Insights Daily Current Affairs + PIB: 20 August 2019
Insights Daily Current Affairs + PIB: 20 August 2019
Insights Daily Current Affairs + PIB: 20 August 2019
insightsonindia.com/2019/08/20/insights-daily-current-affairs-pib-20-august-2019
August 20,
2019
GS Paper 2:
Topics Covered:
UN Security Council
What to study?
For Mains: Role and significance of UNSC, need for UNSC reforms, why India should be given
permanent membership?
Context: Vice President calls for renewed efforts for India to gain permanent
membership of the UN Security Council.
About UNSC:
What is it?
The United Nations Security Council (UNSC) is one of the organs of the United Nations
and is charged with the maintenance of international peace and security.
Members: The Security Council consists of fifteen members. Russia, the United Kingdom,
France, China, and the United States—serve as the body’s five permanent members.
These permanent members can veto any substantive Security Council resolution,
including those on the admission of new member states or candidates for Secretary-
General.
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The Security Council also has 10 non-permanent members, elected on a regional basis to
serve two-year terms. The body’s presidency rotates monthly among its members.
1. The Security Council is the United Nations’ most powerful body, with “primary
responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security.
2. Its powers include the establishment of peacekeeping operations, the
establishment of international sanctions, and the authorization of military action
through Security Council resolutions.
3. It is the only UN body with the authority to issue binding resolutions to member
states.
4. Under the UN Charter, all Member States are obligated to comply with Council s
decisions.
Proposed reforms:
Reform of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) encompasses five key issues:
categories of membership, the question of the veto held by the five permanent
members, regional representation, the size of an enlarged Council and its working
methods, and the Security Council-General Assembly relationship. There is also a
proposal to admit more permanent members.
India’s demands:
India has been calling for the reform of the UN Security Council along with Brazil,
Germany and Japan for long, emphasising that it rightly deserves a place at the UN high
table as a permanent member.
GS Paper 3:
Topics covered:
For Mains: Resource efficiency- need, significance, challenges and means to achieve it,
NITI Aayog’s strategy on resource efficiency.
It aims to streamline the efficient use of these resources with minimum negative impact
on environment.
Functions of NERA:
1. Develop and implement resource efficient strategies for material recycling, reuse
and land-filling targets for various sectors.
2. Set standards for reuse of secondary raw materials to ensure quality.
3. Maintain a database of material use and waste generated, recycled and land filled,
across various sectors and different regions and monitor the implementation.
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What is Resource Efficiency?
Resource efficiency very simply put is making more with fewer materials. In practice,
through a life-cycle approach, it leads to minimizing impact on environment & the
associated societal burdens, transforming ‘waste’ into ‘resources’ fostering circular
economy, and strengthening resource security.
Resource Efficiency and Circular Economy are important goals and central principles for
achieving sustainable development. Sustainability is a global priority and SDGs
commitment and 11th Five year plan also clearly enunciate importance of Resource
efficiency (RE).
India’s large population, rapid urbanization and expanding industrial production have led
to exploitation of available limited natural resources with concerns regarding resource
depletion and future availability becoming more pronounced.
Therefore, Enhancing resource efficiency (RE) and promoting the use of secondary raw
materials (SRM) is a pertinent strategy to address these challenges and reduce
dependence on primary resource.
1. NITI Aayog in collaboration with the European Union delegation to India have
released the Strategy on Resource Efficiency. The strategy aims to promote
resource efficiency in India.
2. This strategy is the first policy document to emphasize resource productivity in
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the country. The Strategy emphasizes on Sustainable Public Procurement (SSP) as
an action agenda which will be the market transformation tool to transform to a
resource efficient economy.
3. It is developed with the recommendations from the Indian Resource Efficiency
Programme (IREP), launched by the Indian Ministry of Environment, Forests and
Climate Change (MoEFCC) and Indian Resource Panel (InRP) in April 2017.
GS Paper 2 and 3:
Topics Covered:
Information Fusion Centre (IFC) for the Indian Ocean Region (IOR)
What to study?
For Mains: IOR- significance, potential, challenges to its security and the need for international
collaboration.
Context: The capabilities of Information Fusion Centre – Indian Ocean Region (IFC-IOR)
are being enhanced under the National Maritime Domain Awareness (NMDA) Project.
The NMDA project was launched in accordance with the vision of PM on SAGAR (Security
and Growth for All in the Region).
The IFC-IOR was established with the vision of strengthening maritime security in the
region and beyond, by building a common coherent maritime situation picture and
acting as a maritime information hub for the region.
The IFC has been established at the Navy’s Information Management and Analysis
Centre (IMAC) in Gurugram, which is the single point centre linking all the coastal radar
chains to generate a seamless real-time picture of the nearly 7,500-km coastline.
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Significance and the need:
1. The IOR has a diverse set of littorals and island nations, each with their unique
needs, aspirations, interest and values.
2. It is necessary to counter the Rise in maritime piracy in the region.
3. IFR-IRO would also ensure that the entire region is benefited by mutual
collaboration and exchange of information and understanding the concerns and
threats which are prevalent in the region.
GS Paper 3:
Topics covered:
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1. Awareness in space.
Interplanetary pollution
What to study?
Context: On April 11, the Israeli spacecraft Beresheet attempted to land on the Moon,
but crashed on the surface. It was carrying a number of items — including thousands of
specimens of a living organism called tardigrade.
The question is: did the thousands of dehydrated tardigrades on Beresheet survive the
crash? And if they did, are they now living on the Moon?
1. The tardigrade, also known as water bear, is among the toughest and most
resilient creatures on Earth.
2. The tardigrade can only be seen under a microscope.
3. Half a millimetre long, it is essentially a water-dweller but also inhabits land and, a
2008 study found, can survive in the cold vacuum of outer space .
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4. The tardigrade can endure extreme hot and cold temperature levels.
5. They themselves expel water from their bodies and set off a mechanism to protect
their cells, and can still revive if placed in water later. The organism is known to
“come back to life” on rehydration.
6. The tardigrade derives its name from the fact that it looks like an eight-legged
bear, with a mouth that can project out like a tongue.
7. A tardigrade typically eats fluids, using its claws and mouth to tear open plant and
animal cells, so that it can suck nutrients out of them.
8. It is also known to feast on bacteria and, in some cases, to kill and eat other
tardigrades.
Did any of them survive the impact? If they did, what happens to them now?
1. When the tardigrades were placed on the Israeli moon mission Beresheet, they
were in a tun state — dehydrated, with their chubby limbs and heads retracted
and all metabolic activity temporarily suspended.
2. Their arrival on the moon was unexpectedly explosive; Beresheet’s crash landing
on April 11 may have scattered the microorganisms onto the lunar surface.
3. But as long as the tardigrades remain on the moon, their chances of spontaneously
awakening are low. Without liquid water, the tiny creatures will remain in a tun
state, and while there’s evidence of ice on the moon, liquid water is nowhere to be
found.
4. Even if the lunar tardigrades did somehow encounter liquid water while still on the
moon, without food, air and a moderate ambient temperature, they wouldn’t last
very long once they revived.
Scientists have yet to find any evidence that the moon ever hosted living organisms(other
than visiting astronauts and microbial hitchhikers from Earth) that could be threatened
by microscopic invaders. However, contamination could carry serious consequences for
missions to planets where life might yet be found.
There is already a fairly sizeable amount of debris from redundant spacecraft and litter
left behind by astronauts. As more missions are planned to the moon, eventually with
human passengers and perhaps even settlements, we must learn to clean up as we go
along. Otherwise, we are going to have the sort of crisis that we are seeing on Earth with
the outcry about environmental damage from plastics.
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Beresheet:
GS Paper 3:
Topics covered:
Context: India is the largest emitter of anthropogenic sulphur dioxide in the world , as
per the data released by environmental NGO Greenpeace on August 19, 2019.
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Key findings:
The Environment Ministry had introduced SO2 emission limits for coal power
plants in December 2015 and set the initial deadline to control SO2 emissions from
power generation by December 2017.
The deadline was later extended till December 2019 after a request from the
Ministry of Power and power plant operators in Delhi-NCR and till 2022 for some
other power plants across the country through a Supreme Court order.
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GS Paper 2:
Topics Covered:
PMUY
What to study?
For Mains: PMUY- objectives, features, significance and measures needed to sustain the
momentum.
Context: The Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana is hailed as a timely intervention to rectify
the harm caused by Household Air Pollution (HAP).
1. The single greatest contributor to air pollution in India is the burning of solid fuels
in households.
2. Burning of such solid fuels, like firewood, impacts the health of household
members and accounts for somewhere between 22% to 52% of all ambient air
pollution in India.
3. One of the many pollutants produced on the burning of such solid fuels is fine
particulate matter. Such particles can travel deep into the respiratory system, and
exposure to them can cause several adverse health effects, both short-term and
long-term, including respiratory problems and heart disease.
Who is eligible? Under the scheme, an adult woman member of a below poverty line
family identified through the Socio-Economic Caste Census (SECC) is given a deposit-free
LPG connection with financial assistance of Rs 1,600 per connection by the Centre.
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caused due to indoor air pollution by burning the fossil fuel.
1. A large section of Indians, especially women and girls, are exposed to severe
household air pollution (HAP) from the use of solid fuels such as biomass, dung
cakes and coal for cooking.
2. A report from the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare places HAP as the second
leading risk factor contributing to India’s disease burden.
3. According to the World Health Organization, solid fuel use is responsible for about
13% of all mortality and morbidity in India (measured as Disability-Adjusted Life
Years), and causes about 40% of all pulmonary disorders, nearly 30% of cataract
incidences, and over 20% each of ischemic heart disease, lung cancer and lower
respiratory infection.
Way ahead:
The PMUY is a bold and much-needed initiative, but it should be recognised that this is
just a first step. The real test of the PMUY and its successor programmes will be in how
they translate the provision of connections to sustained use of LPG or other clean fuels
such as electricity or biogas.
Truly smokeless kitchens can be realized only if the government follows up with
measures that go beyond connections to actual usage of LPG. This may require
concerted efforts cutting across Ministries beyond petroleum and natural gas and
including those of health, rural development and women and child welfare.
This provision was tacked onto the Indian Companies Act of 1956, in an
amendment introduced in the year 2000.
Why in News? Government removes Debenture Redemption Reserve requirement
for Listed Companies, NBFCs and HFCs by amending the Companies (Share Capital
& Debentures) Rules.
Significance: The measure has been taken by the Government with a view to
reducing the cost of the capital raised by companies through issue of debentures
and is expected to significantly deepen the Bond Market.
Okjokull glacier:
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Context: Iceland’s Okjokull glacier commemorated with plaque.
The glacier was officially declared dead in 2014 when it was no longer thick enough to
move.
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