Prepare for UPSC with Confidence – Explore Free Quizzes, Study Material, and Expert Guidance!

30 October 2024 Daily Current Affairs

Key Outcomes:

  1. Defence Manufacturing: The C295 Aircraft Final Assembly Line was inaugurated in Vadodara by Tata Advanced Systems in collaboration with Airbus Spain. This is a landmark project in defence manufacturing and part of India’s “Make in India” initiative.
  2. Investment Facilitation: The establishment of a Fast Track Mechanism between India’s DPIIT and   Spain’s   Directorate   General of   International   Trade and   Investment to ease and encourage mutual investments.
  3. Consular Expansion: Spain announced a new Consulate in Bengaluru, while Indias Consulate in Barcelona was made operational, enhancing consular services and people-to-people ties.
  4. Cultural Cooperation:
    • Launch of the Cultural Exchange Programme for 20242028.
    • 2026 was declared as the IndiaSpain Year of Culture, Tourism, and ArtiPicial Intelligence, promoting greater cultural and technological collaboration.
  • Diplomatic Relations: Established in 1956, marking a long-standing diplomatic partnership.
  1. Defense Ties: India-Spain  Defence Joint  Working  Group facilitates defense cooperation, exemplified by the C295 aircraft manufacturing initiative in India.
  2. Economic and Commercial Growth: Spain is India’s 6th largest trade partner in Europe, with bilateral trade reaching US$ 9.9 billion in 2023.
  3. Multilateral and Global Cooperation:
    • Support for each other’s United Nations Security Council candidacies.
    • Commitment to addressing shared global challenges, including climate change, counterterrorism, and sustainable development.
  1. Import Dependency: India is 100% reliant on imports of minerals like lithium, cobalt, and nickel, which are crucial for renewable energy, electronics, and other sectors.
    • Demand for these minerals is expected to more than double by 2030.
  2. Significance of Critical Minerals: DeAinition: Critical minerals are those with high economic importance and supply risks. Shortages can significantly impact industries reliant on these resources.
    • Applications: These minerals are essential for:
      • Renewable Energy (solar panels, batteries),Electronics (semiconductors, devices),Medical Technology (MRIs, medical equipment),
  1. Strategic Vulnerability: Heavy reliance on speciAic countries, particularly China, poses a strategic risk.
  2. Price Volatility: Fluctuations in global prices can impact manufacturing costs and energy production.
  3. Economic Impact: Increasing import expenses could reduce Indias global competitiveness.
  4. Renewable Energy Ambitions: India’s clean energy goals and electric vehicle initiatives are at risk due to high import dependency.
  • Risk Mitigation: Develop strategies to reduce import dependency and encourage domestic mineral production.
  • International Investments: Explore partnerships with mineralrich, friendly countries like Australia, Chile, Ghana, and South Africa.
  1. Regulatory Reforms: Six critical minerals, including lithium, have been delisted from the Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Amendment Act, 2023 to enable private sector investment in exploration and mining.
  2. IndiaAustralia Partnership: India and Australia have established a Critical Minerals Investment Partnership to boost resource security.
  3. Khanij Bidesh India Limited (KABIL): Created to acquire overseas mineral assets, KABIL focuses on securing critical minerals through strategic international investments.
  1. Avoid Money Transfers Under Pressure: Legitimate law enforcement agencies will not demand immediate money transfers.
  2. Do Not Disclose Sensitive Information: Avoid sharing personal or Financial details over calls, especially to unfamiliar numbers.
  • Reported Loss: Citizens in India reportedly lost around 120 crore to digital arrest scams in the First quarter of 2024.
  • Origins: The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) notes that many perpetrators are based in Myanmar, Laos, and Cambodia.
  • Shortage of QualiAied Personnel: Limited trained manpower to implement cybersecurity measures.
  • Lack of Cyber Awareness: InsufAicient awareness and cybersecurity practices at both individual and organizational levels.
  1. Indian Cyber Coordination Centre (I4C): Coordinated by the MHA, it centralizes cybercrime control measures across India.
  2. CERTIn: Acts as the national agency for addressing computer security incidents.
  3. National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal: Part of I4C, this portal allows the public to report cybercrime incidents.
  4. National Tollfree Helpline Number 1930: Provides assistance in lodging cyber complaints.

  1. Greenhouse Gas Concentrations: As of 2023, globally averaged surface concentrations of:
    1. CO₂ is at 151% of pre-industrial levels,
    1. CH₄ at 265%,
    1. NO at 125% of levels recorded before 1750.
  2. Radiative Forcing Increase: Radiative forcing by long-lived greenhouse gases has surged by 51.5% from 1990 to 2023, with CO₂ alone contributing approximately 81% to this increase.
  3. Methane (CH₄): Atmospheric methane has witnessed its largest threeyear increase on record, mainly due to emissions from natural wetlands exacerbated by climate change.
  4. Impacts of Climate Change: Climate change is amplifying greenhouse gas emissions through:
    • Ecosystems releasing additional GHGs,
    • WildAires emitting more CO₂,
    • Oceans absorb less CO₂, which also contributes to ocean acidification.
  • Impacts of Climate Change: Climate change is amplifying greenhouse gas emissions through:
    • Ecosystems releasing additional GHGs,
    • WildAires emitting more CO₂,
    • Oceans absorb less CO₂, which also contributes to ocean acidification. Radiative Forcing by Longlived GHGs:
  • Definition: Radiative forcing measures the energy per unit area added to or removed from the climate system by greenhouse gases.
  • significance: GHGs, by trapping heat that would otherwise escape to space, disrupt Earth’s energy balance and cause global warming.

Context: The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and the Department of Biotechnology (DBT) have partnered to advance space biotechnology research. This collaboration aims to address critical challenges in space exploration, such as nutrient availability, waste management, food preservation, and health risks due to microgravity and radiation. The partnership seeks to explore how organisms adapt and function in space environments to support human survival on extended missions.

  1. Microgravity Research: Space-based microgravity enhances protein crystal growth, which improves our understanding of protein structures for more precise drug development.
  2. Radiation Research: BioSentinel, a NASA program launched in 2022 on Artemis I, is an example. It examines cellular repair mechanisms in response to space radiation, providing insights to protect human health.
  3. Environmental Monitoring: Studying microbes in space could enable bioremediation to convert lunar or Martian regolith into soil suitable for plant growth, supporting potential habitation efforts on these celestial bodies.
  4. Disease Modeling: Space biotechnology helps model diseases encountered during long-duration missions, addressing challenges like bone and muscle loss and radiation-induced cancers.
  5. Bioregenerative Life Support Systems:Developing self-sustaining life support systems in space—through waste recycling and resource regeneration—contributes to both space and Earth’s sustainability goals.
  • India: Key missions like Axiom4 and Gaganyaan involve components of space biotechnology to support human spaceflight and long-term missions.
  • Global Programs:
    • NASA: Space Biology Program
    • European Space Agency (ESA): Biolab
    • China National Space Administration (CNSA): Space breeding programs

Context: The Pradhan Mantri Vanbandhu Kalyan Yojana (PMVKY), launched in 2014, recently celebrated its 10-year milestone. It is a centrally sponsored scheme focused on the comprehensive development of tribal communities, aiming to enhance their socio-economic status and preserve their cultural heritage. The Ministry of Tribal Affairs (MoTA) implements the scheme, ensuring that the programs address the unique challenges faced by India’s tribal population.

  1. Pradhan Mantri Adi Adarsh Gram Yojana: Focuses on critical sectors such as road and telecom connectivity, education, health, and basic infrastructure development.
  2. Development of Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs): The Pradhan Mantri PVTGs Development Mission, launched in 2023-24, aims to provide essential services like housing, drinking water, sanitation, education, health, and nutrition for PVTGs.
  3. Support to Tribal Research Institutes (TRI): This initiative facilitates research and documentation of tribal cultures, helping to preserve and promote the heritage of tribal communities.
  4. Scholarship Programs: Includes PreMatric and PostMatric Scholarships to support the education of tribal students.
  5. Administrative Assistance: Support for Project Management Units to efficiently implement and manage various tribal welfare projects.
  • Scheduled Tribes (ST) make up about 8.6% of Indias population.
  • There are over 730 Scheduled Tribes notified under Article 342 of the Indian Constitution.
  • Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs): 75 identified PVTGs are spread across 18 states and the Union Territory of Andaman & Nicobar Islands.
  • Eklavya Model Residential Schools: Provide quality education to tribal students from grades VI to XII.
  • Pradhan Mantri Janjatiya Vikas Mission (PMJVM): Combines support mechanisms for marketing Minor Forest Produce (MFP) at Minimum Support Prices and promoting tribal products.
  • Development Action Plan for Scheduled Tribes (DAPST): In addition to MoTA, 41 ministries and departments allocate a portion of their budgets to programs specifically for tribal development.

Objectives and Functions of I4C:

  • Nodal Agency for Cybercrime: I4C is the central point for coordinating efforts against cybercrime across agencies.
  • Research and Development: It collaborates with research institutions and academia to develop advanced cyber tools and forensic technologies.
  • Legal and Policy Framework: Provides inputs for amending cyber laws to adapt to new technologies and ensures international cooperation through Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties (MLATs).
  • Cybercrime Prevention: Focuses on preventing cyber activities that promote terrorism and extremism.
  • Public Awareness and Assistance: Aims to enhance cyber hygiene among citizens and offers quick reporting channels for financial cyber fraud.

Key Components of I4C:

  1. National    Cybercrime    Threat    Analytics    Unit (TAU): Monitors and analyzes cybercrime threats at the national level.
  2. National Cybercrime Reporting Portal (NCRP): A 24/7 platform for citizens to report cybercrime complaints from anywhere in India.
  3. National Cybercrime Training Centre (NCTC): Provides training to officials, especially for state LEAs, to handle cybercrime cases.
  4. National Cybercrime Research and Innovation Centre: Drives research for indigenous cybercrime prevention tools.
  5. Joint Cyber Crime Coordination Team: Facilitates collaboration among states/UTs for sharing data and strategies.
  6. Cybercrime Ecosystem Management Unit: Promotes cyber awareness and hygiene to prevent cybercrimes.
  7. National     Cybercrime     Forensic     Laboratory: Supports LEAs with forensic investigations 
  • Cyber Crime Volunteers Program: Engages citizens to help combat cybercrime through volunteerism.
  • Citizen Financial Cyber Fraud Reporting and Management System: Enables near real-time reporting and response to financial cyber fraud.
  • National Toll-Free Helpline ‘1930’: Provides immediate assistance for online cyber
    complaints.
  • CyberDost: An initiative on social media to raise cyber awareness.

Objectives and Mandate:

  • Border Infrastructure Development: LPAI is responsible for creating, upgrading, maintaining, and managing Integrated Check Posts (ICPs) and other facilities at designated international border points.
  • Cross-Border Movement Management: It facilitates the seamless movement of passengers
    and goods by providing essential services at border points.
  • Security and Sanitation: LPAI ensures that all necessary security and sanitation measures
    are in place at these crossing points.
  • Appointments: The Chairperson and Members of LPAI are appointed by the Central Government.
  • Tenure: They serve a five-year term or until the age of sixty, whichever comes first.
  • Nodal Ministry: It operates under the Ministry of Home Affairs
  • Petrapole’s Significance: It is the largest land port in South Asia and serves as a major trade gateway between India and Bangladesh.
  • Passenger Movement: Facilitates the annual transit of over 2.35 million passengers, making
    it India’s eighth-largest international immigration port.

By streamlining infrastructure at border points, LPAI plays a crucial role in bolstering trade, commerce, and people-to-people connectivity with India’s neighboring countries.

  • Enhanced Responsiveness: Provides rice millers a convenient, digital platform for submitting grievances.
  • Improved Accountability: Ensures transparency in addressing grievances and fosters trust
    in FCI’s processes.

Key Features of the App:

  • User-Friendly Grievance Submission: Rice millers can easily register and submit grievances with a simple interface. Each grievance receives a Unique Grievance ID for tracking.
  • Real-Time Tracking: The app provides real-time updates on each grievance’s status,
    ensuring transparency and accountability.
  • Automatic Assignment and Fast Resolution: Grievances are automatically assigned to
    Nodal Officers, who can investigate through a Quick Response Team (QRT) or consult
    relevant divisions for prompt resolution.
  • Geo-Fencing for QRTs: For on-site visits, the app uses geo-fencing to verify QRT members’
    physical presence, ensuring efficient and accountable field operations.

Context: Recently, as part of the nation-wide
‘Act4Dyslexia’ campaign, key monuments in Delhi,
including Rashtrapati Bhawan, Parliament House,
North and South Blocks, and India Gate, have been
illuminated in red, the color for Dyslexia Awareness.

Causes of Dyslexia:

  • Genetics: Dyslexia is strongly hereditary, with children having a 30-50% likelihood of inheriting it if one parent has the condition.
  • Brain Development and Function: Differences in brain structure and function, particularly in areas responsible for language processing, are common in individuals with dyslexia.
  • Developmental Disruptions: Exposure to toxins, infections, or other factors during fetal development can impact brain function and may increase the risk of dyslexia.

Legal Recognition and Support in India:

  • Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016: Dyslexia and other specific learning disabilities are officially recognized, entitling individuals to equal opportunities in education, employment, and life.
  • National Education Policy (NEP) 2020: Emphasizes inclusive education by focusing
    on early identification, teacher training, and accommodations to support students
    with dyslexia.

Share:

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

1. India: Leading the World in Remittances in 2024 Context: India has retained its position as the largest recipient of...
1. India’s Treatment of Rohingya Detainees: A Human Rights Concern Context: A recent report has highlighted serious violations of constitutional...
1. One Candidate, Multiple Constituencies: A Democratic Dilemma Context: Amid the heated debates surrounding Indian politics, one critical issue often...