ABCD of UPSC by Vikas Dhayal
This channel is an initiative of CSE Topper. Now bringing to you a Free Mapping Series for Prelims. 🏅In Prelims 2025 8 out of 14 Questions of mapping were from this series. 🏅In Prelims 2024 13/15 Questions were solvable based on that year’s series
إظهار المزيد📈 نظرة تحليلية على قناة تيليجرام ABCD of UPSC by Vikas Dhayal
تُعد قناة ABCD of UPSC by Vikas Dhayal (@abcd_of_upsc) في القطاع اللغوي الإنكليزية لاعباً نشطاً. يضم المجتمع حالياً 63 010 مشتركاً، محتلاً المرتبة 2 639 في فئة التعليم والمرتبة 5 340 في منطقة الهند.
📊 مؤشرات الجمهور والحراك
منذ تأسيسه في невідомо، حقق المشروع نمواً سريعاً وجمع 63 010 مشتركاً.
بحسب آخر البيانات بتاريخ 03 يوليو, 2026، تحافظ القناة على نشاط مستقر. خلال آخر 30 يوماً تغيّر عدد الأعضاء بمقدار -311، وفي آخر 24 ساعة بمقدار 19، مع بقاء الوصول العام مرتفعاً.
- حالة التحقق: غير موثّقة
- معدل التفاعل (ER): يبلغ متوسط تفاعل الجمهور 16.76%. وخلال أول 24 ساعة من النشر يحصد المحتوى عادةً 5.26% من ردود الفعل نسبةً إلى إجمالي المشتركين.
- وصول المنشورات: يحصل كل منشور على متوسط 10 562 مشاهدة. وخلال اليوم الأول يجمع عادةً 3 316 مشاهدة.
- التفاعلات والاستجابة: يتفاعل الجمهور بانتظام؛ متوسط التفاعلات لكل منشور يبلغ 17.
- الاهتمامات الموضوعية: يركز المحتوى على مواضيع رئيسية مثل mapping, topper, governance, prelim, upsc.
📝 الوصف وسياسة المحتوى
يصف المؤلف القناة بأنها مساحة للتعبير عن الآراء الذاتية:
“This channel is an initiative of CSE Topper. Now bringing to you a Free Mapping Series for Prelims.
🏅In Prelims 2025 8 out of 14 Questions of mapping were from this series.
🏅In Prelims 2024 13/15 Questions were solvable based on that year’s serie...”
بفضل وتيرة التحديث المرتفعة (أحدث البيانات بتاريخ 04 يوليو, 2026) تحافظ القناة على حداثتها ومستوى وصول مرتفع. وتُظهر التحليلات تفاعلاً نشطاً من الجمهور، ما يجعلها نقطة تأثير مهمة ضمن فئة التعليم.
جاري تحميل البيانات...
| التاريخ | نمو المشتركين | الإشارات | القنوات | |
| 04 يوليو | 0 | |||
| 03 يوليو | +19 | |||
| 02 يوليو | +54 | |||
| 01 يوليو | +203 |
| 2 | Current Affairs Series for Mains-26
Topic-20- MSMEs
#GS3
Introduction
MSME Development Act
Budget 2025–26: Revised composite classification (Effective: 1 April 2025)
Category Investment Turnover
Micro ≤ ₹2.5 Cr ≤ ₹10 Cr
Small ≤ ₹25 Cr ≤ ₹100 Cr
Medium ≤ ₹125 Cr ≤ ₹500 Cr
Importance
1. Employment: 2nd largest employer; 7.47+ Cr MSMEs, 32.82+ Cr livelihoods (Economic Survey 2025–26).
2. Economy: 31.1% GDP, 35.4% manufacturing output.
3. Exports: 48.58% of exports (₹12.39 lakh Cr+).
4. Inclusive Growth: 51% rural MSMEs; reduces poverty & distress migration.
5. Formalisation: 7.85+ Cr units on Udyam/UAP.
Challenges
1. Credit Gap: ₹25–30 lakh Cr (RBI-IFC); 21.5% cite finance as biggest hurdle; 12% depend on informal lenders.
2. Missing Middle: 97.92% Micro, only 0.01% Medium .
3. Low Innovation: 5.8% innovate vs 24.9% (South Asia) & 36% (Global).
4. Export Paradox: 48.58% export share, but only 1.1% MSMEs export directly.
5. Delayed Payments: ₹21,108 Cr locked
6. Compliance Burden: 998 regulations, 1,450 annual compliances etc
7. Infrastructure & ESG: Poor logistics/power; EU CBAM may impose 20–35% tariff disadvantage.
Government Initiatives
1. CGTMSE: Credit guarantee ₹5 Cr → ₹10 Cr.
2. Micro Enterprise Credit Card: ₹5 lakh credit; 10 lakh beneficiaries.
3. RAMP: World Bank-backed; 5.5 lakh MSMEs for technology & digitisation.
4. PM Vishwakarma: 30 lakh artisans, 18 traditional crafts.
Way Forward
1. Cash-flow based lending using Udyam + GST + Banking APIs.
2. Automatic penal interest for delayed payments via MSME Samadhaan.
3. Common Facility Centres (CFCs), testing labs & R&D hubs.
4. Green finance for cleaner production (industries contributing 10–15% industrial emissions).
Conclusion
MSMEs are the backbone of Viksit Bharat@2047. Bridging the ₹25–30 lakh crore credit gap, boosting innovation, ensuring timely payments, and promoting green competitiveness will create globally competitive Champion MSMEs.
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| 3 | Current Affairs Series for Mains-26
Topic-21
#GS3
Climate finance
Introduction
Context: Developing countries disappointed with the enhanced New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG).
Legal Basis: Article 9, Paris Agreement – Developed countries must provide climate finance to developing nations.
Principle: CBDR-RC, Just Transition, Technology Transfer, Climate Resilience.
Major Climate Finance Mechanisms
Loss & Damage Fund (LDF): COP27, operationalized at COP28.
Green Climate Fund (GCF): COP16 (2010); supports NDCs.
Adaptation Fund, SCCF, LDCF (GEF-managed).
Key Trends
Global Climate Finance: US $1.46 tn (2021–22) (2X growth).
Mitigation Finance: 20% CAGR (2018–22); 54% private finance.
Adaptation Finance: 2X growth (2018–22).
Challenges
Funding Inequality: 45% finance to advanced economies; LDCs only 3%.
Adaptation Gap: Need US$215–387 bn/year; received only US$28 bn (2022).
Mitigation Bias: 90% climate finance directed to mitigation.
Debt Trap: 94% finance through debt/equity.
Finance Gap: Needs 5X increase to US$7.4 tn/year till 2030 (1.5°C pathway).
Access Issues: Bureaucracy, low capacity, poor transparency, weak private participation.
India's Climate Finance
Investment Need: US$6–8 tn (2015–30); US$10 tn for Net Zero 2070.
Key Initiatives:
NAFCC (2015)
National Clean Energy and Environment Fund (NCEEF)
RBI Sustainable Finance Group
NGFS Membership
Sovereign Green Bonds: ₹477 bn issued to finance green projects
Yes Bank issued India's first Green Bond (2015).
Way Forward
Blended Finance: Public + Private capital; Carbon Pricing.
Debt-for-Climate Swaps.
Climate Risk Insurance.
Triple MDB lending capacity by 2030 under NCQG.
Conclusion
A successful NCQG requires equitable and predictable climate finance, bridging the US$215–387 billion adaptation gap. Guided by Mission LiFE and Panchamrit, it can advance climate justice and a just, sustainable transition.
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| 4 | Current Affairs Series for Mains-26
Topic-19
#GS4
⚖️ Euthanasia
Euthanasia: Intentionally ending a life to relieve severe, terminal pain/suffering.
Passive Euthanasia (Legal in India): Withdrawing/withholding Life-Sustaining Treatment (LST) (e.g., ventilators, feeding tubes) allowing natural death.
Active Euthanasia (Illegal in India): Administering lethal substances (e.g., lethal injection) to deliberately end life.
⚖️ Evolution of Indian Judicial Jurisprudence
📌 1994: P. Rathinam Case
➔ Article 21 includes "Right to Die."
⬇️
📌 1996: Gian Kaur Case
➔ Overruled P. Rathinam.
➔ Article 21 protects life; suicide not a Fundamental Right.
⬇️
📌 2011: Aruna Shanbaug Case
➔ Allowed Passive Euthanasia.
➔ High Court approval under Article 226.
➔ Applied Parens Patriae Doctrine.
⬇️
📌 2018: Common Cause Case
➔ Right to Die with Dignity = Fundamental Right (Article 21).
➔ Legalized Living Wills/Advance Medical Directives (AMD).
⬇️
📌 2026: Harish Rana Case
➔ Clinically Assisted Nutrition & Hydration (CANH) = Medical Treatment.
➔ Withdrawal allowed under Palliative Care Plan.
Arguments in Favor
1. Ethical
Bodily Integrity – Negative liberty against forced medical invasion.
Doctrine of Double Effect – Intent = pain relief; death is secondary.
Patient-Centered Care – Replaces medical paternalism.
2. Constitutional
Article 21 → Right to Die with Dignity.
Recognition of Advance Medical Directives (Living Wills).
3.Socio-Economic
Prevents Medical Poverty due to catastrophic expenditure on futile treatment.
Arguments Against
1.Socio-Economic
Economic Coercion – Poverty may compel patients to choose death.
Rural Disparities – Weak implementation and monitoring of safeguards.
2. Clinical Risks
Infallibility of Medicine – Risk of misdiagnosis or future breakthroughs.
Miracle Factor – Possible recovery from Persistent Vegetative State (PVS).
3. Ethical & Professional
Slippery Slope – Right to Die may become a "Duty to Die."
Sanctity of Life vs. Quality of Life.
Moral Injury to Healers – Shift from Vitalism to Relativism, causing burnout.
Safeguards
1. End-of-Life Care Act – Codify law; protect doctors under BNS; replace term Passive Euthanasia with Withdrawing/Withholding LST.
2. ABHA Digital Integration – Link Advance Directives with Ayushman Bharat Health Account for a tamper-proof national registry.
3. Mandatory Palliative Pathways – ICU → High-quality comfort care.
4. District-Level Ethics Committees – Decentralized, multidisciplinary approvals; bridge rural-urban divide.
5. Retrospective Clinical Audits – State Medical Council audits to prevent malpractice and profit-driven ICU bed turnover.
6.Insurance Decoupling – Legal withdrawal of care should not invalidate life/health insurance claims.
7. Community Death Literacy – Normalize end-of-life planning and Advance Directives through public health and geriatric care.
🎯 Conclusion
✨ "True success lies in balancing the Sanctity of Life with the Right to a Dignified Exit."
By codifying safeguards, strengthening district ethics committees, digitizing Advance Directives (ABHA), and institutionalizing palliative care, India can protect patient autonomy, uphold human dignity, and prevent medical malpractice and economic coercion.
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| 5 | Current Affairs Series for Mains-26
Topic-20
#GS1/ GS3
🌡️ Heatwaves
Heatwave: A prolonged period of excessively hot weather that disrupts public health, environment, and the economy.
📏 Criteria Breakdown
1.🌍 Physiographic Limits
🌾 Plains: ≥ 40°C
🌊 Coastal Areas: ≥ 37°C
⛰️ Hilly Regions: ≥ 30°C
2.📈 Normal Deviations
🔥 Heatwave: +4.5°C to +6.4°C above normal.
🚨 Severe Heatwave: > +6.4°C above normal.
3.🌡️ Absolute Readings
⚠️ Heatwave: ≥ 45°C
🚨 Severe Heatwave: ≥ 47°C
🌍 Factors Responsible
1.🌿 Natural Drivers
☀️ High-Pressure Blocking: Stagnant high-pressure systems trap descending warm air.
🌊 Climate Variability: Atmospheric circulation changes due to El Niño.
🔄 Feedback Loops: Drought-induced dry soils reduce evaporative cooling, increasing land temperatures.
🏔️ Topography: Landlocked valleys and mountain-ringed basins trap heat.
2.🏭 Anthropogenic (Human-Induced) Drivers
🌍 Global Warming: Rising baseline temperatures due to greenhouse gases.
🏙️ Urban Heat Island (UHI): Concrete/asphalt absorb heat; limited urban green cover.
🌳 LULC Changes: Deforestation (↓ evapotranspiration) and wetland encroachment (loss of heat sinks).
❄️ Anthropogenic Heat Venting: Heat from AC exhausts, vehicles, and industries.
🌫️ Pollution Blanketing: Aerosols trap outgoing night-time infrared radiation.
⚠️ Impacts
1. Public Health
🌡️ Thermoregulation breakdown near 37°C.
🚑 Heat-Related Illnesses (HRIs):Heat exhaustion, Heatstroke, Organ stress
2.Macro-Economy
👷 Heat fatigue reduces labour productivity by up to 50% at 34°C (ILO).
📉 Potential 3–5% GDP loss.
3.Thermal Injustice
👥 Nearly 400 million informal/outdoor workers lack access to cooling.
4.Resource Strain
⚡ Increased electricity demand → Grid overload/blackouts.
🚰 Groundwater depletion.
🌊 Intensifies interstate water disputes (e.g., Cauvery dispute).
� Way Forward
📡 Early Warning Systems: Deploy predictive Heat Health Alerts (HHA) with automatic school and workplace schedule adjustments.
📜 Statutory Evolution: Include heatwaves in the Notified National Disaster List (16th Finance Commission recommendation) for dedicated funding.
👷 Labour Protections: Enforce Section 23 of the OSHWC Code for staggered work hours and employer-provided specialized PPE.
🏠 Thermal Infrastructure: Promote passive cooling (cool roofs, reflective paint) and urban greening (e.g., Telangana's Haritha Haram).
🗺️ Literacy: Map intra-urban heat hotspots and promote climate awareness through community outreach.
🌡️ Metrics Shift: Replace dry-bulb temperature with Humidity-Adjusted Heat Index for emergency triggers, especially in coastal regions.
🎯 Conclusion
🌍 Heat mitigation advances:
SDG 3: Good Health & Well-being
SDG 8: Decent Work & Economic Growth
SDG 10: Reduced Inequalities
SDG 11: Sustainable Cities & Communities
✨ Protecting vulnerable populations through resilient infrastructure, labour safeguards, and climate-smart urban planning is essential to achieving long-term climate justice.
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| 6 | Tracker for Current Affairs Topics: Free Current Affairs Series for Mains-26
GS-1
1. Super El Nino
GS-2
1. Governor’s role: Recent Presidential reference
2. Recent Trade Agreements
3. VB- GRAM-G
4. National One Health Mission
5. Anti Defection- recent developments, cases etc
6. Judicial Overreach
GS-3
1. Plastic Waste Management Rules
2. 16th Finance Commission
3. India’s EV Revolution
4. Solid Waste Management
5. Left Wing Extremism Elimination- reduced to 3 districts- recent updates
6. Gig Economy
7. Digital Public Infra
8. Shanti Act
9. AI Impact Summit and developments related to AI
10. Semiconductor sector
11. Disaster Management Act-2025
12. LWE more data
13. Ethanol Blending, E-20
GS-4
Topics covered till now with recent data, facts, cases, intro, conclusions and body point. Being updated with more topics being added. | 5 632 |
| 7 | Current Affairs Series for Mains-26
Topic-18
#GS3
⛽ Ethanol Blending Program (EBP)
📌 Context
Union Minister advocated 100% Ethanol (E100) for energy self-reliance.
Ethanol blending: 1.5% (2014) → 20% (2025) (13-fold increase).
🌾 Types of Ethanol
1G: Food crops (Sugarcane, Rice, Wheat, Maize, Sorghum).
2G: Agricultural residue, stubble, woody biomass.
3G: Algae (aquatic biomass).
4G: Engineered plants & microorganisms.
⚙️ About EBP
Launched: 2003
Definition: Mixing ethanol with petrol.
E20 Benefits: Better acceleration, ride quality, ~30% lower emissions than E10.
🚀 Need for Ethanol Blending
1. Energy Security
89% crude oil & 60% LPG imported.
Reduces dependence on Strait of Hormuz.
2. Decentralized Energy
Distilleries near farm belts → resilient domestic energy infrastructure.
3. Transition Fuel
Drop-in fuel for ICE vehicles.
Supports E20/E30/E100 & Flex Fuel Vehicles (FFVs).
4. Stubble Burning Solution
Promotes 2G & 3G ethanol from crop residue.
Helps tackle North India's winter pollution.
5. Circular Economy
Utilizes damaged grains & stubble.
India generates 78.2 MT food waste/year → Waste-to-Wealth.
⚠️ Challenges
1. Food Security
Food vs Fuel debate; diversion of food crops (FAO 2023).
2.High Water Footprint
1 L ethanol = 2,800–3,000 L water.
Sugarcane-based ethanol stresses groundwater (Maharashtra, UP).
3. Environmental Concerns
Water-intensive sugarcane affects aquifers.
4. Vehicle Compatibility
Older vehicles incompatible beyond E20.
E100: Lower energy density (45–55% less than petrol); engine corrosion risk
5. Supply Chain Issues
Limited feedstock (especially North-East).
Interstate movement restrictions
🏛️ Government Initiatives
🌱 PM JI-VAN Yojana: Support for 2G ethanol plants.
💰 Ethanol Interest Subvention Scheme (EISS): Dedicated Ethanol Plants.
🧾 GST reduced: 18% → 5% on ethanol for EBP.
🚛 Industries (Development & Regulation) Act amendment: Easier interstate movement.
✅ Conclusion
A phased transition can strengthen energy security, reduce oil imports, promote a circular economy, and advance India's net-zero goals(2070), while balancing food, water, and environmental security.
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| 8 | Current Affairs Series for Mains-26
Topic-17
#GS1
🌊 Super El Niño
📖 Definition
El Niño: Abnormal warming of eastern & central Pacific SSTs; warm phase of ENSO.
(Weak trade winds → eastward movement of warm water → disrupted Walker Circulation → altered global rainfall & temperature)
Super El Niño: Extremely strong El Niño with much higher SST anomalies and severe global impacts(NOAA – 33% chance of Super El Niño later this year)
Rarity: Only 5 Super El Niño events since 1950 (last: 2015–16).
⚙️ Key Drivers
Weak Trade Winds: Reduced westward push of warm water.
Record SSTs: March 2026 – 2nd highest on record.
ENSO Shift: La Niña → Neutral → El Niño transition.
Climate Change: Higher GHGs → greater ocean heat content → stronger El Niño.
⚠Impacts
🌍Global
1. Heatwaves, droughts, floods (2015–16: Australia drought, S. America floods).
2.Crop Losses eg. US maize, Brazilian soybeans, SE Asian rice.
3. Temperature Spike through Ocean heat release eg. 2015–16 among hottest years.
4. Trade Disruption eg. Panama Canal drought; traffic ~24 ships/day (2023–24).
5. Ecosystem Damage Great Barrier Reef bleaching, Amazon wildfires.
🇮🇳India
1. Weak Monsoon ie below-normal monsoon.
2. Higher wet-bulb temperatures; 2–3% productivity loss per 1°C WBGT above 20°C.
3. Crop Loss eg .Rice, pulses, oilseeds; 2023–24 agricultural output ↓ ~6.1%.
4. Lower reservoirs → reduced hydropower (10–12% power mix)
5. Water Stress: Reservoir depletion (Maharashtra, Karnataka).
6. Inflation: Food inflation ↑; rural demand & growth ↓.
📌Mitigation & Adaptation
📡 Early Warning: IMD & NOAA seasonal forecasts.
🥵 Heat Action Plans: Ahmedabad model.
🌱 Climate-Smart Agriculture: Millets, drought-resistant crops, drip irrigation.
💦 Water Management: Reservoir planning, rainwater harvesting (Chennai).
🤝 Global Cooperation: UNFCCC climate finance for vulnerable nations.
✅ Conclusion
By promoting climate-resilient agriculture, blue-green urban infrastructure, and dynamic grid optimization, India can build resilience against compounding climate shocks, ensure sustainable economic growth, and advance the vision of SDG 13 (Climate Action)
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| 9 | Current Affairs Series for Mains-26
Topic-16
#GS2
⚖️Judicial Overreach
Judicial overreach refers to courts exceeding their constitutional limits by intruding into the legislative or executive domain, disturbing the Separation of Powers.
❌Criticisms of Judicial Overreach
Violation of Separation of Powers – Weakens democratic legitimacy of elected institutions.
Lack of Expertise – Judges lack technical expertise in economics, science, administration, etc.
Absence of Accountability – Unelected judges are not answerable to the electorate.
Judicial Backlog – Governance-related interventions divert focus from millions of pending cases.
✅Judicial Activism (Justified Intervention)
1. Kesavananda Bharati (1973)
Basic Structure Doctrine.
Protected democracy, secularism, constitutional identity.
2. Maneka Gandhi (1978)
Expanded Article 21 to Due Process.
Laws must be fair, just & reasonable.
3. Vishaka Guidlines(1997)
Vishaka Guidelines on workplace sexual harassment.
Filled legislative vacuum till POSH Act, 2013.
4. Hussainara Khatoon Case(1979)
Right to Speedy Trial & Free Legal Aid under Article 21.
5. NALSA (2014)
Equality under Articles 14 & 21; led to Transgender Act, 2019.
🚫Judicial Overreach Cases
1. NJAC Case (2015)
Struck down 99th Constitutional Amendment.
Protected opaque Collegium System over Parliament's near-unanimous law.
2. Highway Liquor Ban (2016)
Ban within 500 m of highways led to revenue loss & job losses.
3. Shyam Narayan Chouksey (2016)
Mandatory National Anthem in cinemas.
4. 2G Spectrum Case (2012)
Cancelled telecom licences
5. Arun Gopal Case (2018)
Restricted firecracker composition & timings.
🎯 Conclusion
Thus ,Judiciary must observe Judicial Restraint and a Lakshman Rekha. Its role is to uphold the Constitution, not govern. Constitutional balance lies in checking, not replacing, the Legislature and Executive.
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| 10 | ❤️Batch-2 Ethics MIG-26 Starts on 3rd July 2026
Only for those hoping to write Mains this year and want to start working on mains early. People who have skipped 2026 won’t be able to keep pace if they haven’t written a mains so they should avoid.
A program helping a total of 71 rankers in CSE 2025, 70 rankers in 2024 and 51 rankers in CSE 2023.
Evaluations done by a team of select few toppers of the subject.
Starting 3rd July 2026.
Click here to check AIR-15- Simrandeep Kaur’s MIG Copy
Click here to check AIR-37 Sakshi Jain’s MIG-25 copy
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Click here to check AIR-66, Meenal Negi's MIG-25 copy
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Click here to check Testimonial of AIR-38, who improved his ethics score by 20+ marks taking help of MIG.
Check for all details in the pdf and text at @csetopper_helpline for enrolment at early bird discount now. | 6 590 |
| 11 | Important Data related to India eliminating Left Wing Extremism
#GS3 #Security
• India achieved the target of becoming Naxal-free on 31 March 2026.
• LWE incidents declined by 88%, from 1,936 (2010) to 234 (2025).
• Total fatalities reduced by 90%, from 1,005 (2010) to 100 (2025).
• LWE-affected districts reduced from 126 (2014) to about 7 by early 2026.
• Only 3 districts remained in the “Most Affected” category before the March 2026 declaration: Bijapur, Sukma and Narayanpur (Chhattisgarh).
• 31 districts are now classified as “Legacy & Thrust” districts, where violence has ended but focused developmental support continues.
• 597 fortified police stations have been constructed, compared to 66 before 2014.
• Police stations reporting Naxal incidents declined from 333 to just 16.
• 408 new CAPF camps have been established in the last seven years.
• 68 night-landing helipads have been constructed for rapid deployment in remote areas.
• 9,600+ mobile towers and 15,100+ km of roads have been built in LWE-affected regions, significantly improving governance and connectivity.
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| 12 | Current Affairs Series for Mains-26
Topic-16
#GS3
Disaster Management (Amendment) Act, 2025
🌍 Introduction
The Germanwatch Climate Risk Index (CRI) 2026 ranks India 9th globally among the countries most affected by extreme weather events.
The Disaster Management (Amendment) Act, 2025 seeks to mainstream Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) into developmental planning, in line with the recommendations of the 15th Finance Commission.
📜 Core Provisions of the Amendment Act
🏛️ 1. Centralization of Planning
Transfers the responsibility for preparing disaster management plans from Executive Committees to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) and State Disaster Management Authorities (SDMAs).
⚙️ 2. Expanded Institutional Mandate
Empowers NDMA and SDMAs to: Conduct comprehensive disaster risk assessments, Provide technical assistance, Recommend standardized relief guidelines.
🗃️ 3. National & State Disaster Databases
Mandates centralized databases containing: Type, frequency and severity of disaster risks and Real-time tracking of disaster fund allocation and utilization.
🏙️ 4. Decentralized Urban Governance
Enables States to establish Urban Disaster Management Authorities (UDMAs)
.
⚖️ 5. Statutory Status for NCMC & HLC
Provides statutory backing to: National Crisis Management Committee (NCMC) – Nodal body for macro-disasters.
⭐ Strategic Significance
1. Moves India's disaster governance from reactive relief to proactive risk mitigation and resilience building.
2. Aligns India's disaster governance with the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (2015–2030).
3. Addresses urban vulnerabilities such as Urban flooding, Heat islands etc
4.Encourages Artificial Intelligence (AI), Big Data Analytics and Advanced Early Warning Systems.
5. Strengthens coordination among Centre and states.
6. Uses standardized disaster databases to improve Risk assessment, Resource allocation and Policy formulation.
⚠️ Concerns
1. Establishing and operating UDMAs may impose significant financial and administrative costs on States.
2. Database effectiveness depends on Timely data collection, Accurate updating and Real-time synchronization.
3. Districts and municipalities face manpower shortages and technical expertise
4. lacks robust legal provisions for Community-Based Disaster Risk Reduction (CBDRM) and local preparedness.
🚀 Way Forward
1. Empower SDRFs and local authorities with greater financial and operational autonomy.
2. Integrate AI, GIS etc.
3. Climate-resilient urban planning, Strict enforcement of building codes and Green-blue infrastructure.
4. Expand Community-Based Disaster Risk Management (CBDRM) programmes.
5. Conduct regular awareness campaigns and mock drills.
6.Strengthen Accountability through Periodic preparedness audits.
🎯 Conclusion
The Disaster Management (Amendment) Act, 2025 marks a significant shift towards technology-driven, resilience-based, and proactive disaster governance, strengthening India's institutional capacity to address emerging climate and urban risks while advancing the vision of a disaster-resilient nation.
🚨Tap here to avail Compilations of GS-1,2,3 and 4 combined(covers all best copy snippets from 2019-2025)- Click here for samples
You can also share your suggestions for important current affairs topics for mains-26 at @csetopper_helpline as per your reading of the newspaper and analysis of PYQs. | 9 474 |
| 13 | Current Affairs Series for Mains-26
Topic-15
#GS2
⚖️Anti-Defection Law
📝Introduction:
Recently The SC issued a final three-week deadline to the Telangana Assembly Speaker to resolve pending MLA disqualification petitions under the Tenth Schedule
Introduced by the 52nd Amendment in 1985,(10th Schedule) to stop political defections for personal gain.
Further strengthened by the 91st CAA 2003, which omitted the provision related to a "split" (where 1/3rd members could defect) and retained only the "merger" provision.
📌Disqualification Criteria
1.Giving up party membership voluntarily after being elected on its ticket.
2. Voting or abstaining against party directions ("whip") without prior permission.
3. Independent Members joining any political party after election.
4. Nominated Members joining a political party after 6 months of taking the seat.
✅Exceptions
Merger: > Two-thirds of a legislative party members agree to merge with another party.
Presiding Officers: Speaker/Chairman resigning from their party for neutrality (can rejoin post-tenure).
⚠️Criticisms
1. No explicit deadline for the Speaker's decision.
2. Speakers from ruling parties use a "pocket veto" (delaying petitions for years) to favor governments.
3. Forces voting along party lines; suppresses internal democracy, conscience, and constituent representation.
⚖️Supreme Court Stance
Padi Kaushik Reddy v. State of Telangana (2025): Urged Parliamentary reforms for timely, fair adjudication and re-examining the Speaker’s role.
Keisham Meghachandra Singh v. Speaker, Manipur (2020): Mandated a 3-month deadline for Speaker decisions; suggested an independent tribunal to ensure neutrality.
Kihoto Hollohan v. Zachillhu (1992): Speaker's decisions reviewable for mala fide intent, procedural irregularities, or constitutional violations.
🛠️Strengthening Measures
1. Time-bound, transparent, and public-scrutinized proceedings (Dinesh Goswami Committee 1990).
2. Transfer authority to a permanent tribunal (retired judges/Election Commission) to eliminate bias.
2nd ARC: President/Governor should decide based on Election Commission advice.
3. Promote internal debates and curb top-down control (170th Law Commission Report).
4. Adopt the British convention where Speakers resign from their political party upon election.
5. Limit binding whips strictly to "Critical Motions" (No-Confidence Motions, Money Bills etc).
🎯Conclusion
The Anti-Defection Law must balance political stability with legislative independence. Time-bound decisions, independent adjudication, and stronger intra-party democracy are essential to uphold constitutional morality, representative democracy, and public trust.
🚨Tap here to avail Compilations of GS-1,2,3 and 4 combined(covers all best copy snippets from 2019-2025)- Click here for samples
You can also share your suggestions for important current affairs topics for mains-26 at @csetopper_helpline as per your reading of the newspaper and analysis of PYQs. | 7 290 |
| 14 | Resuming the Free Current affairs Series for Mains-26 from tomorrow.
Halted it for some time as telegram wasn’t accessible to many. | 8 979 |
| 15 | Information with updated schedule on GS-1,2,3 MIG-26
Answer writing begins from tomorrow onwards.
Final day for Mains and interview appeared discounts for the course today.
Text at @csetopper_helpline to reserve your seat today.
Click here for MIG Answers of Akansh Dhull(AIR 3)
Click here for MIG answers of Simrandeep Kaur(AIR 15)
Click here for MIG Answers of Sakshi Jain(AIR 37)
Click here for MIG Answers of Namita Soni(Scored 112 in GS-1) | 4 146 |
| 16 | Information with updated schedule on GS-1,2,3 MIG-26
Answer writing begins from tomorrow onwards.
Final day for Mains and interview appeared discounts for the course today.
Text at @csetopper_helpline to reserve your seat today.
Click here for MIG Answers of Akansh Dhull(AIR 3)
Click here for MIG answers of Simrandeep Kaur(AIR 15)
Click here for MIG Answers of Sakshi Jain(AIR 37)
Click here for MIG Answers of Namita Soni(Scored 112 in GS-1) | 9 680 |
| 17 | History MIG-26 is available for admissions for a Maximum of 50 seats
One of Highest scorer of History Optional , Garv Garg(AIR 192, 288 in Optional) was part of the same course last year.
Complete handholding and daily answer writing based test series.
Text at @csetopper_helpline to reserve your seats.
Details and schedule given in the Brochure
Offers available for CSE mains and interview appeared for first 25 Seats. | 9 181 |
| 18 | PSIR MIG-26 is available Now
Starting 30th June, ends 5th August.
All India highest scorer of PSIR Akash Kumar(AIR 101, 290 in optional) was part of the same course last year.
Includes Daily Answer Writing and Model answers and evaluations by a team of high scorers of PSIR
Flexible Submission of answers till 15th August 2026.
Offers available for CSE mains and interview appeared for first 25 Seats.
Text @csetopper_helpline to reserve your seat. | 6 193 |
| 19 | Pro Tip for improving scores in GS-1
As per what we know about the process of evaluation:
1. The GS-1 paper is evaluated by different experts of History, Sociology and Geography for different sections. This is the reason why it becomes difficult to score higher in GS-1 since even if you write really good answers of one section the positive impression doesn’t spill over to other sections.
2. You must therefore be ready to adopt subject specific approaches for History, Geography and Society questions.
For History questions:
1. To make your answers History like awareness of timeline of events should be clearly visible(mention rough dates/year in bracket for each event you’re mentioning).
2. Intro can be about backdrop of the subject asked for modern and world history, conclusion can be writing crux of analysis or showing importance of the topic asked.
3. For Art and Culture questions, give as many examples as possible for questions implicitly demanding so.
For Geography
1. Micro Maps of India and world and Diagrams where necessary. You should make it a habit that you don’t take a lot of space yet show additional information with proper labelling in maps and diagrams.
2. Certain keywords, facts on predictable topics like Water, Cyclone, Earthquakes, tectonics etc be presented. Flowcharts/diagrams are necessary in such questions to make a better answers.
3. The Geography answers must be visual as the subject itself demands explanations through maps/diagrams etc.
For Society Part
1. Sociological jargon/keywords must be used heavily.
2. Write recent case laws and observations made by Higher courts related to topics of Migration, Urbanisation, women’s issues etc to make your answers fresh and unique.
MIG-26 for GS-1,2,3 starts on 25th June. Mains and interview appeared discounts applicable till tomorrow
Text at @csetopper_helpline to reserve your seat in GS, Essay, PSIR and History MIGs. | 7 619 |
| 20 | 5 more hours for the additional discount on GS-1,2,3 MIG-26
You can text at @csetopper_helpline if you’re able to run it through vpn/vpn based browsers or can send a short email on vikasdhayal@csetopper.in for the same | 7 266 |
متاح الآن! بحث تيليغرام 2025 — أهم رؤى العام 
