Prelims Pinpointer 21-12-2025

Prelims 

Consumer Courts

Context: Consumer courts across India face severe delays with 5.43 lakh pending cases as of January 2024, undermining the speedy justice mandate under the Consumer Protection Act, 2019.

More in News

  • Section 38(7) of the Consumer Protection Act mandates complaint disposal within 3-5 months, but adjournments and backlogs cause years-long delays.
  • In 2024, consumer commissions received 1.73 lakh fresh cases but disposed only 1.58 lakh, creating a net increase of 14,900 pending cases.
  • Up to July 2025, 78,031 new complaints were filed while only 65,537 cases were disposed of, perpetuating the backlog crisis.
  • As of August 2025, 18 President posts and 62 Member posts were vacant in State Consumer Commissions, severely impacting court functioning.
  • At district level, 218 President posts and 518 Member posts remained vacant, contributing to mounting backlogs and delayed hearings nationwide.
  • Litigants face repeated adjournments spanning months, requiring long-distance travel with no hearing assurance, turning courts into endurance tests for consumers.

Consumer Dispute Redressal Machinery

  • The Consumer Protection Act, 2019 establishes a three-tier quasi-judicial consumer redressal system.
  • It provides exclusive alternative dispute resolution for consumer grievances.
  • Forums operate at District, State and National levels.

Three-Tier Consumer Redressal Structure

  • District Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission
  • Established by State Governments in each district.
  • More than one District Commission may be created within a district.
  • Ordinarily functions at district headquarters, with notified additional locations.
  • Composition
  • President + minimum 2 members, as prescribed in consultation with the Centre.

Appointment and Service Conditions

  • Central Government frames rules for qualifications and appointment procedures.
  • State Government determines salaries, allowances and service conditions.

Jurisdiction

  • Complaints where consideration does not exceed ₹1 crore.
  • Revised limit (2021): up to ₹50 lakh.

Powers

  • Power to review its own orders within 30 days for apparent errors.
  • Temporary jurisdiction adjustments allowed during vacancies.

State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission

  • Established by State Governments, ordinarily functioning at state capitals.
  • Can operate at other notified locations within the State.

Composition

  • President + at least 4 members, as prescribed with Central Government consultation.

Jurisdiction

        • Complaints where consideration exceeds ₹1 crore but does not exceed ₹10 crores.
        • Revised limit (2021): above ₹50 lakh and up to ₹2 crores.

Appellate Powers

        • Hears appeals against District Commission orders within 45 days.
        • Delay condoned upon sufficient cause.

Revisional Powers

  • Can intervene where District Commission exceeded, failed, or misused jurisdiction.

Administrative Control

  • Exercises administrative supervision over District Commissions.

National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (NCDRC)

      • Establishment and Nature
        • Established by the Central Government.
        • Ordinarily functions in National Capital Region, with regional branches permitted.
      • Composition
        • President + 4 to 11 members (2020 rules).
        • At least one woman member mandatory.
      • Appointment and Tenure
        • Appointed by Centre on Search-cum-Selection Committee recommendations.
        • Committee chaired by CJI or nominee Supreme Court Judge.
        • Tenure: 4 years or age 70 (President) / 67 (Members).
      • Jurisdiction
        • Pecuniary: Above ₹10 crores under 2019 Act.
        • Revised limit (2021): above ₹2 crores.
      • Appellate Jurisdiction
        • Appeals against State Commission and Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) orders.
        • Appeal period: 30 days, extendable on sufficient cause.

Revisional Jurisdiction

  • Supervises State Commissions for jurisdictional errors or irregularities.
  • Additional Powers
        • Declare unfair contractual terms null and void.
        • Review orders and set aside ex-parte decisions.
        • Transfer cases across States when required.

Appeal

  • Final appeal lies with the Supreme Court within 30 days.

Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA)

  • Established under Section 10 of the Act, effective from 24 July 2020.
  • Regulates consumer rights violations, unfair trade practices, and misleading advertisements.
  • Headed by a Chief Commissioner with other Commissioners.
  • Headquartered in NCR Delhi, with regional offices permitted.

Pecuniary Jurisdiction Comparison

  • District Commission: Up to ₹50 lakh (2021).
  • State Commission: ₹50 lakh–₹2 crore (2021).
  • National Commission: Above ₹2 crore (2021).

Significance

  • Ensures speedy, decentralised and consumer-friendly justice delivery.
  • Strengthens institutional accountability and uniform consumer protection nationwide.

Candida auris (C. auris)

Context

  • Scientists recently identified a genetic process that may improve treatment strategies against Candida auris.
  • The pathogen is emerging as a global public health threat, especially in healthcare settings.

What is Candida auris?

  • Candida auris is a fungal pathogen known for multi-drug resistance.
  • It can survive on human skin, inside the body, and in hospital environments.
  • It is capable of causing severe invasive infections in humans.
  • First identified in Japan in 2009, it has since spread globally.

Diseases Caused

  • Causes bloodstream infections, often associated with high fatality rates.
  • Can lead to meningitis, bone infections, and burn or wound infections.
  • Also associated with urinary tract infections, especially in hospitalised patients.

Mode of Transmission

  • Primarily reported from hospitals and nursing homes.
  • Spreads through contact with contaminated surfaces or person-to-person transmission.
  • Patients with recent hospitalisation, invasive devices, or existing illnesses are at higher risk.

How the Fungus Affects the Body

  • Asymptomatic colonisation: Lives on skin, mouth, or rectum without symptoms but spreads easily.
  • Invasive infection: Enters bloodstream or wounds, causing life-threatening illness.

Symptoms

  • Symptoms closely resemble other infections, making diagnosis difficult.
  • Common signs include persistent fever and chills unresponsive to antibiotics.

Mortality Rate

  • Estimated mortality ranges between 30% and 60%, depending on severity and treatment delay.

Treatment and Challenges

  • First-line treatment involves echinocandin antifungal drugs.
  • Some strains show resistance to all major antifungal classes.
  • In resistant cases, high-dose combination antifungal therapy may be required.

Significance for Public Health

  • Highlights growing challenge of antimicrobial resistance.
  • Requires strict infection control, surveillance, and early detection in healthcare facilities.
  • Ongoing research is crucial to develop new therapeutic strategies against resistant fungal pathogens.

Kavachi Volcano

Context

  • Scientists recently recorded rare footage of sharks living inside the Kavachi volcano.
  • The discovery challenges assumptions about marine survival in extreme volcanic environments.

Location and Setting

  • Kavachi is a shallow submarine volcano located in the South Pacific Ocean.
  • It lies south of Vangunu Island, part of the Solomon Islands.
  • The volcano is situated along the Pacific Ring of Fire, a highly tectonically active belt.

Geological Significance

  • Kavachi is among the world’s few active and visible undersea volcanoes.
  • Its eruptions are frequent but highly unpredictable.
  • The volcano has shown recurrent eruptive activity since 1939, when it was first documented.

Eruptive Characteristics

  • Eruptions typically generate:
    • Steam plumes rising above sea level.
    • Ash and lava emissions.
    • Discolouration of surrounding seawater due to volcanic gases.
  • Periodic eruptions have led to the temporary formation of volcanic islands.

Island Formation and Erosion

  • Newly formed islands are:
    • Small in size.
    • Often coated with solidified lava flows.
  • These islands are short-lived, as they fail to withstand strong wave erosion.
  • Consequently, the islands usually submerge again within short periods.

Ecological Importance

  • The presence of sharks inside an active submarine volcano highlights ecological resilience.
  • It indicates that marine organisms can adapt to extreme conditions, including:
    • Elevated temperatures.
    • Volcanic gases.
    • Acidic waters.
  • This finding expands understanding of life in extreme environments, relevant for marine biology and astrobiology.

Udanti Sitanadi Tiger Reserve


  • Context
    • Forest authorities arrested 53 persons for attempting encroachment inside Udanti Sitanadi Tiger Reserve.
    • Incident highlights pressure on protected forest land in central India.
  • Location and Establishment
    • Located in Chhattisgarh, forming part of the central Indian forest landscape.
    • Created by integrating Udanti Wildlife Sanctuary and Sitanadi Wildlife Sanctuary.
    • Notified as a Tiger Reserve to strengthen wildlife conservation.
  • Area and Physiography
    • Covers approximately 1,842 sq. km, making it one of the larger reserves in the region.
    • Contains 19 named hills and mountains.
    • Deo Dongri is the highest peak, while Atānga Dongar is the most prominent mountain.
  • Drainage System
    • Part of the Mahanadi river basin.
    • Major rivers include Mahanadi, with tributaries Udanti, Sitanadi, Indravan, and Pairi.
    • River systems support forest ecology and wildlife habitats.
  • Ecological Connectivity
    • Strategically located to connect Kanker and North Kondagaon forest divisions.
    • Forms a contiguous forest corridor linking to Indravati Tiger Reserve in Bastar.
    • Enhances gene flow and wildlife movement, crucial for tiger conservation.
  • Flora
    • Dominated by tropical dry and moist deciduous forests.
    • Sal (Shorea robusta) forms dense and extensive patches.
    • Other key species include Teak, Bamboo, Tendu, Mahua, Bija, and Harra.
    • High plant diversity supports rich faunal assemblages.
  • Fauna
    • Along with Indravati, serves as a critical refuge for endangered Wild Buffalo.
    • Supports tiger populations and associated prey base.
    • Other notable species include Indian Wolf, Leopard, Sloth Bear, and Mouse Deer.
    • Presence of rare fauna increases the reserve’s conservation value.
  • Significance
    • Important for tiger conservation, wild buffalo survival, and landscape-level connectivity.
    • Encroachment incidents underline the need for strict protection and enforcement.

Dark Eagle Hypersonic Missile System

Context

  • The U.S. Army and Navy completed integrated testing of the Dark Eagle LRHW.
  • Testing marks progress in operationalising U.S. hypersonic strike capability.

About Dark Eagle LRHW

  • A non-nuclear, ground-launched hypersonic missile system of the United States Army.
  • Designed for long-range strategic precision strike missions.
  • Missile development led by Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman.
  • Intended to counter Anti-Access/Area Denial (A2/AD) environments.

Operational Role

  • Penetrates advanced air and missile defence systems.
  • Suppresses long-range enemy fires with rapid response capability.
  • Enables time-critical strikes across contested theatres.

Key Technical Features

  • Maximum range: Up to 2,735 km, enabling deep-strike operations.
  • Platform: Mobile, land-based missile battery.
  • Launch system: Four Transporter Erector Launchers (TELs) per battery.
  • Missile load: Each TEL carries two missiles, total eight missiles per battery.
  • Propulsion: Solid-fuelled, two-stage rocket booster.
  • Warhead: Common Hypersonic Glide Body (C-HGB).

Hypersonic Glide Capability

  • Glide vehicle is unpowered but highly manoeuvrable.
  • Achieves speeds up to Mach 17, complicating interception.
  • Missile ascends to near-space altitudes before atmospheric glide.
  • Flies outside reach of most conventional air defence systems.

Strategic Significance

  • Strengthens U.S. conventional deterrence without nuclear escalation.
  • Enhances joint Army–Navy hypersonic strike integration.
  • Reflects growing global focus on hypersonic weapons competition.

Autophagy

Context

  • Recent research identified a new regulatory player in autophagy, opening avenues for disease therapies.

What is Autophagy?

  • Autophagy is a fundamental cellular process that removes damaged and unnecessary cellular components.
  • It functions as the cell’s internal recycling mechanism, maintaining cellular balance.
  • Cells break down defective organelles and reuse components for new cell structures.
  • Particularly vital for long-lived cells like neurons, which cannot easily regenerate.

Mechanism and Function

  • The autophagy pathway clears damaged proteins, organelles, and cellular debris.
  • It also helps defend cells against intracellular infections.
  • Failure of waste clearance leads to cellular dysfunction and degeneration.

Importance of Autophagy

  • Converts damaged cellular material into functional cellular components.
  • Removes non-functional structures that impair cellular efficiency.
  • Eliminates intracellular pathogens such as bacteria and viruses.
  • Plays a key role in aging processes and longevity regulation.

Autophagy and Diseases

  • Disruption of autophagy is linked to Alzheimer’s and Huntington’s diseases.
  • Impaired autophagy worsens neurodegeneration due to waste accumulation.
  • In cancer, autophagy shows a dual role:
    • Initially acts as a tumour suppressor by preserving genomic stability.
    • Later, cancer cells exploit autophagy to survive stress and sustain growth.

Tundra Ecosystem

Context

  • A recent Arctic Alaska study shows wildfires in tundra regions are the most active in 3,000 years.

What is the Tundra Ecosystem?

  • The tundra is a treeless biome found in polar regions and high mountain tops.
  • It experiences extremely cold, windy conditions with very low rainfall.

Key Characteristics

  • Low temperatures: Average ranges between –34°C and –6°C.
  • Short growing season: Only 50–60 days, with continuous summer daylight.
  • Permafrost: Permanently frozen subsurface soil restricting root growth.
  • Low precipitation: Minimal moisture, mostly in the form of snow.
  • Limited biodiversity: Harsh climate supports fewer species.
  • Major carbon sink: Slow decomposition allows long-term carbon storage.

Types of Tundra

  • Arctic tundra: Located north of the taiga in the Northern Hemisphere.
  • Alpine tundra: Found above tree lines in global mountain ranges.
  • Antarctic tundra: Present on sub-Antarctic islands and parts of Antarctica.

Flora and Fauna

  • Flora: Mosses, lichens, sedges, cotton grass, birches.

Fauna: Arctic foxes, snow geese, polar bears.

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