Prelim Oriented
Anti-Defection Law

Context: Calcutta High Court disqualified Mukul Roy from West Bengal Assembly under anti-defection law for switching from BJP to TMC after 2021 election victory.
Anti-Defection Law
- Background and Evolution
- Frequent political defections in the 1950s–60s created instability, symbolised by the phrase “Aaya Ram, Gaya Ram.”
- To address this, the Anti-Defection Law was introduced through the 52nd Constitutional Amendment, 1985, adding the Tenth Schedule.
- It aimed to curb defections motivated by personal gain, applying to Parliament and State Assemblies.
- The 91st Constitutional Amendment Act, 2003 removed the one-third split provision, permitted mergers only with two-thirds support, and barred defectors from holding ministerial or paid political posts until re-elected.
- Grounds for Disqualification
- A member is disqualified for voluntarily giving up party membership, inferred from conduct.
- Voting or abstaining against the party whip invites disqualification.
- An independent member joining a political party faces disqualification.
- A nominated member joining a party after six months also faces disqualification.
- Role of the Presiding Officer
- Disqualification cases are decided by the Speaker or Chairman, whose neutrality has been frequently questioned.
- Exceptions
- No disqualification if two-thirds members support a merger with another party.
- Speaker/Chairman/Deputy Chairman may resign from their party to remain neutral without disqualification.
Criticisms of the Anti-Defection Law
- Democratic and Institutional Concerns
- The law imposes a curb on dissent, preventing lawmakers from voting by conscience.
- Party leadership uses the whip to suppress internal debate.
- Speaker’s bias and delays undermine neutrality since there is no fixed time limit for decisions.
- Structural Weaknesses
- The two-thirds merger provision encourages horse-trading and unethical political bargaining.
- Opaque communication of party whips leads to disputes on whether legislators received due notice.
Supreme Court’s Stance
- Ensuring Timeliness and Neutrality
- In Keisham Meghachandra Singh (2020), the SC directed that defection cases be decided within three months, and suggested an independent tribunal for neutrality.
- In Ravi S. Naik (1994), the SC held that the Speaker must act as a neutral adjudicator, and defections may be inferred without a formal resignation.
- In Kihoto Hollohan (1992), the SC allowed judicial review of the Speaker’s decisions for mala fides or constitutional violations.
- In Padi Kaushik Reddy (2025), the SC urged Parliament to reform the law and reconsider the Speaker’s role.
Way Forward
- Restrict disqualification to votes affecting government stability, such as confidence motions or budget votes.
- Transfer adjudication power to an independent body like the Election Commission, as suggested by ARC.
- Establish a clear statutory time limit to prevent strategic delays.
- Improve intra-party democracy, as recommended by the 170th Law Commission Report.
- Ensure transparency in whips by mandating public and digital notification.
- Strengthen enforcement through time-bound, transparent procedures, as proposed by several committees, including Dinesh Goswami (1990) and Halim Committee (1994).
PM-SHRI

PM-SHRI Scheme
- Centrally Sponsored Scheme (2022) establishing 14,500+ PM SHRI Schools by upgrading existing schools to showcase NEP 2020 implementation.
- Objective
- Create inclusive, nurturing environment promoting student well-being and safety, offering diverse learning experiences and quality infrastructure/resources.
- Funding Pattern
- 60:40 (Centre:State/UTs with legislature, except J&K).
- 90:10 (NE, Himalayan States, J&K UT).
- 100% Central (UTs without legislature).
- States must sign MoU with Education Ministry for participation.
- Duration
- 2022-23 to 2026-27; thereafter States/UTs maintain benchmarks.
- Key Features
- Pedagogy
- Focus on holistic development: Communication, collaboration, critical thinking.
- Experiential, inquiry-driven, learner-centered teaching.
- Competency-based assessments applying knowledge to real-life situations.
- Infrastructure
- Modern facilities: Smart Classrooms, Computer Labs, Integrated Science Labs, Vocational/Skill Labs, Atal Tinkering Labs, libraries, art rooms.
- Green initiatives: Water conservation, waste recycling.
- Eligibility
- Schools managed by Central/State/UT Governments, local bodies.
- All Kendriya Vidyalayas and Navodaya Vidyalayas (non-project, permanent buildings).
- Monitoring
- School Quality Assessment Framework (SQAF): Standards and best practices for excellence; regular evaluations ensure high standards.
- Pedagogy
- Selection Process (Challenge Mode – 3 Stages)
- Stage-1: Sign MoU with Centre.
- Stage-2: Identify eligible schools using UDISE+ data.
- Stage-3: Challenge method where eligible schools compete on criteria; States/UTs/KVS/JNV verify and recommend; Expert committee (headed by Secretary) makes final selection.
State Election Commissions (SECs)

About SECs
- State Election Commissions (SECs) conduct free, fair, and impartial elections to local bodies within a State.
- Appointment: The State Election Commissioner is appointed by the Governor.
- Article 243K(1): Grants SECs superintendence, direction, and control over electoral rolls and elections to Panchayats; similar powers for Municipalities under Article 243ZA.
- Article 243K(2): SEC tenure and appointment conditions are determined by State Legislature laws.
- Removal: SEC enjoys the status and protection of a High Court Judge and can be removed only through an equivalent process.
Issues with SECs
- Election Violence: SECs often blamed for poor oversight, e.g., violence during West Bengal panchayat polls.
- State Interference: Despite constitutional mandate, State governments interfere with SEC functioning.
- Lack of Impartiality: SECs sometimes work in alignment with ruling governments, raising accountability concerns.
- Serving Bureaucrats as SECs: SC observed that appointing serving officers is a “mockery of the Constitution.”
- Threat to Independence: Tenure and appointment controlled by State legislatures reduce autonomy.
- Conflicts with State Government: Example: Maharashtra SEC Nand Lal arrested (2008) in a jurisdictional dispute.
Reform Suggestions
- Supreme Court (2021): Serving bureaucrats must not be appointed as SECs to protect independence.
- 2nd ARC
- Appointment by Governor on recommendation of a collegium including CM, Speaker, and Leader of Opposition.
- Calls for institutional coordination between ECI and SECs for shared resources and best practices.
- Law Commission 255th Report: Proposes a permanent Secretariat for ECI under Article 324; similar structures recommended for SECs to ensure autonomy.
Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) in India

Syllabus: Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Health, Education, Human Resources.
Context
- WHO’s GLASS 2025 report notes AMR in India as a serious and escalating threat, with one in three infections resistant to commonly used antibiotics.
- India shows highest resistance rates globally, particularly across South-East Asia.
Key Findings of GLASS 2025
- High resistance in E.coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Staphylococcus aureus, especially in hospital ICUs.
- Major drivers include OTC antibiotic access, self-medication, incomplete courses, and environmental contamination from pharma units and hospital waste.
- Surveillance gaps persist as data predominantly originate from tertiary-care hospitals, excluding primary and secondary levels.
- India joined GLASS in 2017, but nationwide representation remains incomplete.
Limitations in India’s AMR Surveillance
- ICMR’s AMRSN/i-AMRSS and NCDC’s NARS-Net overrepresent high-end tertiary hospitals, inflating national resistance estimates.
- Lack of data diversity across rural and community settings creates skewed susceptibility profiles.
- Experts stress the need for nationwide lab networks, including 500+ NABL labs and peripheral microbiology strengthening.
Policy Gaps and State-Level Actions
- Slow implementation of the National Action Plan on AMR (2017); few states operationalised State Action Plans.
- Kerala remains the only significant performer, launching KARSAP (2018), AMRITH (2024), and moving toward full antibiotic literacy by 2025.
- Kerala’s antibiogram shows slight reduction in AMR trends after OTC restrictions.
Public Awareness and Stewardship
- Experts emphasise AMR literacy, early education on bacterial roles, and humanising the AMR crisis for public engagement.
- AMR remains “abstract” to the public; awareness campaigns must make it relatable.
Recent Interventions
- 2019 colistin ban in animal husbandry expected to reduce resistance, though long-term data are needed.
- Strengthening policy implementation, surveillance quality, and reporting networks is essential.
Developing New Antibiotics
- India approved four new antibiotics, while six candidates gained global approval.
- WHO reports 97 drug candidates (2023), up from 80 (2021), though true innovation remains limited.
- Only 12 of 32 traditional antibiotics meet WHO innovation criteria; only four target critical MDR pathogens.
Global and National Efforts
- The AMR Industry Alliance supports discovery, equitable access, and responsible manufacturing.
- India faces severe funding shortages, with sporadic innovation grants and limited policy support.
- Sustained investment, industry engagement, and multi-sector stewardship are essential to curb AMR.
Conclusion
- AMR threatens to make routine infections untreatable in India.
- Comprehensive action—surveillance expansion, rational antibiotic use, awareness, innovation, and funding—must be prioritised.
- Kerala’s example shows that State-led, multisectoral stewardship can reverse AMR trends.
Carbon Emission

Context
- The Global Carbon Project reports a slower rise in India’s carbon emissions in 2025, increasing by 1.4%, compared to 4% in 2024.
India’s Emission Trends
- India’s slower emission growth is attributed to a favourable monsoon, which reduced cooling demand.
- A strong rise in renewable energy use also limited coal consumption.
- India remains the third-largest CO₂ emitter, releasing 3.2 billion tonnes annually in 2024.
- India’s per capita emission is 2.2 tonnes, the second lowest among the world’s 20 largest economies.
- Coal remains the primary source of India’s fossil CO₂ emissions.
Global Emissions Scenario
- Global CO₂ emissions are expected to rise to 38 billion tonnes in 2025, increasing by 1.1%.
- China’s emissions are projected to grow by 0.4%, due to moderate energy demand and rapid renewable expansion.
- The U.S. (+1.9%) and the EU (+0.4%) are also projected to record emission increases.
Fossil Fuel and Land-Use Trends
- Global fossil CO₂ emissions in 2025 are driven by coal (+0.8%), oil (+1%), and natural gas (+1.3%).
- Emissions from permanent deforestation remain high at 4 billion tonnes annually, while reafforestation offsets only half.
Carbon Budget and Warming Limit
- Total CO₂ emissions have grown slower in the past decade (0.3% annually) compared to 1.9% earlier.
- The remaining carbon budget for 1.5°C warming is 170 billion tonnes, equal to four years of emissions at 2025 levels.
- Scientists warn that keeping warming below 1.5°C is now implausible.
PPV&FRA Act, 2001

About the PPV&FRA (Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers’ Rights) Act, 2001
- India’s first sui generis law protecting farmers’ and breeders’ rights, enacted in 2001.
- Implemented under the Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers’ Welfare; Authority functional since 2005.
- Aims to balance innovation in plant breeding with farmers’ seed sovereignty and equitable benefit-sharing.
Key Features
- Farmers’ Rights (Section 39): Farmers may save, use, resow, exchange, and share seeds of registered varieties. Compensation available for non-performing varieties.
- Breeders’ Rights: Exclusive rights to produce, sell, market, and license registered varieties.
- Registration (DUS Criteria): Varieties must satisfy Distinctness, Uniformity and Stability; 57 crop species notified.
- National Gene Fund: Supports benefit-sharing, conservation, and farmer rewards.
- Researchers’ Exemption: Registered varieties can be used for research, ensuring scientific access.
- Protection Measures: Safeguards community knowledge through National Register of Plant Varieties (NRPV) and provides legal remedy for biopiracy.
Plant Genome Saviour Awards
- A national award under PPV&FRA to honour farmers and communities conserving traditional plant varieties.
- Instituted under Section 39(1)(iii) to reward grassroots plant genetic resource conservation.
- Awardees (2025)
- Community Seed Bank (Telangana).
- Mithilanchal Makhana Producers’ Association (Bihar).
- CRS–Na Dihing Tenga Unyan Committee (Assam), among others.
ARISE Program

About ARISE
- New global program launched at COP30, Belém by the Climate Investment Funds (CIF).
- Aims to strengthen economic and institutional resilience in developing countries facing climate shocks.
- Initial funding announced by Germany and Spain.
Objectives
- Integrate climate resilience into national planning.
- Mobilise catalytic adaptation finance for vulnerable economies.
- Enable communities to withstand and recover from floods, droughts, storms, and other climate risks.
Climate Investment Funds (CIF)
- A multilateral climate finance mechanism providing concessional funds to developing countries.
- Established in 2008; hosted within the World Bank.
- Implemented through six Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs).
- Two Core Funds:
- Clean Technology Fund (CTF): Renewable energy, clean transport, energy efficiency.
- Strategic Climate Fund (SCF): Includes PPCR, Forest Investment Program, and Smart Cities initiatives.
- Blended Finance Model: Uses concessional capital to attract private and MDB investments for transformational climate action.
Mekedatu Project

Context: Supreme Court termed Tamil Nadu’s challenge to Karnataka’s Mekedatu reservoir project as “premature”, stating DPR being considered by CWMA and CWRC experts currently.
About the Project
- The Mekedatu Project is a proposed multi-purpose drinking water and power project by Karnataka.
- It aims to build a balancing reservoir near Kanakapura in Ramanagara district, about 90 km from Bengaluru.
- The project site is located 4 km from the Tamil Nadu border, at the confluence of the Cauvery and Arkavathi rivers.
- Project Features
- Karnataka proposes a 99-metre-high and 735-metre-long concrete gravity dam.
- It includes an underground powerhouse and a water conductor system.
- The dam is expected to store 66,000 TMC of water, supporting both drinking and hydropower needs.
- It aims to supply over 4 TMC of drinking water to Bengaluru city.
- The project cost is estimated at ₹14,000 crore, covering over 5,000 hectares of land.

