Tuesday, 26 November 2019

India Ranked 44th In 2019 Nomuras Food Vulnerability Index - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

India Ranked 44th In 2019 Nomuras Food Vulnerability Index.

Nomura’s Food Vulnerability Index (NFVI) ranks countries based on their exposure to large swings in food prices. India ranked 44 out of 110 countries; a higher rank is worse. At 4.6%, India’s retail inflation for October touched a 16-month high because of the jump in food prices.

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NFVI has three components: (1) the country’s GDP per person, (2) the share of food in household consumption, and (3) the net food imports. The lower per capita GDP, a higher percentage of food in household consumption, and top net food imports would make a country more vulnerable to spikes in food prices. Around 50 countries most vulnerable to food price surges in the coming months mostly belong to the Emerging Market group. The top 50 together account for almost 60 percent of the global population.
India ranked 44 out of 110 countries; a higher rank is worse. At 4.6%, India’s retail inflation for October touched a 16-month high because of the jump in food prices. Food inflation grew by almost 8% – nearly double the rate of overall retail inflation. The essential items that contributed to this rise were pulses (inflation rate 12%) and vegetables (inflation rate 26%) and fish and meat (inflation rate 10%), the Asia-headquartered financial services group with an integrated global network spanning over 30 countries.


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India Ranked 44th In 2019 Nomuras Food Vulnerability Index.

Centre tables SPG (Amendment) Bill in Lok Sabha - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

Centre tables SPG (Amendment) Bill in Lok Sabha.

• The bill proposes to provide the SPG cover to the PM and his immediate family residing with him at his official residence
• SPG (Amendment) Bill was tabled in Lok Sabha in the wake of mounting protests by Congress over the decision to revoke Gandhis’ security cover
Amid a row over the Centre’s decision to revoke special protection group (SPG) cover from Congress president Sonia Gandhi and senior party leaders Rahul Gandhi, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, the Union home ministry on Monday tabled the Special Protection Group (Amendment) Bill, 2019 in the Lok Sabha.
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Minister of state for home affairs G.Kishen Reddy tabled the bill in the lower house in the wake of mounting protests by the Congress party over the decision to revoke the Gandhis’ security cover. The bill has yet to be taken up for consideration and passage.
The proposed amendments – if passed by both the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha – will pave the way for just the Prime Minister and his “immediate family residing with him at his official residence" to be given SPG cover.
At the same time, it also grants SPG cover to any former prime minister and members of his immediate family “residing with him at the residence allotted to him for a period of five years, from the date he ceases to hold the office of prime minister."
The Union home ministry, earlier this month, withdrew the SPG cover of Congress president Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra. They will now be extended Z-plus protection by the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF).
The decision comes just three months after the Centre pulled out the SPG cover of former prime minister Manmohan Singh. Now, Prime Minister Narendra Modi is the only SPG protectee.
The decision to withdraw the security provided by the SPG, the country’s highest grade of protection, is taken only after a review involving the cabinet secretariat and the ministry of home affairs, with inputs from various intelligence agencies.
The SPG is an armed force that provides proximate security to the prime minister. Following the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi in 1991, the SPG Act was amended to provide protection to all former prime ministers and their families for at least 10 years. In 2002, this was amended again to make a provision for an annual review of SPG protectees and threat assessments.


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Centre tables SPG (Amendment) Bill in Lok Sabha.

25% of rural India's households don't have access to sanitation: NSO survey - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

25% of rural India's households don't have access to sanitation: NSO survey.

• Hand pumps major source of drinking water in rural India, reveals a report by the National Statistical Office
• The report has also highlighted that even after having access to latrines, people are not using them
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While a quarter of population still don't have access to sanitation facilities, hand pumps continue to be the major source of drinking water for households in rural areas, a report by the National Statistical Office (NSO), Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation has said.
According to the survey, about 42.9% of the households in the rural areas used hand pump as the principal source of drinking water and about 40.9% of the households in the urban areas used piped water into dwelling as the principal source of drinking water.
“About 48.6% of the households in the rural and about 57.5% in the urban areas had exclusive access to principal source of drinking water. About 87.6% of the households in the rural and about 90.9% in the urban areas had sufficient drinking water throughout the year from the principal source. About 58.2% of the households in the rural and about 80.7% in the urban areas had drinking water facilities within the household premises," the report said.
About 94.5% of the households in the rural and about 97.4% in the urban areas used ‘improved source of drinking water’ viz. bottled water, piped water into dwelling, piped water to yard/plot, piped water from neighbour, public tap/standpipe, tube well, hand pump, protected well, public tanker truck, private tanker truck, protected spring and rainwater collection, he report said adding that about 51.4% of the households in the rural and about 72.0% in the urban areas used improved source of drinking water, sufficiently available throughout the year located in the premises.
The ministry conducted the survey on household social consumption related to Drinking Water, Sanitation, Hygiene and Housing Condition as a part of 76th round of National Sample Survey (NSS). Data was collected from 1,06,838 households--63,736 in rural areas and 43,102 in urban areas--from 5,378 sample villages in rural areas and 3,614 sample Urban Frame Survey (UFS) blocks in urban areas following a scientific survey methodology.
The main objective of the survey was to collect information on facilities of drinking water, sanitation along with housing facilities available to the households and the micro environment surrounding the houses which are important determinants of overall quality of living condition of the people.
“It’s encouraging to see significant increase in access to improved water supply sources and use of toilets by families especially women. Bigger challenges remain on about waste water disposal both in rural and urban areas, which provide ideal breeding ground for insects. Sewer connections are still not available at many urban areas.
Report is a wakeup call for undertaking for design and implementation of appropriate programs and intensified action in areas such as small scale waste water management systems in rural areas," said Dinesh Aggarwal, Technical health advisor, IPE Global.
The survey has revealed that a quarter of rural households still do not have access to sanitation. While about 71.3% of the households in the rural and about 96.2% in the urban areas had access to latrines, the report said adding that there may be respondent bias in the reporting of access to latrine as question on benefits received by the households from government schemes was asked prior to the question on access of households to latrine.
Among the households which had access to latrine, about 94.7% of the males and 95.7% of the females in the rural areas used latrine regularly while about 98.0% of the males and 98.1% of the females in the urban areas used latrine regularly, report said. (Source: Livemint)


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25% of rural India's households don't have access to sanitation: NSO survey.

Greenhouse gases surge to record in 2018, exceeding 10-yr average rate: U.N. - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

Greenhouse gases surge to record in 2018, exceeding 10-yr average rate: U.N..

This continuing trend means that future generations will be confronted with increasingly severe impacts of climate change.

Greenhouse gases in the atmosphere hit a new record in 2018, rising faster than the average rise of the last decade and cementing increasingly damaging weather patterns, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said on Monday.
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Greenhouse gases in the atmosphere hit a new record in 2018, rising faster than the average rise of the last decade and cementing increasingly damaging weather patterns, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said on Monday.
The U.N. agency’s Greenhouse Gas Bulletin is one of a series of studies to be published ahead of a U.N. climate change summit being held in Madrid next week, and is expected to guide discussions there. It measures the atmospheric concentration of the gases responsible for global warming, rather than emissions.
“There is no sign of a slowdown, let alone a decline, in greenhouse gases’ concentration in the atmosphere — despite all the commitments under the Paris Agreement on Climate Change,” said WMO Secretary-General Petteri Taalas.
“This continuing long-term trend means that future generations will be confronted with increasingly severe impacts of climate change, including rising temperatures, more extreme weather, water stress, sea level rise and disruption to marine and land ecosystems.”
The concentration of carbon dioxide, a product of burning fossil fuels that is the biggest contributor to global warming, surged from 405.5 parts per million in 2017 to 407.8 ppm in 2018, exceeding the average rate of increase of 2.06 ppm in 2005-2015, the WMO report said.
Irrespective of future policy, carbon dioxide stays in the atmosphere for centuries, locking in warming trends.
“It is worth recalling that the last time the Earth experienced a comparable concentration of CO2 was 3-5 million years ago,” Mr. Taalas said.
Levels of methane — a much more potent greenhouse gas than CO2 — and nitrous oxide also hit new records, the report said.
The U.N. Environment Programme’s annual “emissions gap” report, due on Tuesday, assesses whether countries emissions reduction policies are enough. (Source: The Hindu)


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Greenhouse gases surge to record in 2018, exceeding 10-yr average rate: U.N..

Sunday, 24 November 2019

Bill to replace ordinance banning production, sale of e-cigarettes introduced in Lok Sabha - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

Bill to replace ordinance banning production, sale of e-cigarettes introduced in Lok Sabha.

The storage of e-cigarettes shall also be punishable with imprisonment.

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A bill to ban production, import and sale of electronic cigarettes and similar products was introduced in the Lok Sabha on Friday.
The Prohibition of Electronic Cigarettes (Production, Manufacture, Import, Export, Transport, Sale, Distribution, Storage and Advertisement) Bill, 2019, seeks to replace an ordinance issued on September 18.
The bill was introduced by Union Health Minister Harsh Vardhan.
The bill makes the manufacturing, production, import, export, distribution, transport, sale, storage or advertisements of such alternative smoking devices a cognizable offence, attracting a jail term and a fine.
First-time violators will face a jail term of up to one year and a fine of ₹1 lakh. For subsequent offences, a jail term of up to three years or a fine of ₹5 lakh, or both, according to the ordinance.
The storage of e-cigarettes shall also be punishable with imprisonment of up to six months or a fine of up to ₹50,000, or both, it said.
The government had cited health risk to people, especially youth and issued an ordinance to ban such products.
The bill authorised officials to conduct searches in premises, stating that where such searches were not permissible, authorities might attach properties, stocks of e-cigarettes or records maintained by the manufacturer, producer exporter, transporter, importer, stockist against whom a complaint had been made.
It said the owner or occupier of the place that stocks e-cigarettes should voluntarily prepare a list of such stock in his possession and without delay submit the stock to the nearest authorised officer.
However, e-cigarettes promoting trade bodies, users and other stakeholders have been opposing government’s move to ban “alternative” smoking device, alleging it was a “draconian” step taken in haste to protect the conventional cigarette industry. (Source: The Hindu)


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Bill to replace ordinance banning production, sale of e-cigarettes introduced in Lok Sabha.

India produces 25k tonnes of plastic waste everyday, 40% uncollected: Govt - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

India produces 25k tonnes of plastic waste everyday, 40% uncollected: Govt.

India generates more than 25,000 tonnes of plastic waste every day, 40 per cent of which remains uncollected and littered in the environment, the Centre informed the Lok Sabha on Friday.

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In a written response to a question in the Lower House, Union Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar said the demand of plastic has increased significantly due its increased use in the fast moving consumer goods (FMCG) sector, which has indirectly resulted into the challenge of plastic waste management.
“With continued economic development, the demand for consumer goods is increasing. Among the various factors driving this growth, one of the most significant factor is increasing use of plastics by the Fast-Moving Consumer Goods (FMCG) sector.
“Due to its durability, strength, inert behaviour and low cost, plastic emerged as one of the most reliable packaging material for the industries. As an outcome, the increase in demand for plastic has indirectly resulted into the challenge of plastic waste management,” Javadekar said.
Replying to another question on developing green alternatives to plastic, the minister said due to its cheap cost, finding an alternative was a “challenging task”.
“Due to various positive factors including cheap cost associated with plastic packaging, finding an ecologically sustainable and green alternative to plastic is a challenging task.
“However, with an objective to ensure the sound management of plastic waste, ministry has already started taking initiatives, for effective management of plastic waste in the country,” he said.
Referring to a study conducted by the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) in 60 major cities of India, the minister said that it has been estimated that around 4,059 tonnes per day of plastic waste is generated from these cities.
“Extrapolating this plastic waste generation data from 60 major cities to the entire country, it is estimated that around 25,940 tonnes/day of plastic waste is generated in India. There are 4,773 registered plastic manufacturing/ Multi-Layer Plastic manufacturing / recycling units in the country.
“Approximately 15,384 tonnes/day, which is 60 per cent of the total plastic waste, is collected and recycled. This recycled plastic is used is manufacturing of several products. The remaining 10,556 tonnes/day of the plastic waste, which is estimated to be approximately 40 per cent of plastic waste generation, remains uncollected and littered in the environment,” Javadekar said.
The minister informed that an expert group has been constituted by Central Institute of Plastics Engineering and Technology (CIPET) with respect to research and development for compostable or biodegradable technology on plastic.
The government aims to rid the country of single use plastic by 2022 as part of the Clean India (Swachh Bharat) part two campaign.
The government has notified Plastic Waste Management Rules, 2016, as per which the generators of waste have been mandated to take steps to minimize generation of plastic waste, not to litter plastic waste, ensure segregated storage of waste at source and handover segregated waste to local bodies or agencies authorised by the local bodies.
The Rules prohibit the use of plastic bags with thickness less than 50 microns.


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India produces 25k tonnes of plastic waste everyday, 40% uncollected: Govt.

Supreme Court seeks government reply to plea on Aadhaar data use by private firms - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

Supreme Court seeks government reply to plea on Aadhaar data use by private firms.

Petition says 2019 amendments to Aadhaar Act are violative of the earlier apex court judgments.

A Bench of Chief Justice of India S.A. Bobde and B.R. Gavai of the Supreme Court on Friday asked the Union government and the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) to respond to a petition alleging that recent amendments to the Aadhaar law opened the back door to private players to access citizens’ sensitive personal data.
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The petition was filed jointly by former Army officer S.G. Vombatkere and activist Bezwada Wilson against the legality of Aadhaar and Other Laws (Amendment) Act, 2019 and the Aadhaar (Pricing of Aadhaar Authentication Services) Regulations, 2019.
The court has tagged the case with an earlier petition filed by the same petitioners raising identical grounds against the Aadhaar and Other Laws (Amendment) Ordinance, 2019 and Aadhaar (Pricing of Aadhaar Authentication Services) Regulations, 2019.
‘Violation of fundamental rights’
The petition, filed by advocate Vipin Nair and represented by senior advocate Shyam Divan, said the law and regulations violated the fundamental rights as guaranteed under Part III of the Constitution.
“The impugned Act creates a backdoor to permit private parties to access the Aadhaar eco-system, thus enabling State and private surveillance of citizens, and the impugned Regulations permit the commercial exploitation of personal and sensitive information, which has been collected and stored for State purposes only,” it said.
The Act and Regulations were manifestly unconstitutional. They sought to relegislate certain provisions of the Aadhaar (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits and Services) Act, 2016. These provisions had originally enabled the commercial exploitation of personal information collected for the purposes of the State but were declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in the Justice Puttuswamy case, it said.
In the Puttuswamy judgment, the court found that the architecture and design of the Aadhaar project did not enable mass surveillance of persons enrolled under the Aadhaar Act. It struck down certain provisions giving an avenue for private players to access Aadhaar data, including Section 57 of the Aadhaar (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits and Services) Act, 2016, which permitted private parties to use Aadhaar for authentication.
Database ‘lacks integrity’
The petitioner argued that the Aadhaar database lacked integrity. None of the data uploaded at the time of enrolment was verified by anyone.
“Permitting such a database to be linked with the existing databases of services offered under Chapter IV of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002, and Section 4 of the Indian Telegraph Act, 1885, poses a grave threat to national security by permitting unverified data to creep into these databases,” the petition said. It called the Aadhaar database a Trojan Horse.
The new amended Act created a new system of “offline verification” that purportedly bypassed the authorities and led to unprecedented opportunities for unauthorised parties to save and replicate Aadhaar related personal data, in various offline federated databases, it said.
The 2019 Act had amended Section 7 of the original Aadhaar Act and increased the ambit of Aadhaar to cover the Consolidated Fund of the States also. “This is an impermissible expansion as it violates the federal structure of India... This increases the risk of surveillance and poses an impermissible threat to privacy,” the plea said.
Through the new regulations, the UIDAI expressly sought to commercialise and gain financially through large-scale collection of the citizens’ private data and the use of Aadhaar database by private entities.
Besides, it said, Section 2(3) of the Aadhaar (Pricing of Authentication Services) Regulations 2019 demonstrated coercion by the State through arbitrarily imposing enrolment targets and for empowering itself to levy penalty charges for not achieving those targets. This was a violation of Article 14 of the Constitution.


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Supreme Court seeks government reply to plea on Aadhaar data use by private firms.

Mahila Sashaktikaran Scheme - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

Mahila Sashaktikaran Scheme.

Mahila Shakti Kendra (MSK) Scheme, under Ministry of Women and Child Development, was approved in November 2017 as a centrally sponsored scheme, to empower rural women through community participation.

Under the Scheme, Capacity Building of Women Collectives is envisaged in not more than 50% of the MSK blocks in 115 aspirational districts to address the livelihood needs of the women particularly those in remote/vulnerable areas where women are not in a position to move out from their immediate surroundings for formal skill training. This component is to be implemented in collaboration of NGO’s/ Cooperative Societies/ KrishiVigyanKendras.
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Ministry of Women & Child Development has released funds (central share) for three aspirational districts in Andhra Pradesh namely Vizianagaram, Visakhapatnam and YSR Kadapa for undertaking block level activities in 8 blocks per aspirational district. A total number of 24 blocks at 8 blocks per aspirational district were identified by the Government of Andhra Pradesh.


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Mahila Sashaktikaran Scheme.

Zero Budget Natural Farming - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

Zero Budget Natural Farming.

The ICAR-Indian Institute of Farming Systems Research initiated a study on Evaluation of Zero Budget Natural Farming practices in Basmati/ coarse rice-wheat system from Rabi 2017 at 4 locations namely Modipuram, Pantnagar, Ludhiana, Kurukshetra .

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Also as per information available, the details of States practicing ZBNF are as follows:
1. Karnataka: – has initiated implementation of ZBNF on pilot basis in an area of 2000 ha in each of the 10 Agro Climatic Zones of the State through the respective State Agriculture/ horticulture Universities as demonstrations/ Scientific experimental trials in farmer’s fields and in the research stations of the concerned universities.
2. Himachal Pradesh: - is implementing State funded scheme ‘Prakritik Kheti Khushal Kisan’ since May, 2018, the details of which are as: 2018-19- 2669 farmers, Area: 357 ha.
2019-20- 19936 Farmers, Area: 1155 ha.
3. Kerala: – only awareness programmes, trainings and workshops to draw interest of farmers towards ZBNF has been imparted.
4. Andhra Pradesh: - launched ZBNF in September 2015 under the Rashtriya Krishi Vikas Yojana. Rythu Sadhikara Samstha (RySS), Govt. of Andhra Pradesh is conducting experiments to generate the scientific evidence of the ZBNF in collaboration with University of Reading, UK World Agro forestry Centre, Nairobi, FAO & resource NGOs/Civil Society Organizations like Centre for Sustainable Agriculture, Hyderabad.
5. Himachal Pradesh: The findings of studies conducted by the state indicated that ZBNF practice showed an improvement in soil quality within a single cropping season and incidence of Invasive leaf miner was significantly less in ZBNF system as compared to the organic farming and conventional farming.


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Zero Budget Natural Farming.

Various Initiatives undertaken by Government for mitigation of Air Pollution - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

Various Initiatives undertaken by Government for mitigation of Air Pollution.

Government is taking all efforts for the mitigation of air pollution in the country. Central Government has taken a number of regulatory measures for prevention, control and abatement of air pollution in the country.

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Action Plans for Improvement of Air Quality
i. The Central Government has launched National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) under the Central Sector “Control of Pollution” Scheme as a long-term, time-bound, national level strategy to tackle the air pollution problem across the country in a comprehensive manner with targets to achieve 20 % to 30 % reduction in PM10 and PM2.5 concentrations by 2024 keeping 2017 as the base year for the comparison of concentration.102 non-attainment cities mostly in Indo-Gangetic Plains have been identified based on ambient air quality data for the period 2011 – 2015 and WHO report 2014/2018. The city specific Action Plans have been approved for all 102 non-attainment cities for implementation on ground.
ii. The Central Government has notified a Comprehensive Action Plan (CAP) in 2018 identifying timelines and implementing agencies for actions identified for prevention, control and mitigation of air pollution in Delhi and NCR.
iii. Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP) was notified on January 12, 2017, for prevention, control and abatement of air pollution in Delhi and NCR. It identifies graded measures and implementing agencies for response to four AQI categories, namely, Moderate to Poor, Very Poor, Severe and Severe + or Emergency.
(b) Several steps have been taken for creating awareness amongst the general population. These steps are as follows.
• SAMEER app has been launched wherein air quality information is available to public along with provision for registering complaints against air polluting activities.
• Air quality information collection and dissemination are done from a centralized location. It provides real time air quality status to all stakeholders.
• A dedicated media corner, Twitter and Facebook accounts have been created for access to air quality related information and to provide a platform for lodging complaints by general population.
• Crowd sourcing of innovative ideas/ suggestions/proposals from public is done through CPCB website to strengthen efforts for improving air quality in Delhi-NCR.
• The Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change is implementing Environment Education, Awareness and Training Scheme with the objective to promote environmental awareness among all sections of the society and to mobilize people’s participation for conservation of environment. Under the National Green Corps (NGC) programme of the Ministry, about one lakh schools have been identified as Eco-clubs, wherein, nearly thirty lakh students are actively participating in various environment protection and conservation activities, including the issues related to the air pollution.
• Ministry is promoting peoples participation and awareness building among citizens for environmental conservation that focus on promotion of cycling, saving water and electricity, growing trees, proper maintenance of vehicles, following of lane discipline and reducing congestion on roads by car pooling etc.
• For field feedback on air polluting activities in Delhi and major NCR towns, 46 teams of Central Pollution Control Board have been deployed since October 7, 2019.
• The initiatives taken by the Government for the abatement and control of air pollution in Delhi and NCR since 2016 have bore good results. As per Continuous Ambient Air Quality Monitoring Stations (CAAQMS) data, the number of ‘Good’, ‘Satisfactory’, and ‘Moderate’ days has progressively increased to 159 in 2018, as compared to 152 in 2017 and 106 in 2016, and the number of ‘Poor’, ‘Very Poor’ and ‘Severe’ days has reduced to 206, compared to 213 in 2017 and 246 in 2016. In Delhi, reduction in PM2.5 levels in 2018 is 7.3% over 2017 and 14.8% over 2016. In Delhi, reduction in PM10 levels in 2018 is 8.6% over 2017 and 16.5% over 2016.
There is overall improvement in air quality of Delhi in 2019 (From Jan 2019 – 18th November, 2019) successively since 2016. Number of ‘Good’ to ‘Moderate’ days increased to 175 in 2019, as compared to 158 in 2018, and number of ‘Poor’ to ‘Severe’ days reduced to 147, compared to 164 in 2018.


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Various Initiatives undertaken by Government for mitigation of Air Pollution.

After J&K bifurcation, govt to merge UTs Daman & Diu, Dadra & Nagar Haveli - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

After J&K bifurcation, govt to merge UTs Daman & Diu, Dadra & Nagar Haveli.

Officials said the merger of the two UTs, located along the western coast near Gujarat, will be done for better administration and check duplications of various work.

Two Union Territories -- Daman and Diu, and Dadra and Nagar Haveli -- will be merged into one and a bill in this effect will be tabled in Parliament next week, Union Minister Arjun Meghwal said in the Lok Sabha on Friday.
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The move comes three months after Jammu and Kashmir was bifurcated into two UTs -- Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh.
The Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu (Merger of Union Territories) Bill 2019 is part of the proposed government business for the next week, Meghwal said.
Officials said the merger of the two UTs, located along the western coast near Gujarat, will be done for better administration and check duplications of various work.
So far, both the UTs have separate budgets and different secretariats even though they are just 35 km apart.
Dadra and Nagar Haveli has just one district while Daman and Diu has two.
The merged UT is likely to be named as Dadra, Nagar Haveli, Daman and Diu and its headquarters could be Daman and Diu.
On August 5, the central government had announced the abrogation of the special status given to Jammu and Kashmir under Article 370 and its bifurcation into two UTs.
The country currently has nine UTs after the creation of the UTs of Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh. However, with the merger of Daman and Diu, and Dadra and Nagar Haveli, the number of UTs will come down to eight.


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After J&K bifurcation, govt to merge UTs Daman & Diu, Dadra & Nagar Haveli.

Friday, 22 November 2019

Water Vapor Confirmed on Jupiter’s Moon Europa by NASA Scientists - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

Water Vapor Confirmed on Jupiter’s Moon Europa by NASA Scientists.

Forty years ago, a Voyager spacecraft snapped the first closeup images of Europa, one of Jupiter’s 79 moons. These revealed brownish cracks slicing the moon’s icy surface, which give Europa the look of a veiny eyeball. Missions to the outer solar system in the decades since have amassed enough additional information about Europa to make it a high-priority target of investigation in NASA’s search for life.

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What makes this moon so alluring is the possibility that it may possess all of the ingredients necessary for life. Scientists have evidence that one of these ingredients, liquid water, is present under the icy surface and may sometimes erupt into space in huge geysers. But no one has been able to confirm the presence of water in these plumes by directly measuring the water molecule itself. Now, an international research team led out of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, has detected the water vapor for the first time above Europa’s surface. The team measured the vapor by peering at Europa through one of the world’s biggest telescopes in Hawaii.
Confirming that water vapor is present above Europa helps scientists better understand the inner workings of the moon. For example, it helps support an idea, of which scientists are confident, that there’s a liquid water ocean, possibly twice as big as Earth’s, sloshing beneath this moon’s miles-thick ice shell. Another source of water for the plumes, some scientists suspect, could be shallow reservoirs of melted water ice not far below Europa’s surface. It’s also possible that Jupiter’s strong radiation field is stripping water particles from Europa’s ice shell, though the recent investigation argued against this mechanism as the source of the observed water.
“Essential chemical elements (carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus, and sulfur) and sources of energy, two of three requirements for life, are found all over the solar system. But the third — liquid water — is somewhat hard to find beyond Earth,” said Lucas Paganini, a NASA planetary scientist who led the water detection investigation. “While scientists have not yet detected liquid water directly, we’ve found the next best thing: water in vapor form.”
Paganini and his team reported in the journal Nature Astronomy on November 18, 2019, that they detected enough water releasing from Europa (5,202 pounds, or 2,360 kilograms, per second) to fill an Olympic-size swimming pool within minutes. Yet, the scientists also found that the water appears infrequently, at least in amounts large enough to detect from Earth, said Paganini: “For me, the interesting thing about this work is not only the first direct detection of water above Europa, but also the lack thereof within the limits of our detection method.”
Indeed, Paganini’s team detected the faint yet distinct signal of water vapor just once throughout 17 nights of observations between 2016 and 2017. Looking at the moon from the W. M. Keck Observatory atop the dormant Mauna Kea volcano in Hawaii, the scientists saw water molecules at Europa’s leading hemisphere, or the side of the moon that’s always facing in the direction of the moon’s orbit around Jupiter. (Europa, like Earth’s moon, is gravitationally locked to its host planet, so the leading hemisphere always faces the direction of the orbit, while the trailing hemisphere always faces in the opposite direction.)
They used a spectrograph at the Keck Observatory that measures the chemical composition of planetary atmospheres through the infrared light they emit or absorb. Molecules such as water emit specific frequencies of infrared light as they interact with solar radiation.
Mounting Evidence for Water
Before the recent water vapor detection, there have been many tantalizing findings on Europa. The first came from NASA’s Galileo spacecraft, which measured perturbations in Jupiter’s magnetic field near Europa while orbiting the gas giant planet between 1995 and 2003. The measurements suggested to scientists that electrically conductive fluid, likely a salty ocean beneath Europa’s ice layer, was causing the magnetic disturbances. When researchers analyzed the magnetic disturbances more closely in 2018, they found evidence of possible plumes.
In the meantime, scientists announced in 2013 that they had used NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope to detect the chemical elements hydrogen (H) and oxygen (O) — components of water (H2O) — in plume-like configurations in Europa’s atmosphere. And a few years later, other scientists used Hubble to gather more evidence of possible plume eruptions when they snapped photos of finger-like projections that appeared in silhouette as the moon passed in front of Jupiter.
“This first direct identification of water vapor on Europa is a critical confirmation of our original detections of atomic species, and it highlights the apparent sparsity of large plumes on this icy world” said Lorenz Roth, an astronomer and physicist from KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm who led the 2013 Hubble study and was a co-author of this recent investigation.
Roth’s research, along with other previous Europa findings, have only measured components of water above the surface. The trouble is that detecting water vapor at other worlds is challenging. Existing spacecraft have limited capabilities to detect it, and scientists using ground-based telescopes to look for water in deep space have to account for the distorting effect of water in Earth’s atmosphere. To minimize this effect, Paganini’s team used complex mathematical and computer modeling to simulate the conditions of Earth’s atmosphere so they could differentiate Earth’s atmospheric water from Europa’s in data returned by the Keck spectrograph.
“We performed diligent safety checks to remove possible contaminants in ground-based observations,” said Avi Mandell, a Goddard planetary scientist on Paganini’s team. “But, eventually, we’ll have to get closer to Europa to see what’s really going on.”
Scientists will soon be able get close enough to Europa to settle their lingering questions about the inner and outer workings of this possibly habitable world. The forthcoming Europa Clipper mission, expected to launch in the mid-2020s, will round out half a century of scientific discovery that started with a modest photo of a mysterious, veiny eyeball.
When it arrives at Europa, the Clipper orbiter will conduct a detailed survey of Europa’s surface, deep interior, thin atmosphere, subsurface ocean, and potentially even smaller active vents. Clipper will try to take images of any plumes and sample the molecules it finds in the atmosphere with its mass spectrometers. It will also seek out a fruitful site from which a future Europa lander could collect a sample. These efforts should further unlock the secrets of Europa and its potential for life. (Source: scitechdaily.com)


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Water Vapor Confirmed on Jupiter’s Moon Europa by NASA Scientists.

Singapore to get access to use India’s Chandipur missile test range - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

Singapore to get access to use India’s Chandipur missile test range.

Cooperation in artificial intelligence, geo-spatial data sharing and cyber security mooted

The Singapore military will soon be able to utilise India’s missile test range at Chandipur in Odisha. This was agreed at the 4th Defence Ministers Dialogue between Defence Minister Rajnath Singh and his counterpart Dr. Ng Eng Hen in Singapore on Wednesday.
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“The Ministers commended the progress in defence technology collaboration. They witnessed the exchange of a Letter of Intent to register both sides’ commitment to conclude a Memorandum of Understanding to facilitate the use of Chandipur Integrated Test Range by the Singapore defence establishment,” the Defence Ministry said in a statement.
Mr. Singh also offered setting up of a joint test facilities under the Defence Testing Infrastructure Scheme of India to which Dr. Ng agreed to explore opportunities for joint collaboration. “The Ministers also agreed to explore cooperation in the fields of artificial intelligence, geo-spatial data sharing and cyber security,” the Ministry stated.
On India’s deepening engagement with the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN), Dr. Ng expressed support for New Delhi’s upcoming co-chairmanship of the ASEAN Defence Ministers’ Meeting Plus (ADMM Plus) Experts’ Working Group on Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief (HADR). “In this regard, both sides welcomed the conclusion of a Letter of Intent to reaffirm mutual commitment to explore deepening HADR cooperation in areas such as information sharing and capacity building,” the statement said.
In the maritime domain, the two Ministers reviewed the recently held inaugural edition of the Singapore-India-Thailand Maritime Exercise (SITMEX) in the Andaman Sea and agreed to conduct the exercise on a yearly basis. “This exercise underscores the shared responsibility of the countries to work together in keeping the sea lines of communications open and strengthens interoperability between the three countries,” the statement noted.
The Singapore military, due to space constraints, already utilizes India’s military facilities for training and other purposes. (Source: The Hindu)


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Singapore to get access to use India’s Chandipur missile test range.

Nuclear capable Prithvi-2 missile successfully testfired at night - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

Nuclear capable Prithvi-2 missile successfully testfired at night.

India successfully testfired on Wednesday night its indigenously developed nuclear capable surface-to-surface Prithvi-2 missile as part of a user trial by the Army from a test range off Odisha coast, an official of the ITR said.

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"Two Prithvi-2 missiles were test fired consecutively and both tests met all parameters," the official said from the Interim Test Range (ITR) at Chandipur.
The trial of the missile, which has a strike range of 350 km, was carried out from a mobile launcher from launch complex-3 of the ITR between 7 pm to 7.15 pm, he said.
It was a routine trial, he said adding "The missile trajectory was tracked by radars, electro-optical tracking systems and telemetry stations by the DRDO along the coast of Odisha".
The missile was randomly chosen from the production stock and the entire launch activity was carried out by Strategic Force Command (SFC) of the Army and monitored by scientists of Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) as part of the training exercise, official sources said.
The downrange teams on board a ship deployed near the designated impact point in the Bay of Bengal monitored the terminal events and splashdown.
The last night time testfire of Prithvi-2 was conducted successfully from the ITR on February 21, 2018. Two missiles were successfully test fired in quick succession from the same base in salvo mode on November 21, 2016, they said.
Prithvi-2 is capable of carrying 500-1,000 kg of warheads and is powered by liquid propulsion twin engines, the sources said.
The state-of-the-art missile uses advanced inertial guidance system with maneuvering trajectory to hit its target, they said.
Already inducted into the armory of Indian defence forces in 2003, nine-metre tall 'Prithvi' was the first missile to have been developed by DRDO under the Integrated Guided Missile Development Programme (IGMDP). (Source: defencenews.in)


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Nuclear capable Prithvi-2 missile successfully testfired at night.

Cabinet approves amendments and modifications in the Toll-Operate-Transfer model and securitization of user fee receipts of NH -Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

Cabinet approves amendments and modifications in the Toll-Operate-Transfer model and securitization of user fee receipts of NH.

The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs, chaired by Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi has given its approval to the amendments proposed in the Toll Operate Transfer (TOT) Model by National Highways Authority of India (NHAI).

Public funded National Highway (NH) projects which are operational and have toll revenue generation history of one year after the Commercial Operations Date (COD) shall be monetized through the TOT Model. The monetization will be subject to approval of the Competent Authority in Ministry of Road Transport and Highways (MoRTH) / NHAI on a case to case basis.
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Around 75 operational NH projects have been identified for potential monetization using the TOT Model, and bundled into 10 separate bids to attract economics of scale for the private sector. The corpus generated from proceeds of such project monetization shall be utilized by the Government to meet its fund requirements regarding future development and O&M of highways in the country. The Model would facilitate efficient toll realization through private sector.
This approval would ensure a wider set of assets for Monetization and providing a more attractive model for the investors. Further, the fund generated from such monetization shall be utilized for development/O&M of highways in the country, which would benefit highway users throughout the country.
Implementation Strategy and targets:
The approved TOT Model authorized NHAI to monetize public funded NH projects, such as EPC/BOT (Annuity) projects, which are operational and have a proven toll collection history of at least two years. The approved TOT Model provides for a fixed 30-year concession period. The fund generated from proceeds of monetization are being utilized by the Government to meet its financing requirements regarding future development of NHs in the country, including their operation and maintenance.
NHAI has already monetized one bundle of projects under TOT Model, generating a revenue of Rs. 9681.50crore for the government. However, the second bundle saw deviation in the market valuation of assets from NHAI's valuation. NHAI has conducted several rounds of discussions with the private sector to reduce uncertainty in the Model. The approved amendments in the model will allow more efficient asset monetization through TOT Mode.
Background:
The NHAI was authorized to monetize public funded NationalHighway projects through the TOT Model. The TOT Model allows NHAI to:
(i) Ensure efficient management of constructed and operational NH projects through proper Operation and Maintenance (O&M).
(ii) Arrange for additional funds which are required for achievement of targets under Bharatmala Programme and other NH development works.


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Cabinet approves amendments and modifications in the Toll-Operate-Transfer model and securitization of user fee receipts of NH.

Cabinet gives nod to corporate tax rate cut implemented through Ordinance - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

Cabinet gives nod to corporate tax rate cut implemented through Ordinance.

• Nirmala Sitharaman said that all the proposals in the Ordinance have been approved by the cabinet including minor corrections to be done and clarifications to be issued
• The government had in September announced lower corporate tax for companies
The Union Cabinet on Wednesday approved the Taxation Laws (Amendment) Ordinance 2019, which lowered the corporate tax rate for domestic and new manufacturing companies through an Ordinance on 20 September, finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman said. The Ordinance had amended the Income Tax Act 1961 and the Finance (No 2) Act of 2019.
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The minister said that all the proposals in the Ordinance have been approved by the cabinet including minor corrections to be done and clarifications to be issued. The government is now expected to move a bill in Parliament in the winter session of Parliament.
The government had in September announced a lower 22% corporate tax rate for companies that do not avail of any tax incentives and a 15% rate for new manufacturing companies that start production before March 2023 in a bid to reverse the economic slowdown. (Source: Livemint)


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Cabinet gives nod to corporate tax rate cut implemented through Ordinance.

Wednesday, 20 November 2019

ISRO to launch Cartosat-3, 13 commercial nano satellites on Nov 25-Pragnya Ias Academy-News Analysis

ISRO to launch Cartosat-3, 13 commercial nano satellites on Nov 25.

The Cartosat-3 is a "third generation agile advanced satellite" having high resolution imaging capability, it said, adding that the satellite would be placed in an orbit of 509 km at an inclination of 97.5 degree

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Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) would launch its earth imaging and mapping satellite Cartosat-3 along with 13 commercial nano satellites from the US, on November 25, the space agency said.
The satellites would be launched by India's Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle, PSLV-C47into Sun Synchronous Orbit from Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC) SHAR at Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh.
The launch is tentatively scheduled at 09:28 hrs IST on November 25, 2019 subject to weather conditions, ISRO said.
The Cartosat-3 is a "third generation agile advanced satellite" having high resolution imaging capability, it said, adding that the satellite would be placed in an orbit of 509 km at an inclination of 97.5 degree.
PSLV-C47 is the 21st flight of PSLV in 'XL' configuration (with 6 solid strap-on motors).
PSLV-C47 would also carry 13 commercial nano satellites from United States of America as part of commercial arrangement with NewSpace India Limited (NSIL), Department of Space.
ISRO has said, this would be the 74th launch vehicle mission from SDSC SHAR, Sriharikota. (Source:ndtv)


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ISRO to launch Cartosat-3, 13 commercial nano satellites on Nov 25.

India ranks 59 on IMD World Talent Ranking Report; Switzerland first.-Pragnya Ias Academy News Analysis-Best Coaching Centre

India ranks 59 on IMD World Talent Ranking Report; Switzerland first.

The Top 10 was completed by Austria (4th), Luxembourg (5th), Norway (6th), Iceland (7th), Finland (8th), the Netherlands (9th) and Singapore (10th)

India has slipped 6 places to 59 rank on a global annual list of 63 countries, due to low quality of life and expenditure on education, according to the latest edition of IMD World Talent Ranking, which was topped by Switzerland.
ias-coaching-centres-bangalore-hyderabad-pragnya-ias-academy-current-affairs-India-IMD-Talent-Switzerland
The ranking, which is based on the performance in three main categories -- investment and development, appeal and readiness, noted that India is also lagging behind fellow BRICs countries - China ranked 42nd on the list, Russia (47th) and South Africa (50th).
India also witnessed one of the sharpest declines among Asian economies owing to low quality of life, negative impact of brain drain, and the low priority of its economy on attracting and retaining talents.
"The drop is a combination of several factors including expenditure on education (per student) and the quality of education which may be linked to the GDP growth," said Jose Caballero is a Senior Economist at the IMD Business School Switzerland and Singapore.
Caballero further said: "There are other issues that have an equally important impact than GDP growth, such as the effectiveness of the health system and women's participation in the labour force".
On India's appeal factor with regard to the recent pollution issues, Caballero said, "Remuneration is an issue but when combined with other factors, exacerbate the status of the country in terms of Appeal".
Switzerland retained its title as the world's top talent hub, while Europe lead the way in fostering the best conditions for competitiveness in a skills-scarce global economy.
Denmark was placed second and Sweden, was in the third place.
The Top 10 was completed by Austria (4th), Luxembourg (5th), Norway (6th), Iceland (7th), Finland (8th), the Netherlands (9th) and Singapore (10th).
The countries at the top of the rankings share strong levels of investment in education and a high quality of life.
Meanwhile, China ranked in the lower half of the index. China (42nd) fell 3 places due to low ranking on government expenditure per student, cost of living index and exposure to particle pollution.
In Asia, Singapore, along with Hong Kong SAR (15th) and Taiwan (20th) lead in terms of talent competitiveness due to the readiness of talent pool.
Singapore rose from 13th to 10th position compared to last year, Hong Kong SAR from 18th to 15th, and Taiwan from 27th to 20th.
"Most leading economies emphasize long-term talent development by focusing on investment and development. This emphasis, however, goes beyond purely academic aspects to encompass the effective implementation of apprenticeships and employee training. Such an approach ensures a consistent alignment between talent demand and supply," said Professor Arturo Bris, Director of the IMD World Competitiveness Center. (Source: The Business Standard)


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India ranks 59 on IMD World Talent Ranking Report; Switzerland first

Saturn Moon Titan Shaped by Same Forces as Earth: Researchers.-Pragnya Ias Academy-best civil service coaching centre in hyderabad

Saturn Moon Titan Shaped by Same Forces as Earth: Researchers.

Researchers said Titan's visible exterior was "one of the most geologically diverse in the Solar System."

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The largest of Saturn's many moons has lakes, mountains and dunes, with its surface scarred and crafted by many of the same forces which have shaped Earth, scientists said Monday.
A team led by Rosaly Lopes at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) said Titan's visible exterior was "one of the most geologically diverse in the Solar System."
"Despite the differences in materials, temperatures and gravity fields between Earth and Titan, many of their surface features are similar and can be interpreted as products of the same geologic processes," the scientists said in an article in Nature Astronomy.
Using radar and infra-red data generated by the now defunct Cassini probe, which completed a 20-year mission by crashing into Saturn in 2017, the scientists said they could fill in many of the gaps in mapping Titan, some 1.2 billion kilometres (800 million miles) from Earth.
Dunes and lakes, they said, were relatively young while mountainous terrain appeared older.
Titan's surface was sculpted by the accumulation and erosion of sediment and showed "clear latitudinal variation, with dunes at the equator, plains at mid-latitudes and labyrinth terrains and lakes at the poles," they said.
The region around the equator is arid, with Titan getting wetter closer to the poles.
Just as on Earth, Titan's surface has been marked by impact craters, liquid- and air-driven erosion, methane-laden rainfall, tectonic plate movement and possible volcanic activity.
Alice Le Gall, one of the team and working at Paris-Saclay University, said Titan "is the only known extra-terrestrial body to have liquid bodies on its surface."
Methane exists in three states -- solid, liquid and gas -- at super-cold temperatures. It produces a cycle similar to that of rain falling on Earth to form rivers and lakes, and then evaporating to form clouds again, Le Gall told AFP. (Source: ndtv)


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Saturn Moon Titan Shaped by Same Forces as Earth: Researchers

Steep climb in global nitrous oxide levels: Study - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

Steep climb in global nitrous oxide levels: Study.

Global atmospheric levels of nitrous oxide (N2O) increased 10 per cent between 2000-2005 and 2010-2015, according to a new research. The absolute value of the increase was 1.6 TgN per year.

N2O is the third-most important greenhouse gas after carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4). It has the highest global warming potential among the three — 300 times than CO2.
The research also flagged a discrepancy in the way the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) estimates N2O levels.
Scientists from several institutes in Europe and the United States, including some from the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) and the Norwegian Institute for Air Research (NILU), collaborated for the research. Its results were published in the journal Nature Climate Change.
The authors of the paper brought together N2O emission estimates deduced from three global atmospheric inversion frameworks from 1998 to 2016, themselves based on N2O observational data from global networks.
ias-coaching-centres-bangalore-hyderabad-pragnya-ias-academy-current-affairs-Steep-climb-global-oxide
Within this, IIASA contributed data from the Greenhouse Gas and Air Pollution Interactions and Synergies (GAINS) model.
“We see that the N2O emissions have increased considerably during the past two decades, but especially from 2009 onwards,” Rona Thompson, senior scientist at NILU and lead author of the study, said. She did not offer any reason for the increase post-2009.
“Our estimates show that the emission of N2O has increased faster over the last decade than estimated by the IPCC emission factor approach,” Thompson said.
The panel’s estimates were based on the extent of usage of fertilisers and manure by different countries and a default emission factor — the amount of N2O emitted relative to the amount of nitrogen fertiliser used.
The current research found the estimation factor to be 2.3 (+/- 0.6) per cent — much above IPCC’s default 1.375 per cent.
“The larger emission factor, and the accelerating emission increase found from the inversions suggest that N2O emission may have a non-linear response at global and regional scales with high levels of nitrogen input,” according to a IIASA statement.
Authors of the study recommended using more complex algorithms and region-specific emission factors to estimate N2O.
The main reasons for this dramatic increase in N2O levels since the mid-20th century and especially in the past two decades has been the “production of nitrogen fertilisers, widespread cultivation of nitrogen-fixing crops (such as clover, soybeans, alfalfa, lupins, and peanuts) and the combustion of fossil and biofuels,” according to the authors of the research. (Source: down to earth)


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Steep climb in global nitrous oxide levels: Study

IEA projects rapid increase in installed solar capacity by 2040 - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

IEA projects rapid increase in installed solar capacity by 2040.

However, it expects carbon dioxide emissions to continue rising for decades.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) has projected a rapid increase in installed capacity of solar power by 2040, from 495 GW now to 3,142 GW, in its latest World Energy Outlook (WEO).
This is a massive departure from its previous stance as the projected capacity addition trend now is almost the exact opposite of the projection made in 2018.
The strong growth of solar has now been projected on account to optimistic policy changes around the world, including China’s partial reversal of a decision to reduce subsidies; India’s announced target of 450 GW of renewable energy capacity by 2030; and strengthening of some renewables portfolio standards in the United States.
Despite turning bullish on solar, IEA remains conservative in its projections compared to other energy thinktanks such as the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) which in its recently released 'Future of Solar Photovoltaic' report projected solar growth to be over 6,000 GW by 2040.
IEA is an inter-governmental organisation established in the framework of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). The WEO is its flagship publication.
In the 2019 edition, IEA projects a ‘profound shift’ in global energy systems, with rapid increase in the installed solar capacity by 2040, flattening of coal-based power generation and a decline in reliance of oil.
However, it expects (CO2) emissions to continue rising for decades unless polices reflect greater ambition on climate change. This is primarily due to the longevity of the existing stock of coal-based plants, which account for 30 per cent of all energy-related emissions.
In the developing countries of Asia where the majority of the new plants are located, the average age of coal-based plants is just 12 years.
Mapped climate scenarios
The report models three policy scenarios. The first is the Current Policy scenario where the world continues to function according to the old regulations and the energy demand rises annually by 1.3 per cent by 2040.
The second scenario is the Stated Policy Scenario, formerly known as New Policies Scenario, which incorporates new policies already announced by governments, where the energy demand rises by one per cent per year.
The third, more ambitious, Sustainable Development Scenario (SDS) scenario charts out a path aligning with the Paris agreement to maintain the global temperature well below two degrees Celsius (°C) and pursuing efforts to limit it to 1.5°C.
However, the report does not define a pathway for the world’s temperature increase to remain below or at 1.5°C from the pre-industrial levels.
Additionally, the SDS comes quite close to the Stated Policies scenario, with the additional reliance on carbon sequestration beyond 2050 to overcome the overshoot. IEA points to the difficulty in the sustainable delivery of an extensive end-of-century deployment plan.
Importantly, IEA doesn’t see energy-related CO2 peaking by 2040 due to economic growth and population increases.
ias-coaching-centres-bangalore-hyderabad-pragnya-ias-academy-current-affairs-IEA-rapid-solar
Change in energy mix
Under the Stated Policy scenario, solar surges ahead of coal and gas to become the largest source of installed power by 2035, if stated policies and targets are perused.
Growth of coal-based capacity is expected to decline marginally post-2020, and remain around 2100 GW.
As for generation, the share of renewable generation could nearly double, from 26 per cent today to 44 per cent to 2040, surpassing coal-based generation in 2026.
ias-coaching-centres-bangalore-hyderabad-pragnya-ias-academy-current-affairs-solar-capacity-projects
IEA’s past projections
The IEA has long faced criticism for being overtly bullish with its prediction of coal and other fossil fuel dependence, and underpaying the importance being gained by solar PV.
For instance, in its WEO 2012 report, IEA had suggested that solar capacity will grow by 15 GW in 2015. However, in reality, the solar capacity in 2015 was 52 GW.
Even in successive publications following the 2012 report, the projected amount for 2015 remained lower than actual. Similarly, its 2013 report projected a growth of 29 GW by 2018 whereas the actual in 2018 was close to 108 GW.
Moreover, in its 2016 projection it suggested a decline in solar capacity growth post 2035.


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IEA projects rapid increase in installed solar capacity by 2040.

Tuesday, 19 November 2019

India leads mobile ad fraud in Asia, blockchain can help fix issues: Report -Pragnya Ias Acadamy-News Analysis

India leads mobile ad fraud in Asia, blockchain can help fix issues: Report.

Only 37% respondents are aware of Blockchain and its application to fraud prevention.

India is leading mobile ad fraud in Asia with a rate of 62 per cent as marketers are spending nearly 20 per cent of their advertising budget on ad fraud, a new report said on Monday.
Nine out of 10 marketers said there is scope for improvement in ad fraud prevention methods while 95 per cent respondents felt that lack of penalties and transparency in industry regulations give rise to ad fraud," said the report titled 'Ad Fraud Benchmark Report' from global non-profit organization Mobile Marketing Association.
Major types of ad fraud are cookie stuffing (74 per cent), adware traffic (65 per cent), data fraud (61 per cent) and ad injection (54 per cent).
ias-coaching-centres-bangalore-hyderabad-pragnya-ias-academy-current-affairs-Asia-blockchain-issues
Only 37 per cent respondents are aware of Blockchain and its application to fraud prevention, said the report published in collaboration with a leading research firm Decision Lab.
"In India, the awareness on ad fraud risks is very low with almost a fifth of the marketers being unclear of their ad fraud budget and majority of them believing that fraudulent activities will only increase," said Moneka Khurana, Country Head, MMA India.
"Marketers must understand the potential of technologies such as Blockchain that can help solve issues related to fraud and create security and transparency in mobile marketing ecosystem," Khurana added. (Source: The Business Standard)


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India leads mobile ad fraud in Asia, blockchain can help fix issues: Report

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Climate change: Investors wants world energy body to support Paris accord.

The signatories said they wanted the IEA to produce what they would consider a "fully transparent" scenario showing how the world could meet the most ambitious Paris accord goals.

Fatih Birol, the head of the International Energy Agency (IEA), faced renewed pressure on Monday to overhaul the organisation's influential projections for fossil fuel demand from investors and scientists concerned about climate change.
ias-coaching-centres-bangalore-hyderabad-pragnya-ias-academy-current-affairs-Investors-paris-accord
Pension funds, insurers and large companies were among 65 signatories of a joint letter to Birol, seen by Reuters, urging him to do more to support the implementation of the 2015 Paris Agreement to avert catastrophic global warming.
"The year 2020 marks a turning point for the world - the year when we either grasp the challenges and opportunities before us, or continue delaying and obstructing the low-carbon transformation," the letter said.
The letter represented the first coordinated response by investors, scientists and campaigners pushing Birol to rethink the Paris-based organisation's flagship annual outlook since the latest edition was launched on Nov. 13.
Known as the World Energy Outlook, the document, which runs to hundreds of pages, helps shape expectations in financial markets over how quickly the world could transition from a fossil fuel-dominated energy system to cleaner sources of power.
Since the start of this year, various networks of institutional investors, asset owners, scientists and climate advocacy groups have been urging Birol to change the way the report is produced and presented.
These critics argue that a revised approach could help unlock faster investment in renewables and better identify possible risks to the value of oil, gas and coal companies posed by the prospect of rapid action to cut greenhouse gas emissions.
The IEA made several changes to the last edition of the outlook, including providing what officials describe as a more "stringent" scenario showing how the world could fully achieve the goals of the Paris agreement than in the previous edition.
In interviews with Reuters this month, Birol and other senior IEA officials argued that the criticism of the outlook was misplaced, saying it was based on misunderstandings of how its scenarios work and what they aim to demonstrate.
Birol also emphasised that the IEA's wide-ranging work on topics from energy efficiency to offshore wind played an important role in boosting international efforts to tackle climate change.
Nevertheless, in the letter, sent on Monday, signatories described the new elements in the latest outlook as "minor improvements" that should not be mistaken for delivering "urgently needed substantial changes."
The signatories said they wanted the IEA to produce what they would consider a "fully transparent" scenario showing how the world could meet the most ambitious Paris accord goals.
That would include reliably limiting the rise in average global temperatures to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial times without banking on early stage technologies to suck carbon from the air, and reaching net zero carbon emissions by 2050.
The signatories want their vision for what would qualify as such a scenario to be the centrepiece of the next outlook.
German insurer Allianz, Switzerland's Zurich Insurance Group, and Danish fund PensionDanmark confirmed to Reuters they had signed the letter. Other signatories shown on a copy of the letter seen by Reuters included Unilever, IKEA, Nordea Life & Pension and Ørsted.
Climate scientists based in the United States, Britain and Germany, former U.N. climate chief Christiana Figueres and Michelle Bachelet, U.N. high commissioner for human rights, also signed.
In a statement emailed to Reuters on Saturday, the IEA said it received a lot of comments on its work and carefully considered all suggestions.
"As science, technologies, markets, policies, and costs evolve each year, we take those changes into account in our analysis. We will do so again as we prepare for next year's edition of the World Energy Outlook," the IEA said. (Source: The business standard)


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Climate change: Investors wants world energy body to support Paris accord

Arctic Ocean may be ice-free for part of year by 2044, finds study - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

Arctic Ocean may be ice-free for part of year by 2044, finds study.

Scientists have been attempting to predict the future of Arctic sea ice for several decades

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Human-caused climate change is on track to make the Arctic Ocean functionally ice-free for part of each year starting sometime between 2044 and 2067, according to a study.
Researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in the U.S. noted that as long as humans have been on Earth, the planet has had a large cap of sea ice at the Arctic Circle that expands each winter and contracts each summer.
Satellite observations show that since 1979, the amount of sea ice in the Arctic in September — the month when there is the least sea ice, before water starts freezing again — has declined by 13% per decade, the researchers said.
Scientists have been attempting to predict the future of Arctic sea ice for several decades, relying on an array of global climate models that simulate how the climate system will react to all of the carbon dioxide entering the atmosphere.
However, the models’ predictions have disagreed widely, according to the study published in the journal Nature Climate Change.
Among the current generation of models, some show ice-free Septembers as early as 2026, while others suggest the phenomenon will begin as late as 2132.
The study’s lead author, Chad Thackeray, an assistant researcher at UCLA, said one reason predictions about sea ice loss diverge so much is that they differ in how they consider a process called sea ice albedo feedback.
The process occurs when a patch of sea ice completely melts, uncovering a seawater surface that is darker and absorbs more sunlight than ice would have.
That change in the surface’s reflectivity of sunlight, or albedo, causes greater local warming, which in turn leads to further ice melt, the researchers said.
The cycle exacerbates warming — one reason the Arctic is heating up twice as fast as the rest of the globe, they said.
Thackeray and co-author Alex Hall, a UCLA professor, noted that sea ice albedo feedback not only happens over long periods of time due to climate change, but also happens every summer when sea ice melts for the season.
Satellite observations over the past few decades have tracked that seasonal melt and resulting albedo feedback, they said.
Thackeray and Hall assessed 23 models’ depiction of seasonal ice melt between 1980 and 2015 and compared them with the satellite observations.
They retained the six models that best captured the actual historical results and discarded the ones that had proven to be off base, enabling them to narrow the range of predictions for ice-free Septembers in the Arctic.
“Arctic sea ice is a key component of the earth system because of its highly reflective nature, which keeps the global climate relatively cool,” Thackeray said.
There are other environmental and economic implications to ice loss as well, the researchers said.
Sea ice is critical to the Arctic ecosystem, and to the fishing industry and indigenous peoples who depend on that ecosystem, they said.
The researchers explained that as Arctic ice is lost, more waters are used for commercial shipping and oil and gas exploration, which presents economic opportunity for some nations.
However, they noted, this also contributes to further greenhouse gas emissions and climate change. (Source: The Hindu)


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Arctic Ocean may be ice-free for part of year by 2044, finds study.

Darjeeling green, white teas get GI backing - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

Darjeeling green, white teas get GI backing.

Teas sold as Darjeeling white and green teas without GI will not be considered authentic.

Darjeeling green and white teas, whose price varies from Rs 3,000 -Rs 10,000 per kg, have received Geographical Indication (GI) tag for the domestic market, which will put to rest any doubt about their authenticity and quality.
Both these premium teas have been registered as a GI in the country with effect from October 24, 2019, which means that any teas sold as Darjeeling white and green teas in the domestic market without GI will not be considered authentic teas. “Darjeeling black tea is already registered as GI. Since the demand for Darjeeling white and green teas is increasing in the domestic market, we thought that these two varieties also be protected under GI.
The Tea Board is the registered proprietor of GI for Darjeeling tea. Geographical indications mean indications which identify a product as originating from the territory of a member, or a region or locality in that territory, where a given quality, reputation or other characteristic of the product is essentially attributable to its geographical origin.
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Darjeeling white tea has a unique aroma. While the leaves used for making black tea undergo withering and oxidation, those used for making white tea do not face any withering and oxidation. In other words, white tea undergoes minimum processing and the terminal buds with rich pubescence of tea shoots are merely dried in natural sunlight. This allows the buds to retain the covering of velvety silver colour.
Darjeeling white tea brews have a pale yellow/light translucent colour and has a slightly sweet flavour with no ‘grassy’ undertones sometimes associated with green tea.
Basu said white tea is a preferred choice among tea connoisseurs, both in India and abroad, and that is why these teas fetch premium prices. Darjeeling white tea has good demand in the US and European Union. The annual estimated production of Darjeeling white tea is one lakh kg. (Source: The Economic Times)


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Darjeeling green, white teas get GI backing.

ADB, India Sign $91 Million Loan for Comprehensive Water Management in Karnataka - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

ADB, India Sign $91 Million Loan for Comprehensive Water Management in Karnataka.

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the Government of India today signed a $91 million loan to modernize the Vijayanagara Channel irrigation systems and prepare river basin management plans in the Krishna river basin that will help improve irrigation water use efficiency and contribute to improving sustainable water security in Karnataka.

The signatories to the second project loan for the Karnataka Integrated and Sustainable Water Resources Management Investment Program (IWRM) were Mr. Sameer Kumar Khare, Additional Secretary, Department of Economic Affairs, Ministry of Finance who signed for the Government of India and Mr. Kenichi Yokoyama, Country Director of ADB’s India Resident Mission, who signed for ADB.
“The investment program will help Government of Karnataka in strengthening its institutions involved in integrated water resource management and modernizing the irrigation system infrastructure for improving water use efficiency in the State ” said Mr. Khare after signing the loan documents.
“This second project loan will continue to strengthen state and basin institutions for IWRM and finance the modernization of Vijayanagara Channels by upgrading headworks and about 442 kilometers of main, distributaries and minor canals,” said Mr. Yokoyama.
The investment program, consisting of two project loans, will help Karnataka’s water agencies better draw up and roll out effective river basin management plans. The first project is helping the modernization of the Gondi irrigation system and supporting the state with preparing a new water resources policy and other water governance strengthening activities.
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The project interventions are also tackling inefficient water use in agriculture that accounts for over 84% of the state’s total water use. This will improve water availability to meet the rising demand from other users in the state. About 30 water user cooperative societies will also be established and strengthened for improving their farmer irrigation canals under the second project. Improving irrigation efficiency under the investment program is expected to generate water savings of 1,700 million cubic meters for use on an additional 160,000 hectares of farmland. Annual farm incomes are also projected to rise by as much as 50% for some marginal households as a result of increased crop production, and about 1.5 million people could benefit overall.
ADB is committed to achieving a prosperous, inclusive, resilient, and sustainable Asia and the Pacific, while sustaining its efforts to eradicate extreme poverty. In 2018, it made commitments of new loans and grants amounting to $ 21.5 billion. Established in 1966, it is owned by 68 members---49 from the region.


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ADB, India Sign $91 Million Loan for Comprehensive Water Management in Karnataka.

NITI Aayog releases Report on Building a 21st Century Health System for India - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

NITI Aayog releases Report on Building a 21st Century Health System for India.

NITI Aayog today released the report on ‘Health Systems for a New India: Building Blocks—Potential Pathways to Reforms’. The report was released by NITI Aayog Vice Chairman Dr Rajiv Kumar in the presence of Bill Gates. Officials from NITI Aayog, policymakers, and representatives from national and international academia and Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation were also present for the event.

Over the last few years, India has embarked on a journey towards providing improved access to high-quality, affordable healthcare for the most unreached and vulnerable population of the country. Many indicators, however, continue to show significant scope for improvement. By placing health at the centre-stage of the policy narrative, this report charts a clear roadmap for the complete transformation of India’s health system. It focuses on breaking silos in the health space and removing fragmentation between various initiatives, ensuring greater convergence between ministries as well as the Centre and states, as already initiated under Ayushman Bharat.
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‘At a systems level, overcoming the challenges of fragmentation, across healthcare financing and service delivery, will help us optimize both quality and access. India now needs to build on its many opportunities to achieve further progress on the health of its citizens and respond to the growing aspirations and needs of a new India,’ said Dr Rajiv Kumar, Vice Chairman, NITI Aayog.
Lauding the significant improvements made in India's health sector, Bill Gates, co-chairman of Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, said primary healthcare is extremely important for all. India is in a very hopeful situation, he said, and is set to be an example for other countries. He mentioned that the private sector needs to be involved to meet key challenges and that the Gates Foundation through its initiatives will extend all possible help.
The report identified 5 focus areas of future health system, deliver on unfinished Public health agenda, change health financing away from out of pocket so spend into large insurers, integrate service delivery vertically and horizontally, empower citizens to become better buyers of health, harness the power of digital health.
Highlighting the need to build India’s opportunities, the vision for health over the next fifteen years is to transform the delivery of health services in a way that they improve at a much greater pace, without financially burdening its citizens. A synthesis of all the discussions and efforts initiated at NITI Aayog’s ‘Development Dialogues’ held on 30 November 2018, the report consolidates global findings on key health system themes of financing and provisioning, with a focus on risk pooling, strategic purchasing, health-service provisioning and digital health. With insights to transform the Indian health system in the twenty-first century, the report presents a preliminary menu of strategic choices available before India to reform its healthcare system.
This report was guided by analysis undertaken by well-known international experts, along with other national counterparts representing the government, private sector, insurance companies, researchers and academia. The analysis and insights highlight that investments in strengthening the current health system will reap tremendous social and economic dividend for India.


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NITI Aayog releases Report on Building a 21st Century Health System for India.

Government Unveils Bharatiya Poshan Krishi Kosh To Help Fight Malnutrition, Here’s All You Need To Know - Pragnya IAS Academy - News Analysis.

Government Unveils Bharatiya Poshan Krishi Kosh To Help Fight Malnutrition, Here’s All You Need To Know.

The Bharatiya Poshan Krishi Kosh (BPKK) would be accessible to policy-makers, administrators, experts and communities in order to help meet nutritional outcomes in the country

Union Government today launched announced Bharatiya Poshan Krishi Kosh which would be a repository of diverse crops across 128 agro-climatic zones for better nutritional outcomes.
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The Kosh (fund) aims at reducing malnutrition through a multi-sectoral results-based framework, including agriculture, among women and children across the country.
A novel feature of the POSHAN Abhiyaan is its focus on social and behavioral change among parents and for improving linkages between communities and the health systems towards paving the way for a mass movement to promote a transformative change.
Speaking at a function here, Women and Child Development Minister Smriti Zubin Irani stressed the need for convergence between agriculture and nutrition to address the challenge of malnutrition. She said, government has done commendable job to address the challenges of malnutrition, availability of drinking water and sanitation. She said, with high focus on toilet construction and menstrual hygiene, government is providing health security to women and children.
In his special address, noted philanthropist and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates said, not only India, but the whole world is facing the challenge of malnutrition. He said, in many cases, deaths of children below five is result of malnutrition. Lauding India’s efforts to tackle malnutrition, Mr Gates said, not many countries are talking about addressing this challenge. He said, National Nutrition Mission in India has brought a new energy needed to eliminate the Malnutrition.
Through a video message, Father of Green Revolution in the country, Dr M S Swaminathan underscored the five-point action plan to make India nutrition secure. The five points include, ensuring calorie-rich diet to women and children, ensuring high protein diet, eradication of hidden hunger by deficiency of micro- nutrients, ensuring clean drinking water supply and spreading nutrition literacy across the country.
In consultation with Ministry of WCD and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the project team will select around 12 high focus states which are representative of the geographical, social, economic, cultural and structural diversities of India. In each of the states or group of states the team will identify a local partner organization which has relevant work experience in Social and Behavior Change Communication (SBCC) and nutrition for developing the food atlas.


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Government Unveils Bharatiya Poshan Krishi Kosh To Help Fight Malnutrition, Here’s All You Need To Know.