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Article
23 Apr 2026

Indian Railway Track Modernisation - Building a Safer, Faster Network

Context:

  • Indian Railways is one of the largest rail networks in the world, operating over 25,000 trains daily, serving 20 million passengers and transporting critical commodities — coal, iron ore, steel, cement, and grains — across 1,37,000 km of tracks.
    The track is the very foundation of this system. Therefore, its integrity directly determines passenger safety, freight efficiency, and network reliability.
  • Recognising this, Indian Railways launched a comprehensive track modernisation programme over a decade ago, and the results today are measurable and significant.

Key Modernisation Initiatives:

  • Track renewal and structural upgrades:
    • Since 2014, approximately 55,000 km of tracks have been renewed, improving safety, ride quality and reducing maintenance frequency.
    • Around 44,000 track km of long rail panels (260 m each) have been laid — fewer joints mean smoother, safer movement.
    • Over 80,000 track km of stronger 60-kg rails now support heavier axle loads and higher speeds.
  • Advanced inspection and flaw detection:
    • Ultrasonic Flaw Detection (USFD) testing has been conducted over 36.2 lakh track km and 2.25 crore welds, identifying hidden internal cracks invisible to the naked eye.
    • This has resulted in a 90% reduction in rail and weld failures — a paradigm shift from reactive maintenance to preventive safety management.
    • Complementary technologies now deployed include -
      • Phased-array testing for flash-butt welds.
      • Magnetic-particle inspection for new welds.
      • GPS-enabled Oscillation Monitoring Systems (OMS) for real-time ride quality measurement and precise location tracking of track defects.
  • Mechanised maintenance:
    • The track machine fleet has nearly doubled — from 748 machines in 2014 to 1,785 in 2026 — enabling faster tamping, ballast cleaning and rail grinding.
    • Deep screening of ballast (the crushed stone bed providing drainage, vibration absorption, and track stability) has been completed across over 1 lakh track km. Rail grinding for surface defect removal has similarly covered over 1 lakh km.
    • Mechanisation is critical given that maintenance windows between trains are shrinking as traffic volumes grow.
  • Supporting safety infrastructure:
    • 17,500 km of safety fencing installed, especially on sections where speeds exceed 110 kmph, to prevent trespassing by humans and cattle.
    • 36,000 thick-web switches and 7,500 weldable CMS crossings at points and crossings for durability and smoother passage.
    • Wider, heavier sleepers for thermal stability, especially during summer.
    • H-beam sleepers on girder bridges and long welded rails through yards.
  • Digital integration: A web-enabled Track Management System (TMS) consolidates data from USFD testing, ride quality readings and track geometry measurements onto a single platform, enabling data-driven prioritisation and timely interventions.

Outcomes and Impact:

  • Increase in speed potential: Networks capable of higher speeds, for example, track fit for over 130 kmph rose from 6% to 23% (between 2014-15 and 2025-26), and track fit for over 110 kmph rose from 40% to 80%.
  • Improved safety outcomes: Consequential train accidents reduced from 135 (2014–15) to 16 (2025–26), and accident rate per million train km improved from 0.11 to 0.01 - a 90% improvement.
  • Impact: These improvements enabled semi-high-speed services like the Vande Bharat Express, reduced journey times, improved punctuality and boosted freight reliability.

Challenges:

  • Shrinking maintenance windows as train frequency increases, leaving less time for track upkeep between services.
  • The scale of the network (over 1,37,000 km) makes uniform upgradation a logistical challenge.
  • The ballast degradation is a continuous process requiring sustained mechanised intervention.
  • Balancing speed upgradation with structural and signalling system readiness.
  • Last-mile safety risks such as trespassing, unmanned level crossings, and human error persist.

Way Forward:

  • Continued expansion of the track machine fleet and USFD coverage across the remaining network.
  • Scaling up preventive and predictive maintenance using AI-integrated TMS data.
  • Extending high-speed-capable track (≥130 kmph) to enable broader deployment of Vande Bharat and future high-speed corridors.
  • Strengthening safety fencing and level crossing elimination on high-density routes.
  • Upgrading bridges and girder infrastructure in parallel with track renewal.
  • Investment in human capital — training maintenance staff in operating and interpreting data from modern machines.

Conclusion:

  • India's railway track modernisation over the past decade represents one of the most significant infrastructure transformations in the country's recent history.
  • This story is instructive not merely as a sectoral achievement but as a model of how sustained institutional investment, technological adoption and policy continuity can produce systemic change in a public utility of national importance.
  • The task ahead is to consolidate these gains, extend them to the entire network, and align track capacity with India's broader ambitions in high-speed and freight rail.
Editorial Analysis

Article
23 Apr 2026

India’s Post-LWE Future, From Red Sun to New Dawn

Context

  • The trajectory of Left-Wing Extremism (LWE) in India marks a transition from entrenched conflict to emerging stability.
  • Districts such as West Midnapore and Simdega once reflected deprivation, insecurity, and limited state presence.
  • Today, figures like Salima Tete and Mamta Hansda symbolise a shift toward opportunity and national integration.
  • Their journeys from remote, conflict-affected regions to representing India underscore the transformative power of sustained intervention.
  • Yet, the deeper challenge lies in ensuring that peace evolves into durable and inclusive development.

The Arc of Conflict and Security Gains

  • In 2009, the then PM (Manmohan Singh) identified LWE as India’s most serious internal security threat, a concern reinforced by the 2010 Dantewada attack.
  • Prolonged violence eroded state legitimacy, disrupted governance, and created an environment of fear, instability, and institutional breakdown.
  • By 2026, Home Minister Amit Shah declared the country free of Maoist insurgency, marking a significant security victory.
  • This achievement reflects political commitment, inter-state coordination, and strategic operations.
  • However, security gains alone cannot ensure long-term peace; they merely open the path for governance to establish trust, credibility, and stability.

Beyond Security: The Imperative of Governance Credibility

  • The transition from conflict to peace depends on building governance credibility in historically neglected regions.
  • These areas have long suffered from a resource curse, where natural wealth coexists with poverty.
  • Initiatives such as Jungle Mahal, Saranda, and Bastar demonstrate a shift toward area-based planning and sustained reconstruction.
  • A community-centred approach is essential, focusing on forest economies, agroforestry, local enterprises, and eco-tourism.
  • Strengthening local value chains and ensuring fair procurement can generate livelihood security.
  • The emphasis must be on inclusive growth, local ownership, and equitable distribution of resources.
  • Development, in this context, is not merely economic expansion but the restoration of dignity and agency.

The Human Dimension: Reclaiming Citizenship

  • At the heart of the LWE landscape lies the experience of the Adivasi citizen, often positioned between state forces and insurgents.
  • This condition reflects a deeper crisis of citizenship, where constitutional rights remain inadequately realised.
  • The everyday reality includes displacement, exclusion, and limited access to basic services.
  • Reclaiming citizenship requires recognising individuals as rights-bearing stakeholders rather than passive recipients.
  • The focus must shift toward human dignity, social justice, and empathetic governance. Peace is not simply the absence of violence but the presence of trust, recognition, and participation.

A Framework for Post-LWE Transformation

  • Sustainable transformation requires rebuilding relationships between the state and citizens, an idea aligned with the work of John Paul Lederach.
  • Conflict reflects deeper fractures that demand institutional repair, trust-building, and fairness.
  • The proposed AIEEEE framework, accountability, innovation, evidence, equity, empathy, and efficiency, offers a structured approach.
  • Effective implementation depends on policy convergence, institutional coordination, and last-mile delivery.
  • Strengthening justice systems, ensuring humane policing, improving grievance redressal, and addressing undertrial burdens are essential for building public confidence.

Youth, Aspiration, and the Role of Opportunity

  • Youth represent a critical driver of transformation. Sports have demonstrated their role in fostering discipline, confidence, and identity, but broader opportunities are necessary.
  • Expanding education access, skill development, and employment pathways aligned with local economies can sustain progress.
  • Encouraging women-led enterprises, enhancing residential schooling, and supporting entrepreneurship can create long-term social mobility.
  • Channelling aspiration into productive avenues reduces vulnerability to conflict and strengthens community resilience.

Conclusion

  • The shift from counter-insurgency to inclusive governance requires a commitment to cooperative federalism and sustained engagement.
  • The ultimate measure of success lies not in the absence of violence but in the presence of justice, opportunity, and institutional trust. Building structural confidence in governance is both an administrative and psychological task.
  • A humane and consistent state presence can transform these regions into spaces of belonging, participation, and shared progress.
Editorial Analysis

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23 Apr 2026

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23 Apr 2026

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23 Apr 2026

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23 Apr 2026

Paid Test

Full Length Test - 6 (R7725)

Questions : 100 Questions

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Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight

This Test is part of a Test Series
Test Series : Prelims Plus Test Series 2026 - Offline Batch 3
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22 April 2026 MCQs Test

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Current Affairs
April 22, 2026

What is the Prajna System?
The Union Ministry of Home Affairs recently received an indigenously developed AI-enabled satellite imaging system, ‘Prajna’.
current affairs image

About Prajna System:

  • It is an indigenously developed satellite imaging system to enhance the real-time decision support for the security agencies.
  • The AI-enabled system was developed by the DRDO's Centre for Artificial Intelligence and Robotics (CAIR).
  • It is intended to strengthen the country’s internal security by monitoring sensitive regions and aiding counter-terrorism operations.
  • The system integrates satellite imagery with advanced AI-driven analytics to provide actionable insights in real time.
  • It is designed to significantly improve situational awareness and support faster, more accurate decision-making during critical operations.
  • By leveraging artificial intelligence, it can process vast volumes of satellite data, identify patterns and flag anomalies that may otherwise go unnoticed through conventional methods.
Science & Tech

Current Affairs
April 22, 2026

Mookambika Wildlife Sanctuary
Sewage from commercial activities related to religious tourism in Kollur has emerged as a threat to the Mookambika Wildlife Sanctuary in Udupi district, with the depleted Souparnika river carrying sewage and sludge to the core area in summer.
current affairs image

About Mookambika Wildlife Sanctuary:

  • It is located in the Udupi district of Karnataka.
  • The sanctuary is named after the presiding deity of the Kollur Mookambika Temple, which is located within its boundaries.
  • It forms a vital connecting link between Someshwara Wildlife Sanctuary located on the southern side and Sharavathi Wildlife Sanctuary located on the northern side.
  • At the heart of the sanctuary lies the revered Kodachadri Peak, often referred to as a “botanical paradise.”
  • The sanctuary boasts two significant rivers – River Chakra and River Souparnika.
  • It is home to many beautiful waterfalls such as Koosalli waterfalls and Belkal Theertha waterfalls.
  • Vegetation: The vegetation type is a mix of evergreen, semi-evergreen, and moist deciduous forests covering the steep slopes typical of the Western Ghats Mountains.
  • Flora:
    • Some of the eminent tree species are found in this region, including trees like Dipterocarpus Indicus, Calophyllum Tomentosum, and Hopea Parviflora.
    • A rare species of the climber, Coscinium Fenestratum, is found here.
    • Small patches of teak plantations are also there.
  • Fauna: It is known for the presence of rare animals like the slender loris and lion-tailed macaque, alongside larger wildlife such as tiger, leopard, sloth bear, sambar deer, chital, wild pig, barking deer, gaur, porcupine, and otter.
Environment

Current Affairs
April 22, 2026

Key Facts about Aspero
Archaeologists in Peru recently uncovered a structure at Áspero that appears to have been used to observe the sky, adding detail to what is known about early scientific practices in the Caral Civilisation.
current affairs image

About Aspero:

  • It is a late preceramic archaeological site associated with the Norte Chico civilization (also called Caral-Supe civilization), one of the oldest known civilizations in the Americas.
  • It is located in Peru on the right bank of the Supe River.
  • Once a major fishing centre for the city of Caral, Áspero was inhabited throughout the Late Archaic period from before 3000 BC to approximately 1800 BC.
  • It was a major urban center with monumental architecture, including large platform mounds and sunken circular plazas, serving as a hub for trade, agriculture, and religious rituals.
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