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Article
27 Mar 2026
Why in the News?
- The 14th Ministerial Conference of the World Trade Organisation has begun amid debates on global trade reforms and India’s policy stance.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- WTO (Objectives, Key Principles, Mechanism, Significance, etc.)
- News Summary (Crisis of Relevance, India’s Trade Strategy, etc.)
World Trade Organization
- The World Trade Organisation (WTO) is a global international body established in 1995 to regulate and facilitate international trade among nations.
- Objectives
- Promote free and fair global trade.
- Ensure predictability and transparency in trade rules.
- Provide a platform for negotiation and dispute settlement.
- Support development through trade integration.
- Key Principles
- Most-Favoured Nation (MFN): Equal treatment to all member countries in trade.
- National Treatment: Imported goods should be treated equally with domestic goods.
- Consensus-based decision-making: Decisions are typically taken with agreement from all of the members.
- Institutional Mechanisms
- Ministerial Conference: The highest decision-making body, held every two years.
- Dispute Settlement Body: Resolves trade disputes among member countries.
- Trade Policy Review Mechanism: Monitors trade policies of member countries.
- Significance
- The WTO plays a crucial role in maintaining a stable global trade system.
- However, in recent years, it has faced challenges such as weakening dispute settlement mechanisms and rising protectionism.
News Summary
- The ongoing WTO Ministerial Conference (MC14) takes place in a context of a changing global trade order and growing tensions among major economies.
- Crisis of Relevance
- The WTO is facing a crisis of relevance due to disruptions in global trade rules.
- The dispute settlement mechanism has become ineffective because of the blocking of judge appointments by the United States.
- Push for WTO Reforms
- The United States is advocating significant reforms, including reconsideration of the MFN principle.
- There is also a push to incorporate plurilateral agreements, which involve a subset of countries instead of all members.
- This represents a shift away from the WTO’s traditional consensus-based approach.
- E-commerce Moratorium
- One of the key issues is the continuation of the moratorium on customs duties on electronic transmissions. It has been in place since 1998.
- Developed countries support its continuation.
- India, along with countries like Indonesia and South Africa, opposes it.
- India argues that:
- It may lead to significant revenue loss.
- It restricts policy space in the digital economy.
- Developing countries lack the technological capacity to benefit equally.
- Investment Facilitation Agreement
- Another major issue is the China-backed Investment Facilitation for Development (IFD) Agreement.
- Supported by over 120 countries.
- Aims to improve the flow of foreign direct investment.
- India opposes this agreement because:
- It is being introduced through a plurilateral route.
- It undermines the multilateral and consensus-based structure of the WTO.
- It may have strategic implications linked to global investment networks.
- Public Stockholding for Food Security
- India continues to push for a permanent solution on public stockholding.
- WTO rules limit agricultural subsidies to 10% of production value.
- India seeks flexibility to support farmers and ensure food security.
- This is crucial because:
- India supports millions of small farmers through MSP.
- Around 80 crore people receive free food grains under welfare schemes.
- Fisheries Subsidies and Livelihood Concerns
- India advocates a balanced approach to fisheries subsidies.
- It supports sustainability in fishing practices.
- It emphasises the protection of small fishers’ livelihoods.
- It calls for greater responsibility from developed nations engaged in distant water fishing.
- India’s Broader Trade Strategy
- India’s approach to the WTO is guided by the need to preserve policy space.
- India has a relatively low share in global trade but high growth potential.
- Past experiences, such as the Information Technology Agreement (ITA-1), influence its cautious approach.
- India aims to ensure that:
- Development concerns remain central to WTO reforms.
- Trade rules do not constrain domestic policy flexibility.
- Emerging sectors like digital trade are regulated fairly.
Article
27 Mar 2026
Context:
- The ongoing geopolitical turbulence in West Asia highlights a structural reality for India: energy insecurity is systemic, not episodic.
- With over 85% dependence on crude oil imports, India remains highly vulnerable to supply disruptions, price shocks, and regional conflicts—leading to inflationary pressures, fiscal strain, and current account deficits.
- However, this crisis also presents a strategic opportunity to transform vulnerability into long-term energy resilience and leadership.
Structural Challenge - Import Dependence and Vulnerability:
- Heavy reliance on imported fossil fuels exposes India to geopolitical risks, volatile oil prices, and macroeconomic instability.
- Energy security is thus directly linked to economic stability, strategic autonomy, and climate commitments (NDCs).
Scaling Renewable Energy - From Incrementalism to Transformation:
- Need for ambition reset:
- India’s existing target of 500 GW of RE by 2030 was bold when announced, but it's no longer sufficient today. A revised target of 1,500 GW by 2030 is both necessary and achievable.
- For example, China added almost 1,600 GW in clean energy (solar and wind) in 2025, whereas India added a mere 49 GW.
- Policy imperatives:
- Strengthening procurement mechanisms: Central agencies must aggregate and contract at least 200 GW+ annually, complemented by aggressive state-level procurement.
- Strengthening: Renewable Purchase Obligations (RPOs), and Renewable Consumption Obligations (RCOs).
Grid Infrastructure and Storage - The Missing Link:
- Transmission bottlenecks:
- Renewables-rich states: Gujarat, Rajasthan, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu.
- Last year, over 50GW of energy capacity remained stranded due to a lack of evacuation and over 35GW is likely to be curtailed this year.
- As storage is equally critical, grid infrastructure must be treated as a national priority.
- Key reforms:
- Develop high-capacity transmission corridors that are seamlessly integrated with storage systems.
- Expand Renewable Energy Management Centres (REMCs).
- Integrate Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) and Pumped Hydro Storage
- Make storage mandatory in RE tenders.
- Reduce GST on storage systems.
Household Energy Transition - From LPG to Electrification:
- Issues with LPG: Significant import dependence, which increased further with the success of schemes like PM Ujjwala Yojana.
- Suggestions:
- Promote electric induction cooking.
- Replicate UJALA model (demand aggregation for affordability).
- Use Ujjwala database for targeted distribution.
Transport Electrification as Economic Strategy:
- Clear and time-bound roadmap: Full electrification of new two-wheelers and three-wheelers by 2030, buses in the near term, and cars and trucks by 2035.
- Challenges: Weak battery ecosystem, and underperformance of PLI for Advanced Chemistry Cells.
- Solutions: Restructure PLI scheme, expand charging infrastructure, and create viable business models and standards.
Nuclear Energy - Backbone of Grid Stability:
- Strategic role: As nuclear power provides the firm, non-intermittent supply that is essential for grid stability, it must be scaled as a long-term backbone of India’s energy mix.
- Targets and innovations: India’s ambition to reach 100 GW of nuclear capacity by 2047 is strategic and necessary. Small modular reactors offer a scalable pathway.
- Policy priorities: Enable private sector participation, strengthen global partnerships, and streamline regulatory processes.
Critical Minerals - Securing the Supply Chain:
- Core issues: Overdependence on concentrated global supply chains, lack of domestic processing and refining capacity.
- Strategic measures: Develop end-to-end domestic capabilities; secure assured offtake agreements, price support mechanisms, deepen partnerships with resource-rich countries, and invest in human capital (battery tech, mineral processing).
Clean Energy Manufacturing Hub - India’s Next Growth Engine:
- Key sectors: Solar modules, batteries, electrolysers, grid technologies and green hydrogen represent the next wave of global manufacturing.
- Policy direction: Align PLI schemes across sectors, reduce logistics costs, and boost export competitiveness. Leverage domestic demand, policy incentives, and scale advantage.
Financing the Energy Transition:
- Challenges: High capital requirements, risk perception in emerging sectors.
- Best practice:
- India's renewable sector has attracted private capital from across the world, thanks to predictable policies and actions through the Solar Energy Corporation of India (SECI).
- Similar policy frameworks are necessary across sectors to enable the private sector to attract capital and technology.
- Solutions:
- India must deepen its green finance ecosystem, including green bonds, blended finance structures, and sovereign-backed risk mitigation instruments.
- Strengthen role of domestic financial institutions, Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs), and develop robust carbon markets.
Governance and Execution - Whole-of-Government Approach:
- Execution must be anchored in institutional coordination and accountability.
- India has demonstrated its ability to deliver at scale, whether through digital public infrastructure (DPI), financial inclusion, or RE deployment.
- Therefore, energy transition now requires an integrated action across centre, states, and municipal bodies.
Conclusion:
- The instability in West Asia is both a warning and an opportunity.
- India stands at a critical juncture where it can either remain vulnerable to external shocks or emerge as a global leader in clean energy and energy security.
- By adopting a holistic, ambitious, and execution-driven approach, India can transition from energy dependence to energy sovereignty, shaping not just its own future but also contributing to global energy transformation.
Online Test
27 Mar 2026
CAMP-ET-03
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Online Test
27 Mar 2026
CAMP-ET-03
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 60 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Online Test
27 Mar 2026
Full Length Test - 3 (R7722)
Questions : 100 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight
Online Test
27 Mar 2026
Full Length Test - 3 (R7722)
Questions : 100 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight
Online Test
27 Mar 2026
CAMP-ET-01
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Current Affairs
March 26, 2026
About QS World University Rankings:
- It is published annually by global higher education consultancy Quacquarelli Symonds.
- The QS rankings evaluate universities on several parameters, including academic reputation, overall score, employer reputation, and employment outcomes.
- It uses a structured approach to assess institutions across the globe. Each ranking is built on a set of measurements that help evaluate different aspects of university performance. These measurements are grouped as follows:
- Lens:A collection of indicators linked by a common theme, such as research or employability.
- Five Lenses: Research and Discovery, Employability and Outcomes, Global Engagement, Learning Experience, Sustainability.
- Indicator:A specific area of performance, such as Citations per Faculty or Employer Reputation. Institutions are scored and ranked on each indicator, which contributes to their overall rank.
- Metric:A detailed calculation within an indicator, used to generate precise scores.
- Lens:A collection of indicators linked by a common theme, such as research or employability.
Key Highlights of QS World University Rankings
- India recorded 120 new entries this year, placing it fourth globally for fresh appearances, behind only the US (287), China (181), and the UK (159).
- The country now holds the fourth-largest presence in these rankings by institution count, after the US, China, and the UK.
- Six Indian institutions now feature in the global top 100 for computer science, all improving from last year.
- The Indian Institute of Technology (ISM) Dhanbad and the Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad, both securing the country's highest global rank of 21.
- IIT-ISM Dhanbad has retained its stronghold in mineral and mining engineering.
- IIM Ahmedabad has broken into the top 25 globally in business and management studies as well as marketing.
Current Affairs
March 26, 2026
About Amrabad Tiger Reserve:
- Location: It is located in the Nallamala hills of the Eastern Ghats in Telangana state.
- It was originally part of the larger Nagarjunasagar-Srisailam Tiger Reserve before the bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana in 2014.
- Terrain: The reserve is renowned for its rugged terrain, deep valleys, and dense forests.
- Rivers: The Krishna River and its perennial streams originating within the reserve contribute to the water supply of major reservoirs such as the Srishailam Dam and Nagarjunsagar Dam.
- Tribal Community: The Chenchu tribe is one of the major tribal communities that live in the ATR.
- Flora:
- Amrabad is characterized by dry deciduous forests, primarily made up of sal, teak, bamboo, and acacia trees.
- The forest is rich in medicinal plants and shrubs, which have long been used by local tribes for traditional remedies.
- Fauna: It is home to leopards and wild cats, along with herbivores like sambar deer, chital (spotted deer), nilgai (blue bull), wild boar, and the Indian bison (gaur).
Over 303 bird species have been identified in this region. Some important groups include Eagles, Pigeons, Doves, Cuckoos, Woodpeckers, Drongos, etc.