed by IHS Markit, a global information provider based in London.

• Unlike the Industrial Production Index (IIP), which denotes changes in input or output.

• PMI is an investor sentiment tracking index, and it is more dynamic in nature. They come from a monthly survey of about 400 private companies.

• The variables used to calculate PMI are: output, new orders, employment, input costs, output prices, backlogs, export orders, purchase quantities, supplier delivery time, purchase inventory, and finished goods inventory.

• While Purchasing Managers Index >50 implies an expansion of business and economic activity, Purchasing Managers Index <50 means contraction.

World Food Price Index by FAO.

Food and Agriculture Organization - FAO is one of the specialized agencies of the United Nations (UN), leading international efforts to eradicate hunger globally.

Food Price Index of the Food & Agriculture Organization - FAO averaged 107.5 points in December 2020, which is an increase of 2.3 points from November 2020. This is the 7th consecutive month of growth.

Highlights:

• The food price index was established in 1996 as a public good.

• The Price Index is a public good in order to help monitoring the development of the global agricultural market.

• The FAO Food Price Index (FFPI) is a measure of the monthly changes in the international price of a basket of food.

• It measures changes in a basket of grains, oilseeds, dairy products, meat, and sugar.

• The Base period is 2014-16.

Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO):

Food and Agriculture Organization - FAO is one of the specialized agencies of the United Nations (UN), leading international efforts to eradicate hunger globally. On October 16, World Food Day is observed every year globally. Celebrate this day to mark the tenth anniversary of the founding of FAO in 1945. India issued a commemorative rupee coin of 75 denominations to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the founding of FAO (October 16, 2020). It is one of the United Nations food aid organizations based in Rome (Italy). Its sister institutions are the World Food Program and the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD).

 

 

India to become Fifth-Largest Economy in 2025: Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR).

India, which is world’s sixth-biggest economy in 2020, will again overtake the U.K. to become the fifth-largest in 2025 and race to the third spot by 2030.

India Specific Findings:

• As the manufacturer of the majority of the world’s vaccines, India is better placed than many other developing countries to roll out the vaccines successfully and efficiently.

• Efforts to liberalise the agricultural sector can deliver economic benefits. However, with the majority of the Indian workforce employed in the agricultural sector, the reform process requires a delicate and gradual approach that balances the need for longer-term efficiency gains with the need to support incomes in the short-term.

• The government’s stimulus spending in response to the COVID-19 crisis has been significantly more restrained than most other large economies, although the debt to GDP ratio did rise to 89% in 2020.

• The outlook for the economy going forwards will be closely related to the government’s approach to infrastructure spending.

• It forecasts that the Indian economy will expand by 9.0% in 2021 and by 7.0% in 2022.

• Annual GDP growth expected to sink to 5.8% in 2035.

 

• India will become the world’s third largest economy by 2030, overtaking the UK in 2025, Germany in 2027 and Japan in 2030.

Nanotechnology

Recently, a team of scientists has created a nanomicelle that can be used for effective drug

delivery to treat various cancers including Breast, Colon and Lung Cancer.

Highlights:

• Nanotechnology or nanotech is the technology that involves the manipulation of matter on atomic, molecular, and supramolecular scales. This includes particles of a scale of 1 to 100

Nanometers.

• Nanomicelles are formed when amphiphilic molecules assemble themselves to create a globular structure that is only around 5 to 100nm in diameter.

• Different agents are used to create Nanomicelles, however, they are usually made through surfactant molecules that may be non-ionic, ionic, and cationic detergents. Some nanomicelles may also be developed from a mixture of lipids and detergents.

• They are amphiphilic have a hydrophilic outer shell and a hydrophobic interior. This dual property makes them a perfect carrier for delivering drug molecules.

• The hydrophilic shell makes the micelle water soluble that allows for intravenous delivery while the Hydrophobic core carries a Payload of drug for Therapy.

• Once injected intravenously, these nanomicelles can easily escape the circulation and enter the tumours where the blood vessels are found to be leaky. These leaky blood vessels are absent in the healthy organs.

 

Nano Science and Technology Mission (NSTM):

• NSTM, launched in 2007, is an umbrella programme that aims to promote research and development in nanotechnology. The objectives include the promotion of research, infrastructure development to support the research, development of nanotechnology, human resources, and international collaborations.

Nano Science and Technology Initiative (NSTI):

• It was set up by the Department of Science and Technology (DST) in 2001 to focus on issues related to infrastructure development, research and application programmes related to nanomaterials including drugs, drug delivery, gene targeting and DNA chips.

International Blue Flag Hoisted at 8 Beaches Across the Country.

The Environment Minister has virtually hoisted the international blue flags in 8 beaches across the Country.

Blue Flag Certification:

• This Certification is accorded by an international agency “Foundation for Environment Education, Denmark” based on 33 stringent criteria in four major heads i.e.

Environmental Education and Information,

Bathing Water Quality,

Environment Management and Conservation and

Safety and Services on the beaches.

 

• It started in France in 1985 and has been implemented in Europe since 1987, and in areas outside Europe since 2001 when South Africa joined.

• Japan and South Korea are the only countries in South and south-eastern Asia to have Blue Flag beaches.

• Spain tops the list with 566 such beaches; Greece and France follow with 515 and 395, respectively.

Which are the 8 Beaches?

• The beaches where the International Blue Flags were hoisted are:

Kappad (Kerala)

Shivrajpur (Gujarat)

Ghoghla (Diu)

Kasarkod and

Padubidri (Karnataka)

Rushikonda (Andhra Pradesh)

Golden (Odisha) and

Radhanagar (Andaman & Nicobar Islands).

Iceberg A68a

 

 

Recently, Iceberg A68a has been floating off the Coast of South Georgia Island. This has prompted fears about the impact the iceberg could have on the island’s abundant wildlife.

Highlights:

• An iceberg is ice that broke off from glaciers or shelf ice and is floating in open water.

• Icebergs travel with ocean currents and either get caught up in shallow waters or ground themselves.

• The US National Ice Center (USNIC) is the only organisation that names and tracks Antarctic Icebergs.

• Icebergs are named according to the Antarctic quadrant in which they are spotted.

• Shaped like a closed hand with a pointing finger, the iceberg known as A68a split off in 2017 from Larsen Ice Shelf on the West Antarctic Peninsula, which has warmed faster than any other part of Earth's southernmost continent.

• On its journey, smaller icebergs have calved from the iceberg and the biggest section of the iceberg is called A68a and spans an area of roughly 2,600 sq. km.

Recently, the two icebergs that calved from A68a - have been named by the USNIC. They are called A68e and A68f.

• All the berg fragments are entrained in a fast-moving stream of water known as the Southern Antarctic Circumpolar Current Front.

• The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) is the most important current in the Southern Ocean, and the only current that flows completely around the globe.

• The ACC, as it encircles the Antarctic continent, flows eastward through the southern portions of the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans.

 

 

• It has been drifting towards the remote island of South Georgia, which is a British Overseas Territory (BOT).

• The fear is that if the iceberg grounds itself near the island, it could cause disruption to the local wildlife that forages in the ocean. Penguins and seals will have to travel farther in search of food.

• On the other hand, there are some positives of an iceberg being stuck in the open ocean, since icebergs carry dust which fertilises ocean plankton, which draws up carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

• The British Antarctic Survey (BAS) will launch a research mission to study A68a’s impact on the ecosystem.

• BAS is a component of the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC). NERC is part of UK Research and Innovation.

• It delivers and enables world-leading interdisciplinary research in the Polar Regions.

• Calving of Glaciers: Calving is the glaciological term for the mechanical loss (or simply, breaking off) of ice from a glacier margin.

• Calving is most common when a glacier flows into water (i.e. lakes or the ocean) but can also occur on dry land, where it is known as dry calving.

• Before calving occurs, smaller cracks and fractures in glacier ice grow into larger crevasses.

• The growth of crevasses effectively divides the ice into blocks that subsequently fall from the snout into an adjacent lake (where they are known as icebergs).

• Glacier Snout is the lowest end of a glacier, also called glacier terminus or toe.

Impact on Glacier Mass Balance:

• In lake-terminating (or freshwater) glaciers, calving is often a very efficient process of ablation and is therefore an important control on Glacier Mass Balance.

 

 

 1). World War Orphans Day is Observed on 6th January.

Every January 6th, World War Orphans Day is celebrated to raise people's awareness of the plight of war orphans and to resolve the painful conditions they face.

Highlights:

• According to UNICEF, children under 18 who have lost one or two parents due to any cause of death are considered orphans.

• According to UNICEF data, there were approximately 140 million orphans worldwide in 2015, including 10 million in Latin America and the Caribbean, 61 million in Asia, 7.3 million in Eastern Europe and Central Asia and 52 million in Africa.

• This day highlights the lives of children affected by the results of the war and aims to improve their future.

• According to UNICEF data, in the wars of the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries, nearly 50% victims were civilians, and this number gradually increased in 2001. Since that year, the figure has fallen by 0.7%. Per year.

• In World War II, about two-thirds of the victims were civilians, and by the end of the 1980s, this number had risen to 90%.

• Based on the above data, it is obvious that civilians in many countries around the world have become victims of wars. Among them, the child is the victim of silence. Millions of children grew up in war zones without family racial conflicts. Orphans are not only forced to take care of themselves, but also their young siblings (if any).

• Therefore, this day highlights the plight of orphans and reminds us that we must take care of every child.

2). Pravasi Bharatiya Divas Convention Organized on 9 January.

The PBD Convention is the flagship activity of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and provides an important platform for contact and contact with overseas Indians.

Although the Covid pandemic is still ongoing, the 16th Pravasi Bharatiya Divas Convention is being organized on January 9, 2021. Pravasi Bharatiya Divas (PBD) was celebrated on January 9th to commemorate the contribution of overseas Indian communities to the development of India (NRI).

Highlights:

• The PBD Convention is the flagship activity of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and provides an important platform for contact and contact with overseas Indians.

• Since 2003, the PBD Convention has been held every year. Since 2015, the format been revised to celebrate PBD every two years.

• The theme of Article 16 of the 2021 PBD Convention is: "Contribution to Aatmanirbhar Bharat".

• Since this day in 1915, Mahatma Gandhi, the greatest Pravasi, returned to India from South Africa, leading India’s struggle for freedom and changing the lives of Indians forever. Therefore, January 9th was set to celebrate this day. Days.

• These conventions provide a platform for overseas Indian communities to interact with their ancestral governments and local people to carry out mutually beneficial activities.

• These conventions are also very useful for connecting between overseas Indian communities living around the world and enabling them to share their experiences in various fields.

3). PMI Data Service Sector of India is at Slow Pace.

India's PMI was published by Japanese company Nikkei, but was written and constructed by IHS Markit, a global information provider based in London.

According to the latest PMI data, India’s service industry activity grew at a slower rate in December. The service industry PMI rose to 52.3 in December from 53.7 in November.

Purchasing Managers Index:

• The Purchasing Managers Index is an economic indicator that can indicate the business activities and economic health of the manufacturing and service industries.

• India's PMI was published by Japanese company Nikkei, but was written and constructed by IHS Markit, a global information provider based in London.

• Unlike the Industrial Production Index (IIP), which denotes changes in input or output.

• PMI is an investor sentiment tracking index, and it is more dynamic in nature. They come from a monthly survey of about 400 private companies.

• The variables used to calculate PMI are: output, new orders, employment, input costs, output prices, backlogs, export orders, purchase quantities, supplier delivery time, purchase inventory, and finished goods inventory.

• While Purchasing Managers Index >50 implies an expansion of business and economic activity, Purchasing Managers Index <50 means contraction.

4). World Food Price Index by FAO.

Food and Agriculture Organization - FAO is one of the specialized agencies of the United Nations (UN), leading international efforts to eradicate hunger globally.

Food Price Index of the Food & Agriculture Organization - FAO averaged 107.5 points in December 2020, which is an increase of 2.3 points from November 2020. This is the 7th consecutive month of growth.

Highlights:

• The food price index was established in 1996 as a public good.

• The Price Index is a public good in order to help monitoring the development of the global agricultural market.

• The FAO Food Price Index (FFPI) is a measure of the monthly changes in the international price of a basket of food.

• It measures changes in a basket of grains, oilseeds, dairy products, meat, and sugar.

• The Base period is 2014-16.

Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO):

Food and Agriculture Organization - FAO is one of the specialized agencies of the United Nations (UN), leading international efforts to eradicate hunger globally. On October 16, World Food Day is observed every year globally. Celebrate this day to mark the tenth anniversary of the founding of FAO in 1945. India issued a commemorative rupee coin of 75 denominations to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the founding of FAO (October 16, 2020). It is one of the United Nations food aid organizations based in Rome (Italy). Its sister institutions are the World Food Program and the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD).

5). India to become Fifth-Largest Economy in 2025: Centre for Economics

and Business Research (CEBR).

India, which is world’s sixth-biggest economy in 2020, will again overtake the U.K. to become the fifth-largest in 2025 and race to the third spot by 2030.

India Specific Findings:

• As the manufacturer of the majority of the world’s vaccines, India is better placed than many other developing countries to roll out the vaccines successfully and efficiently.

• Efforts to liberalise the agricultural sector can deliver economic benefits. However, with the majority of the Indian workforce employed in the agricultural sector, the reform process requires a delicate and gradual approach that balances the need for longer-term

efficiency gains with the need to support incomes in the short-term.

• The government’s stimulus spending in response to the COVID-19 crisis has been significantly more restrained than most other large economies, although the debt to GDP ratio did rise to 89% in 2020.

• The outlook for the economy going forwards will be closely related to the government’s approach to infrastructure spending.

• It forecasts that the Indian economy will expand by 9.0% in 2021 and by 7.0% in 2022.

• Annual GDP growth expected to sink to 5.8% in 2035.

• India will become the world’s third largest economy by 2030, overtaking the UK in 2025, Germany in 2027 and Japan in 2030.

6). Nanotechnology

.

Recently, a team of scientists has created a nanomicelle that can be used for effective drug

delivery to treat various cancers including Breast, Colon and Lung Cancer.

Highlights:

• Nanotechnology or nanotech is the technology that involves the manipulation of matter on

atomic, molecular, and supramolecular scales. This includes particles of a scale of 1 to 100

Nanometers.

• Nanomicelles are formed when amphiphilic molecules assemble themselves to create a

globular structure that is only around 5 to 100nm in diameter.

• Different agents are used to create Nanomicelles, however, they are usually made through

surfactant molecules that may be non-ionic, ionic, and cationic detergents. Some nanomicelles may also be developed from a mixture of lipids and detergents.

• They are amphiphilic have a hydrophilic outer shell and a hydrophobic interior. This dual

property makes them a perfect carrier for delivering drug molecules.

• The hydrophilic shell makes the micelle water soluble that allows for intravenous delivery while the Hydrophobic core carries a Payload of drug for Therapy.

• Once injected intravenously, these nanomicelles can easily escape the circulation and enter the tumours where the blood vessels are found to be leaky. These leaky blood vessels are absent in the healthy organs.

• Nano Science and Technology Mission (NSTM):

• NSTM, launched in 2007, is an umbrella programme that aims to promote research and development in nanotechnology. The objectives include the promotion of research, infrastructure development to support the research, development of nanotechnology,

human resources, and international collaborations.

• Nano Science and Technology Initiative (NSTI):

• It was set up by the Department of Science and Technology (DST) in 2001 to focus on issues related to infrastructure development, research and application programmes related

to nanomaterials including drugs, drug delivery, gene targeting and DNA chips.

7). International Blue Flag Hoisted at 8 Beaches Across the Country.

The Environment Minister has virtually hoisted the international blue flags in 8 beaches across the Country.

Blue Flag Certification:

• This Certification is accorded by an international agency “Foundation for Environment Education, Denmark” based on 33 stringent criteria in four major heads i.e.

Environmental Education and Information,

Bathing Water Quality,

Environment Management and Conservation and

Safety and Services on the beaches.

• It started in France in 1985 and has been implemented in Europe since 1987, and in areas outside Europe since 2001 when South Africa joined.

• Japan and South Korea are the only countries in South and south-eastern Asia to have Blue Flag beaches.

• Spain tops the list with 566 such beaches; Greece and France follow with 515 and 395, respectively.

Which are the 8 Beaches?

• The beaches where the International Blue Flags were hoisted are:

Kappad (Kerala)

Shivrajpur (Gujarat)

Ghoghla (Diu)

Kasarkod and

Padubidri (Karnataka)

Rushikonda (Andhra Pradesh)

Golden (Odisha) and

Radhanagar (Andaman & Nicobar Islands).

8). Iceberg A68a

Recently, Iceberg A68a has been floating off the Coast of South Georgia Island. This has prompted fears about the impact the iceberg could have on the island’s abundant wildlife.

Highlights:

• An iceberg is ice that broke off from glaciers or shelf ice and is floating in open water.

• Icebergs travel with ocean currents and either get caught up in shallow waters or ground themselves.

• The US National Ice Center (USNIC) is the only organisation that names and tracks Antarctic Icebergs.

• Icebergs are named according to the Antarctic quadrant in which they are spotted.

• Shaped like a closed hand with a pointing finger, the iceberg known as A68a split off in 2017 from Larsen Ice Shelf on the West Antarctic Peninsula, which has warmed faster than

any other part of Earth's southernmost continent.

• On its journey, smaller icebergs have calved from the iceberg and the biggest section of the iceberg is called A68a and spans an area of roughly 2,600 sq. km.

Recently, the two icebergs that calved from A68a - have been named by the USNIC. They are called A68e and A68f.

• All the berg fragments are entrained in a fast-moving stream of water known as the Southern Antarctic Circumpolar Current Front.

• The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) is the most important current in the Southern Ocean, and the only current that flows completely around the globe.

• The ACC, as it encircles the Antarctic continent, flows eastward through the southern portions of the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans.

• It has been drifting towards the remote island of South Georgia, which is a British Overseas Territory (BOT).

• The fear is that if the iceberg grounds itself near the island, it could cause disruption to the local wildlife that forages in the ocean. Penguins and seals will have to travel farther in

search of food.

• On the other hand, there are some positives of an iceberg being stuck in the open ocean, since icebergs carry dust which fertilises ocean plankton, which draws up carbon dioxide

from the atmosphere.

• The British Antarctic Survey (BAS) will launch a research mission to study A68a’s impact on the ecosystem.

• BAS is a component of the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC). NERC is part of UK Research and Innovation.

• It delivers and enables world-leading interdisciplinary research in the Polar Regions.

• Calving of Glaciers: Calving is the glaciological term for the mechanical loss (or simply, breaking off) of ice from a glacier margin.

• Calving is most common when a glacier flows into water (i.e. lakes or the ocean) but can also occur on dry land, where it is known as dry calving.

• Before calving occurs, smaller cracks and fractures in glacier ice grow into larger crevasses.

• The growth of crevasses effectively divides the ice into blocks that subsequently fall from the snout into an adjacent lake (where they are known as icebergs).

• Glacier Snout is the lowest end of a glacier, also called glacier terminus or toe.

• Impact on Glacier Mass Balance:

• In lake-terminating (or freshwater) glaciers, calving is often a very efficient process of ablation and is therefore an important control on Glacier Mass Balance.

• It implies combined processes (such as sublimation, fusion or melting, evaporation) which remove snow or ice from the surface of a glacier or from a snow-field.

• Glacier mass balance is simply the gain and loss of ice from the glacier system.

• Global warming has increased the frequency of this process.

• It implies combined processes (such as sublimation, fusion or melting, evaporation) which remove snow or ice from the surface of a glacier or from a snow-field.

• Glacier mass balance is simply the gain and loss of ice from the glacier system.

• Global warming has increased the frequency of this process.

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