Daily Current Affairs 16 October 2020 | UPSC Current Affairs 2020

 Current Affairs Of Today Are


    1) GST Compensation Cess

    • States were promised that if their revenue collection is less due to implementation of GST then "GST Compensation Cess" will be levied and the amount will be given to States. But this time due to the "Covid-19" crisis, the revenue shortfall is huge and can't be met by imposing more cess as it will further make economic recovery difficult. 
    • Earlier Centre was asking states to borrow for the shortfall (which they can repay through GST cess collection even after June 2022) but States were asking the Centre to borrow and give it to States. So now the Centre has agreed to the State's demand, and the Centre said it will borrow Rs. 1.1 lakh crore and will pass on to states on "back-to-back basis/loan". This means that the States will have to repay for the interest and principal (maybe from GST cess collection even after June 2022) and it will be reflected as "Capital Receipts" in States account.
    • Actually, the dispute was regarding "in whose name, the borrowing will reflect i.e. in whose books of accounts" because both Centre/State knew/agreed that principal and interest payment will be done by GST cess collection post-June 2022.
    • This borrowing will not get reflected either in State's Fiscal Deficit (because State's have not borrowed) or in the Centre's Fiscal Deficit (because Centre has not borrowed for its own purpose). But this borrowing must get reflected in account books as Debt. So, it's not very clear what jugglery will be done, but most likely it will get reflected in Centre's account books, may not be as proper debt but as "off-budget liabilities". (don't go into all this, UPSC will not ask, because all this is a kind of manipulation of accounts)
    • Generally Centre can borrow from the market at a lesser interest rate as compared to States because the creditworthiness of Centre is better than States (Centre has the printing press of Rupee notes through RBI and it has more taxation powers). So, this step of Centre borrowing of Rs. 1.1 lakh crore will come as a lesser cost for States (in terms of interest payment).
    • When States borrow from the market (by issuing State Development Loans), then they can raise money at the different interest rates. That means the market/investors are willing to give/lend money to different States at different interest rates and the main reason for this difference is, different States have different creditworthiness (credit profile) for example if some states have fewer tax resources and generally delays its repayment of the debt, they will get a loan at the higher interest rate. If a State's fiscal deficit (or Debt) is higher then again it will get a loan at a higher rate. (higher the fiscal deficit or debt, more is the financial burden on that state, and the chances of default increases).
    • The other factors which impact the interest rate are the timing of borrowing and quantity of borrowing.
    • So, since the Centre is borrowing, all the States will get the loan at the same interest rate.
    Source: Indian Express

    2) Remittances growth turning muted

    • Remittances growth is mut­ed due to ‘structural’ reasons which will hamper consumption demand locally
    • The muted external remittances growth is more of a structural issue than transitory India Ratings
    • and Research said
    • India received over $70 billion inflows last year.
    • The agency argued that flows had started to moderate even before the pandemic outbreak, pointing out that as a percentage of gross disposable income, the share of remittances fell to 2.5% in FY19 as against 3.5% in FY10.
    • Gross National Product (GNP) = GDP + Net Factor Income from Abroad (NFIA)
    • Factor Income means income earned from the four factors of production Entrepreneur (profit), Capital (interest), Natural Resources (Rent), and Labour (wages). Factor income is something that you earn through some work or providing something. It is not free income. If you are getting something for free (like remittances), then it is not considered as factor income. Hence remittances are not part of NFIA and hence not part of GNP.
    • National Disposable Income = National Income (or GNP) + Transfer Payments
    • This transfer payment is free money received which includes remittances (from private persons), Gifts/Donations, and Grants (which Govt. receives for free).
    • Last year (2019-20) India received around $ 76 billion in remittances (which is the highest in the world) but it is going to decline not just because of Covid-19 but because of other structural reasons (for example, countries putting restrictions on the movement of labors)
    • As a percentage of National Disposable income, remittances are around 2.5% in last to last year, which basically means, remittances contribute 2.5% of the National Disposable Income.
    Source: The Hindu

    3) Saviour Sibling

    • Recently, doctors successfully conducted India’s first ‘savior sibling’ experiment.
    • The Saviour Sibling named Kavya saved her 6-year-old brother (suffering from Thalassemia).
    • 150- 200 ml bone marrow was harvested from Kavya in an hour-long procedure and then given to her brother Abhijeet through transfusion.
    • Kavya suffered low hemoglobin for some time but it was corrected with supplements and she also endured some pain in the areas from where the marrow was taken for a few days. Presently, both Kavya and Abhijeet are healthy.
    • Saviour Sibling’ refers to babies that are created to serve an older sibling as a donor of organs, bone marrow, or cells.
    • Stem cells from the umbilical cord blood or blood of the savior sibling are used for the treatment of serious blood disorders like thalassemia, sickle cell anemia.
    • They are created with In vitro fertilization (IVF) so that they can undergo pre-implantation genetic diagnosis (or testing) to rule out any genetic disorders and also check bone marrow compatibility.
    • Pre-implantation Genetic Testing (PGT) refers to the genetic profiling of embryos. It is used to screen embryos for genetic diseases or chromosomal abnormalities.
    • From each embryo, PGT takes a biopsy of only a few cells and conducts a genetic analysis.
    • This analysis can search to exclude embryos carrying a genetic variant that causes a hereditary disease, and it can search to find embryos that are a Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) match to a sibling.
    • HLA is a type of molecule found on the surface of most cells in the body. These play an important part in the body’s immune response to foreign substances.
    • These make up a person’s tissue type, which varies from person to person.
    • HLA typing is important in organ transplantation protocols, as they determine the likelihood of rejection.
    • The world’s first savior sibling, Adam Nash, was born in 2000 in the USA.

    Need:

    • For those families with a child that requires a stem cell transplant, often there is a hurdle of finding a donor for the transplant.
    • A successful transplant requires an HLA match between donor and recipient. However, the probability of finding a suitable match among family members is about 30% overall.

    Ethical Considerations and Implications:

    • In a 2004 paper published in the Journal of Medical Ethics, UK researchers debated whether selecting savior siblings should be banned.
    • They studied the arguments to ban it:
      • That savior siblings would be wrongfully treated as means rather than ends.
      • They would cause or constitute a slide towards designer babies,
      • They would suffer physically and/or emotionally.
    • But the paper found these arguments to be flawed. It concluded that the selection of savior siblings should be permitted, especially given that prohibiting it would result in the preventable deaths of several existing children.

    In vitro Fertilisation

    • IVF is one of the more widely known types of Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART).
    • In vitro comes from the Latin word ‘in glass’, i.e. studies are done in a test tube rather than in a human or animal.
    • The opposite of ‘In-vitro’ is ‘In-vivo’, which comes from the Latin word ‘within the living’. In vivo refers to experimentation being done in a living organism.
    • In vitro means outside the body. Fertilization means the sperm has attached to and entered the egg.
    • During IVF, mature eggs are collected (retrieved) from the ovaries and fertilized by sperm in a lab. Then the fertilized egg (embryo) or eggs (embryos) are transferred to a uterus.
    Source: The Hindu

    4) Gurkha Rights in Assam

    • The Gurkha community in Assam has sought gazette notification ensuring that the safeguards according to Clause 6 of the 1985 Assam Accord are also extended to the Gurkha people of Assam.
    • The demand for the safeguards by the Gurkha community further intensified with the recommendations of the high-level committee formed under the Chairmanship of Biplab Kumar Sharma by the Union Home Ministry on Clause 6 of Assam Accord.
    • The committee recommended that all Gurkhas of Assam are not indigenous Assamese people as per the definition of Assamese people.
    • Clause 6 of the Accord envisages constitutional, legislative, and administrative safeguards for protecting, preserving, and promoting the culture, social, linguistic identity, and heritage of the Assamese people.

    Biplab Kumar Sharma Committee Recommendation:

    • Definition of Assamese: The report proposes 1st January 1951 as the cut-off date for any Indian citizen residing in Assam to be defined as an Assamese to implement Clause 6.
    • Reservation for Assamese: It seeks reservations for the Assamese in Parliament, state assembly, local bodies. It recommended creating an Upper House (Legislative Council of Assam) whose seats will be reserved for the ‘Assamese people’.
    • The report also seeks quotas in government jobs.
    • Regulation of Outsiders: Recommends regulation of entry of people from other states into Assam, which includes the implementation of an Inner Line Permit (ILP) regime in the state.
    • The ILP is a system in which a special permit is required by people from other regions of India to visit the state.
    • Currently, the ILP is applicable in Manipur, Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, and Mizoram.
    • Other Rights: It also talks about issues related to land and land rights, linguistic, cultural, and social rights, and protection of the state’s resources and biodiversity.
    • Concern: It did not mention anything about the constitutional, legislative, and administrative safeguards of local Gorkhas.
    • This means the exclusion from the rights under Clause 6 of the Accord.

    Government Assurance

    • The Gurkhas in Assam are “one of the old communities”.
    • The government would treat them “at par with other indigenous communities and protect their constitutional rights while implementing Clause 6”.

    Gorkhas in Assam:

    • There are currently 25 lakh Gurkhas in Assam.
    • The Gurkhas were permanently settled in the Scheduled Areas in the last part of the 18th century as grazers and cultivators.
    • They fought for Assam against the Burmese invaders in 1826 resulting in the Treaty of Yandaboo.
    • It was a peace treaty that resulted at the end of the First Anglo Burmese War. This treaty was signed on February 24, 1826, after two years of the war between the British and Burmese.
    • They were declared as a protected class by the British in the tribal belts and blocks according to the Assam Land and Revenue Regulation Act, 1886.

    Assam Accord

    • It was a tripartite accord signed between the Government of India, State Government of Assam, and the leaders of the Assam Movement in 1985.
    • The Accord ended the anti-foreigner Assam Agitation from 1979-1985.
    • The signing of the Accord led to the conclusion of a six-year agitation that was launched by the All Assam Students’ Union (AASU) in 1979, demanding the identification and deportation of illegal immigrants from Assam.
    • It sets a cut-off of midnight of 24th March 1971, for the detection of illegal foreigners in Assam.
    • However, the demand was for the detection and deportation of migrants who had illegally entered Assam after 1951.
    Source: The Hindu

    5) Right of Passage of the Animals

    Recently, the Supreme Court (SC) upheld the 2011 order of the Madras High Court (HC) on the Nilgiris elephant corridor, affirming the right of passage of the animals and the closure of resorts in the area.

    Madras HC Judgement:

    • In 2011, the Madras HC upheld the validity of the Tamil Nadu government’s notification (of 2010) declaring an ‘Elephant Corridor’ in the Sigur Plateau of Nilgiris District.
    • It said that the government is fully empowered under the 'Project Elephant' of the Union government as well as Article 51 A(g) of the Constitution to notify the elephant corridor in the state’s Nilgiris district.
    • Article 51 A(g): It shall be the duty of every citizen of India to protect and improve the natural environment including forests, lakes, rivers, and wildlife, and to have compassion for living creatures.
    • Further, it upheld directions to the resort owners and other private landowners to vacate lands falling within the notified elephant corridor.

    Highlights of the SC Judgement:

    • It’s the State’s duty to protect a “keystone species” like elephants, which are immensely important to the environment.
    • Keystone species, in ecology, a species that has a disproportionately large effect on the communities in which it lives.
    • Elephant corridors allow elephants to continue their nomadic mode of survival, despite shrinking forest cover, by facilitating travel between distinct forest habitats. These corridors play a crucial role in sustaining wildlife by reducing the impact of habitat isolation.
    • The court also allowed the formation of a committee led by a retired HC judge and two other persons to hear the individual objections of resort owners and private landowners within the corridor space.
    • However, during the hearings, the SC opined that the area is a fragile ecosystem, where the will of men must give way to elephants.
    Daily Current Affairs 16 October 2020 | UPSC Current Affairs 2020

    Nilgiris Elephant Corridor:

    • The corridor is situated in the ecologically fragile Sigur plateau, which connects the Western and the Eastern Ghats and sustains elephant populations and their genetic diversity.
    • It is situated near the Mudumalai National Park in the Nilgiris district.
    • It has the Nilgiri hills on its southwestern side and the Moyar river valley on its northeastern side.
    • There are about 100 elephant corridors in India of which almost 70% are used regularly.
    • 75% of the corridors are in the southern, central, and northeastern forests.
    • There are an estimated 6,500 elephants in just the Brahmagiri-Nilgiris-Eastern Ghats ranges.

    Challenges for Elephant Corridors:

    • ‘Right of Passage’, an 800-page study released in August 2017, authored by experts and published by the Wildlife Trust of India (WTI) identifies and records details about 101 elephant corridors across India.
    • Narrowing Passage Width: Only 22% of corridors are of a width of one to three kilometers in 2017, compared with 41% in 2005, pointing to how constricted corridors have become in the past 12 years.
    • Human Encroachment of Corridors: 21.8% of corridors were free of human settlements in 2017 compared with 22.8% in 2005, and 45.5% have 1-3 settlements in 2017 compared with 42% in 2005.
    • Intercepted Corridors: About 36.4% of the elephant corridors in northwestern India, 32% in central India, 35.7% in northern West Bengal, and 13% of the elephant corridors in northeastern India have a railway line passing through them.
    • Almost two-thirds of the corridors have a National or State Highway passing through them, fragmenting habitats and hindering elephant movement further.
    • 11% of corridors have canals passing through them.
    • 12% are affected by the mining and the extraction of boulders.

    Land-use Along Corridors:

    • In terms of land use, only 12.9% of the corridors are totally under forest cover in 2017 compared with 24% in 2005.
    • Two in every three elephant corridors in the country are now affected by agricultural activities.
    • All the corridors in northern West Bengal (100%) and almost all in central India (96%) and northeastern India (52.2% under settled cultivation and 43.4% under slash and burn cultivation) have agricultural land.

    Asian Elephant

    • There are three subspecies of Asian elephant – the Indian, Sumatran, and Sri Lankan.
    • The Indian has the widest range and accounts for the majority of the remaining elephants on the continent.
    • Escalation of poaching, habitat loss, human-elephant conflict and mistreatment in captivity are some common threats to both African and Asian elephants.
    • African elephants are listed as “vulnerable” and Asian elephants as “endangered” in the IUCN Red List of threatened species.
    • CITES status:
      • Appendix I for Asian Elephants.
      • Appendix II for African elephants in Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe.

    Conservation Efforts:

    • Project Elephant was launched by the Government of India in the year 1992 as a Centrally Sponsored Scheme. Elephant census is conducted once in 5 years under the aegis of Project elephant.
    • Establishment of elephant reserves and adoption of the “World Elephant Day” (August 12) to help conserve and protect elephants in India.
    • ‘Gaj Yatra’ a nationwide awareness campaign to celebrate elephants and highlight the necessity of securing elephant corridors.
    • Monitoring the Illegal Killing of Elephants (MIKE) program, launched in 2003, is an international collaboration that tracks trends in information related to the illegal killing of elephants from across Africa and Asia, to monitor the effectiveness of field conservation efforts.
    Source: Down To Earth

    6) SC on Crimes and Violence Against Women

    Recently, the Supreme Court has said that crimes against women continued in a “never-ending cycle” in India.

    Judgment:

    • The judgment dealt with the statutory scheme of the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005. It has allowed women to fight domestic violence cases the right to reside in the ‘shared household’ even if her husband had no legal right to the house and the same was owned by the father-in-law or mother-in-law.
    • Making the Act Comprehensive: The court observed that the relief granted the right to the residence to a married woman under the domestic violence law by a criminal court is relevant and could be considered even in civil proceedings seeking her eviction from the matrimonial home (the residence in which a husband and wife have lived together).
    • The wife would have the right to claim the “shared household” of the joint family under the Domestic Violence Act, 2005.
    • Section 2(s) of the domestic violence act defines “shared property”, as the property owned by a woman’s husband, or by the joint family of which the husband is a member.
    • Reversed Earlier Judgement: The court reversed the law held by a previous decision of the Supreme Court in December 2006 in SR Batra v Taruna Batra where on similar facts, it refused permission to the wife to continue staying in her husband’s house as it was owned by her mother-in-law. This part of the ruling was held wrong in law as it did not give full meaning to the 2005 act.
    • Least Reported Form of Cruel Behaviour: The court noted that the domestic violence in India is rampant yet underreported. Women in India faced violence and discrimination in one form or the other in their various roles as daughter, sister, wife, mother, partner, or single woman.
    • The National Family Health Survey-4 (2015-16) (NFHS-4) suggests that 30% of women in India in the age group of 15-49 have experienced physical violence.
    • As per the UN Women, globally in 2019-20, 243 million women and girls (aged 15-49) across the world have been subjected to sexual or physical violence by an intimate partner.
    • Less than 40% of women who experience violence seeking the help of any sort of reporting the crime.
    • Less than 10% of those women seeking help go to the police.
    • Reasons: Women continue to be vulnerable to these crimes because of:
      • Non-Retaliation,
      • Absence of laws addressing their rights comprehensively.
      • Ignorance of the existing statutes.
      • Societal attitude, stigma, and conditioning also made women vulnerable to domestic violence and these are the main factors for under-reporting of cases.
      • This set of circumstances ensured that a majority of women preferred to suffer in silence, not out of choice but of compulsion.

    Acts of Domestic Violence

    • Physical violence, such as slapping, hitting, kicking, and beating.
    • Sexual violence, including forced sexual intercourse and other forms of sexual coercion.
    • Emotional (psychological) abuse, such as insults, belittling, constant humiliation, intimidation, threats of harm, threats to take away children.
    • Controlling behaviors, including isolating a person from family and friends, monitoring their movements, and restricting access to financial resources, employment, education, or medical care.
    Source: The Hindu

    7) 65th Anniversary of Bandung Conference: NAM

    • The year 2020 marks the 65th anniversary of the landmark Bandung Conference that resulted in the adoption of the founding principles of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM).
    • The basic concept for NAM originated in 1955 during discussions that took place at the Asia-Africa Bandung Conference held in Indonesia.
    • The milestone of the 65th anniversary is a good time to reflect upon the philosophy behind the movement.
    • India reiterated that NAM never was and can never be a platform for pursuits that undermine the territorial integrity of a State by another State.
    • India will deploy her rich developmental experience for the peace and welfare of humanity, treating the world as one family.
    • India also emphasized that to make NAM a relevant entity in the global decision-making process, its members must avoid raising issues that divide the forum.
    • Covid-19 is a reminder of the interconnectedness and dependence of NAM members on each other.
    • Members must work to reduce the socio-economic impact of the pandemic on the most vulnerable sections of society. NAM's unique tradition of promoting South-South cooperation can provide a way out as societies look to rebuild and regenerate in the wake of this crisis.
    • Apart from the global pandemic, terrorism, climate change, cybersecurity threats, and the uneven impact of frontier technologies (Artificial Intelligence, robotics, Internet of Things, etc.) and development concerns are few other challenges that can only be tackled if all the members work together.
    • The strength of the NAM lies in its diversity, its shared developmental experience, and its youthful populations.

    Non-Aligned Movement

    • Background:
      • It was formed during the Cold War as an organization of States that did not seek to formally align themselves with either the USA (Capitalism) or the Soviet Union (Socialism) but sought to remain independent or neutral.
    • Foundation:
      • Six years after the Bandung Conference, the Movement of Non-Aligned Countries was founded on a wider geographical basis at the First Summit Conference of Belgrade, which was held in September 1961.
      • It was held under the leadership of Josip Broz Tito of Yugoslavia, Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt, Jawaharlal Nehru of India, Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, and Sukarno of Indonesia.
    • Purpose:
      • The purpose of the organization was enumerated in the Havana Declaration of 1979 to ensure "the national independence, sovereignty, territorial integrity and security of non-aligned countries" in their struggle against imperialism, colonialism, neo-colonialism, racism, and all forms of foreign subjugation.
    • Members and Observers:
      • It has 120 members as of April 2018 comprising 53 countries from Africa, 39 from Asia, 26 from Latin America and the Caribbean, and 2 from Europe.
      • There are 17 countries and 10 international organizations that are Observers at NAM.
    • Headquarters:
      • NAM does not have a formal constitution or permanent secretariat, and its administration is non-hierarchical and rotational.
      • Decisions are made by consensus, which requires substantial agreement, but not unanimity.

    8) Geneva Conventions

    • After the Galwan (India-China) clash in Ladakh in June 2020, the International Committee for the Red Cross (ICRC) urged both the Indian and Chinese governments that they observe the Geneva Conventions to which both countries are signatories.
    • The Geneva Conventions (1949) and their Additional Protocols are international treaties that contain the most important rules limiting the barbarity of war.
    • They protect people who do not take part in the fighting (civilians, medics, aid workers) and those who can no longer fight (wounded, sick and shipwrecked troops, prisoners of war).
    • The first Geneva Convention protects wounded and sick soldiers on land during the war.
    • The second Geneva Convention protects wounded, sick, and shipwrecked military personnel at sea during the war.
    • The third Geneva Convention applies to prisoners of war.
    • The fourth Geneva Convention affords protection to civilians, including in occupied territory.
    • Article 3, common to the four Geneva Conventions, covers situations of non-international armed conflicts. They include traditional civil wars, internal armed conflicts that spill over into other States, or internal conflicts in which a third State or a multinational force intervenes alongside the government.
    • Two Protocols of 1977: Additional to the four 1949 Geneva Conventions were adopted in 1977. They strengthen the protection of victims of international (Protocol I) and non-international (Protocol II) armed conflicts and place limits on the way wars are fought.
    • In 2005, a third Additional Protocol was adopted creating an additional emblem, the Red Crystal, which has the same international status as the Red Cross and Red Crescent emblems.
    • The International Committee for the Red Cross (ICRC), an international humanitarian organization, has the mandate to monitor that signatories follow the rules in situations of conflict.
    • Established in 1863, the ICRC operates worldwide, helping people affected by conflict and armed violence and promoting the laws that protect victims of war.
    • An independent and neutral organization, based in Geneva, Switzerland.
    • The ICRC is funded mainly by voluntary donations from governments and from National Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.
    Source: Indian Express

    9) Uranium Supply From Australia to India

    • Recently, the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) has turned down the offers submitted by the two Australian companies for commencing supply of uranium ore to India citing lack of viability of the proposals.
    • India-Australia ties have been on an upswing since 2012 when the Australian government decided to sell uranium to India despite India not being a signatory to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
    • The above decision was formalized by way of a bilateral agreement in 2014 known as Cooperation in the Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy.
    • The uranium imports from Australia were to be used to meet the fuel requirements of Indian nuclear reactors that are under International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safeguards.
    • However, the progress on uranium supply has been very low, despite efforts from both sides. In 2017, Australia had sent its first uranium shipment to India but that was cited as “a small sample of uranium” transferred “purely for testing purposes”.

    India’s Civil Nuclear Capacity

    • India has 22 reactors with an installed capacity of 6,780 megawatts. Of these, eight reactors are fuelled by indigenous uranium while the remaining 14 are under IAEA safeguards and qualify to use imported uranium.
    • India was required to bring 14 reactors under IAEA safeguards in a phased manner under the separation plan announced by India in 2006, which was negotiated after the 2005 nuclear deal with the USA.
    • Currently, India imports uranium fuel from Russia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, France, and Canada.
    • Kazakhstan is the world’s largest producer of uranium.
    • A steady supply of uranium is expected to boost the performance of Indian nuclear power plants, as well as of several fuel cycle facilities.

    Non-Proliferation Treaty

    • The NPT is an international treaty whose objective is to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and weapons technology, to foster the peaceful uses of nuclear energy, and to further the goal of disarmament.
    • The treaty was signed in 1968 and entered into force in 1970. Presently, it has 190 member states.
    • It requires countries to give up any present or future plans to build nuclear weapons in return for access to peaceful uses of nuclear energy.
    • It represents the only binding commitment in a multilateral treaty to the goal of disarmament by the nuclear-weapon States.
    • Nuclear-weapon states parties under the NPT are defined as those that manufactured and exploded a nuclear weapon or other nuclear explosive devices before 1st January 1967.

    India’s Stand on NPT

    • India is one of the five countries that have not signed the NPT, the others include Pakistan, Israel, North Korea, and South Sudan.
    • India always considered the NPT as discriminatory and had refused to sign it.
    • India has opposed the international treaties aimed at non-proliferation since they were selectively applicable to the non-nuclear powers and legitimized the monopoly of the five nuclear weapons powers.
    • India believes that nuclear disarmament can be achieved through a step-by-step process underwritten by a universal commitment and an agreed multilateral framework after meaningful dialogues among all States possessing nuclear weapons, for building trust and confidence.
    Source: Indian Express

    10) Wheat Variety MACS 6478

    Daily Current Affairs 16 October 2020 | UPSC Current Affairs 2020
    • The wheat variety called MACS 6478 has doubled the crop yield for farmers in Karanjkhop, a village in Maharashtra.
    • Developed By: Scientists from Agharkar Research Institute (ARI), Pune- an autonomous institute of the Department of Science and Technology (DST).

    Features:

    • Common wheat or bread wheat (Triticum aestivum).
    • Other popular wheat varieties are durum wheat (T. durum) and club wheat (T. compactum).
    • Hybrid Crops, i.e. produced by the cross-breeding of two genetically different varieties or species. Hybrids are often spontaneously and randomly created in nature when open-pollinated plants naturally cross-pollinate with other related varieties (not genetically modified).
    • Matures in 110 days and is resistant to most races of leaf and stem rust.
    • This is against the normal maturing attained after 140 to 150 days, required for wheat varieties cultivated commonly in northern India.
    • This amber-colored medium-sized grain contains 14% protein, 44.1 ppm (parts per million) zinc, and 42.8 ppm iron which is higher than other cultivated varieties.
    • Farmers get a yield of 45-60 quintal per hectare with the new variety as against earlier average yield ranging 25-30 quintal per hectare when they cultivated Lok 1, HD 2189, and other old varieties.

    Other ARI Wheat Variety (MACS 4028):

    • This bio-fortified durum variety has very high protein (14.7%), iron (46.1 ppm), and zinc (40.3 ppm) content, compared to the corresponding levels of 8-10%, 28-32 ppm, and 30-32 ppm in normally-grown varieties.
    • Biofortification is the process by which the nutritional quality of food crops is improved through agronomic practices, conventional plant breeding, or modern biotechnology.
    • Maturing in just over 100 days, it is suitable for cultivation in rainfed and low fertility conditions in Maharashtra and Karnataka.
    • It was chosen for a UNICEF-funded Farming System for Nutrition project, operated through the Indian Council of Agricultural Research’s (ICAR) Krishi Vigyan Kendras (KVK), as part of the National Nutrition Strategy.
    • ARI has also bred MACS 2971, a high-yielding variety of the traditionally cultivated dicoccum (also known as ‘khapli’) wheat that is rich in dietary fiber.
    • The Karan Vandana (DBW 187) wheat variety, developed by the Indian Institute of Wheat and Barley Research (IIWBR) under the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR), is used for cultivation in North Eastern Plains Zones.

    Other Recent Activities by ARI

    • Found the first synthetic route for producing flavonoid molecules related to the treatment of tuberculosis and chikungunya.
    • Found that the color of Lonar lake water in Maharashtra’s Buldhana district turned pink due to a large presence of the salt-loving ‘Haloarchaea’ microbes.
    • Mapped two alternative dwarfing genes Rht14 and Rht18 in wheat that can help in reducing rice crop residue burning i.e. stubble burning.
    • Isolated and cultivated 45 different strains of methanotrophs (methane-utilizing bacteria) and created the first indigenous methanotroph culture.
    • A study on biogenic methane hydrate in the Krishna-Godavari (KG) Basin.
    Source: PIB

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