0.2316
7667766266
x

Daily UPSC Current Affairs and Latest Daily News on IAS Prelims Bits

Prelim Bits

Patient Capital


Prelims: Current events of national and international importance | Infrastructure

Why in News?

Recently, Ministry of Finance has established a specialized committee to simplify the Mobilization of "Patient Capital" long-term investments from domestic sources like pension funds and insurance companies into a large-scale infrastructure project.

  • Declared during – World Bank & IMF Spring Meetings held in Washington DC, 2026.

Patient Capital

  • Definition - Capital invested for a long-term duration (10–30 years) where the investor does not expect quick returns on investment but seeks for a stable & long-term return.
  • Sources - Pension Funds (National Pension Scheme, Employee Provident Fund) and Insurance Funds (Private Insurance & LIC).
  • Importance - Infrastructure projects have Higher Initial costs & a long gestation periods.
  •  Unlike Banking Credits which faces Asset-Liability Mismatch (ALM) issues, patient Capital in this case aligns Perfectly with this time.

Framework - Government is using a specific framework to provide Transparency and Visibility for these long-term investors:

  • National Monetisation Pipeline (NMP) - By leasing them to Private sector it is aiming at unlocking the value of brownfield public sector assets.
  • National Infrastructure Pipeline (NIP) - A Clear roadmap of greenfield and brownfield projects across all sectors like energy, roads & railways.
  • Public-Private Partnership (PPP) - Structured frameworks to ensure risk-sharing between the government and private entities.

Role of Insurance sector

  • FDI Limits - India currently is allowing 100% FDI in insurance sector (specifically intermediaries, with 74% in insurance companies).
  • Goal to expand - Government is targeting deprived or Unserved segments like Agriculture, Services & MSMEs to increase insurance Foothold.
  • Dual Benefit - Increased Foothold would provide social Safety (risk mitigation for citizens) & would simultaneously generate a huge corpus of funds for nation-building.

Economic Strategy & Viksit Bharat 2047 - Secretary for Economic affairs & Chief Economic Advisor highlighted India’s long-term trajectory:

  • Global Benchmarking Introducing Indian firms to international competition to drive productivity & innovation.
  • Institutional Reliability - It Focusing on Predictable regulatory Environment & policy continuity to attract International and National institutional investors.
  • Productivity Push - Moving from just mere growth to growth driven by competitiveness and innovation.

Reference

Economic standard | Govt pushing for more infrastructure

Prelim Bits

Resilience & Logistics Intervention for Export Facilitation (RELIEF) Scheme


Prelims: Current events of national and international importance | Polity and Governance

Why in News?

The Government has expanded the RELIEF Scheme coverage to include Egypt and Jordan amid evolving geopolitical tensions in West Asia and disruptions in maritime logistics.

  • Aim – To provide a financial and operational safety net for Indian exporters.
  • Type – Central Sector Scheme under the Export Promotion Mission (EPM).
  • Launched in – March 2026.
  • Nodal Ministry – Ministry of Commerce & Industry.
  • Implementing Agency – Export Credit Guarantee Corporation of India (ECGC).

ECGC - Provides credit insurance to Indian exporters against risks such as buyer default (non‑payment), political risks (war, civil unrest, currency restrictions), and commercial risks (insolvency, protracted default)

  • Duration – Time‑bound intervention (initially notified for shipments between February and June 2026).
  • Objectives
    • Mitigate logistics costs and maritime risk exposure.
    • Provide calibrated insurance and financial support to exporters.
    • Ensure supply chain resilience and sustain trade flows.
    • Support MSME exporters disproportionately affected by freight surcharges.
  • Coverage
    • Exports to Gulf and West Asia countries – UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman, Kuwait, Bahrain, Iraq, Iran, Yemen.
    • Newly added – Egypt and Jordan.

Key Features

Component I

Maintains pre‑disruption premium rates for ECGC‑covered consignments (Feb 14–Mar 15, 2026) with enhanced cover up to 100% for war‑related risks.

Component II

Provides up to 95% loss coverage for consignments (Mar 16–Jun 15, 2026); includes exporters obtaining fresh ECGC Whole Turnover Policies post Mar 16, 2026.

Component III

Targets uninsured MSME exporters; cap of Rs. 50 lakh per exporter for affected shipments.

External Support

Reimbursement assistance for extraordinary freight and insurance surcharge burdens.

Policy Circular

Clarified eligibility – for new ECGC policyholders under Component II.

  • Beneficiaries
    • Primary – MSME exporters, insured exporters, new ECGC policyholders.
    • Secondary – Logistics providers, shipping companies, wider export ecosystem.

References                             

  1. PIB | RELIEF Scheme
  2. ECGC | RELIEF Scheme
  3. The Hindu | RELIEF Scheme

 

Prelim Bits

Recent discovery of a World Beneath the Great Lakes


Prelims: Current events of national and international importance | History

Why in News?

Archaeologists have uncovered a 9,000‑year‑old submerged world beneath Lake Huron in the Great Lakes, revealing stone structures linked to ancient caribou hunters.

Key Findings

  • The submerged features discovered in Lake Huron are located on an ancient ridge known as the Alpena-Amberley Ridge.
  • Ancient Stone Structures Discovery of 9,000-year-old hunting pits, drive lanes, and stone caches for tool making.
  • Earliest Human EvidenceThe site represents the oldest known human activity at the bottom of the Great Lakes.
  • Extensive MappingResearchers identified 80 distinct locations using SONAR and Remotely Operated Vehicles (ROV) for underwater archaeology.
  • Sophisticated HuntingDrive lanes funnelled caribou into specific areas, reflecting advanced animal management techniques.
  • PreservationThe cold, sediment-free waters of Lake Huron kept the structures largely undisturbed for millennia.
  • Scientific TransformationArchaeological findings converted the known Alpena-Amberley Ridge into a significant "lost world" site.
  • Archaeological Significance
    • Cultural Insight – Reveals Paleoindian adaptation strategies during transition from Paleo‑Indian to Archaic periods.
    • Comparative Ethnography – Hunting methods comparable to modern reindeer herders.
    • Artifacts – Stone caches, tool‑making resources, and mapped hunting systems.

Geographical context of Alpena‑Amberley Ridge

Alphena-Amberly Ridge

  • Geological ContextOnce a land bridge was exposed during the final stages of the last Ice Age.
  • SubmergenceFlooded 10,000 years ago due to rising glacial meltwaters.
  • Significance Provided a natural corridor for Paleoindian hunters.

The Great Lakes (Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie, and Ontario) are 5 interconnected freshwater bodies spanning the Canada–U.S. border.

Lake Huron

  • The world's 4th-largest lake by surface area.
  • Third-Largest Freshwater Lake.
  • Home to Manitoulin Island – World's largest freshwater lake island.

Lake Baikal – World's largest freshwater lake by volume – Southern Siberia, Russia.

Lake Superior – Largest freshwater lake by surface area – Border of Ontario, Canada.

References

  1. Indian Defence Review | Alpena-Amberly Ridge
  2. University of Michigan | Alpena-Amberly Ridge

Prelim Bits

Bharat Maritime Insurance Pool (BMIP)


Prelims: Current events of national and international importance | Polity and Governance

Why in News?

The Union Cabinet has approved the creation of the Bharat Maritime Insurance Pool (BMIP) to provide continuous insurance coverage.

  • It is a government‑backed insurance system designed to provide risk coverage for Indian‑flagged and Indian‑controlled maritime vessels operating domestically and internationally.
  • Part of India’s push for strategic self‑reliance in maritime trade under Maritime India Vision 2030.

Objectives of BMIP

  • Ensuring Operational Continuity – Maintains uninterrupted maritime trade and insurance access during periods of global geopolitical instability.
  • Strategic Risk Autonomy – Establishes sovereign control over maritime risk management through a domestic risk-sharing mechanism.
  • Reducing External Vulnerability – Curtails heavy dependence on International Group of Protection and Indemnity Clubs (IGP&I)and foreign insurers for critical coverage.
  • Enhancing Maritime Sovereignty – Builds domestic capacity to safeguard Indian-flagged vessels and critical maritime trade routes.
  • Sanctions and Strategic Resilience – Strengthens resilience against global sanctions while promoting Atmanirbharta in maritime financial services.
  • Coverage
    • Hull & Machinery Insurance – Protects ships against physical damage or loss.
    • Cargo Insurance – Covers goods transported between India and international ports.
    • Protection & Indemnity (P&I) – Covers third‑party liabilities.
    • War Risk Insurance – Ensures vessels can operate in conflict‑prone areas without disruption.
    • Third‑party liabilities – Oil pollution, wreck removal, cargo damage, crew injury, collision liabilities.

UNCLOS (United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea) – The UNCLOS is the international "constitution of the oceans" that establishes the legal framework for maritime zones, navigation rights, resource management, and peaceful dispute resolution.

  • Strategic Timing of India’s Launch
    • Global insurers raised premiums or withdrew coverage, leaving exporters exposed.
    • Recent disruptions in the Red Sea, Strait of Hormuz, Gulf of Oman exposed vulnerability to foreign insurers.
    • India’s maritime sector handles 70% of trade by volume and 95% by value.
    • BMIP acts as a buffer, ensuring affordable insurance even during geopolitical crises.
  • Impact on Global Supply Chains
    • Conflicts increase risks of cargo loss, vessel damage, and crew safety.
    • Insurance costs spike, disrupting logistics and raising export costs.
    • Withdrawal of coverage can halt shipping operations.

References

  1. India Today | BMIP
  2. Indian Express | BMIP

Prelim Bits

Recent study about Himalayan Glaciers


Prelims: Current events of national and international importance | Geography | Disaster Management

Why in News?

A recent study has identified 219 unstable hanging glaciers in the Alaknanda basin of Uttarakhand, warning of avalanche and downstream disaster risks.

 The Alaknanda Basin       

  • Location Primary headstream of the Ganga in Uttarakhand.
  • Elevation Range400 m to 7,800 m.
  • Key Settlements at RiskMana (last Indian village), Badrinath, Hanuman Chatti.
  • Critical Infrastructure – National Highway 7 (NH7), hydropower projects, pilgrimage routes.
  • Concentration30% of hanging mass volume in Upper Alaknanda basin.
  • Seismicity – The Alaknanda basin is characterized by high seismic activity, which acts as a secondary trigger for glacial instability.
  • Exposure Growth – Built‑up area expanded from 8,000 sq. m (2000) to projected 150,000 sq. m (2030); population from <400 to >8,500.

The Four‑Step Life Cycle

Hanging Glaciers

The 2021 Chamoli disaster showed glacier collapses evolving into debris flows.

  • Key Analysis
    • Monitoring Gap – Unlike the Alps (radar, time‑lapse cameras, early‑warning systems), the Himalayas lack systematic monitoring.
    • Climate Trends – Himalayan warming in the past two decades has exceeded the global average, accelerating glacier retreat.
    • Suggested Measures – Targeted monitoring of high‑risk glaciers, prioritizing resources for the most perilous zones.

Reference

The Hindu | Hanging Glaciers

Free UPSC Interview Guidance Programme
sidetext

  IAS Parliament Current Affairs April 2026


  IAS Parliament Current Affairs March 2026


  IAS Parliament Current Affairs February 2026


  IAS Parliament Current Affairs January 2026


  IAS Parliament Current Affairs December 2025


  IAS Parliament Current Affairs November 2025


  IAS Parliament Current Affairs October 2025


  IAS Parliament Current Affairs September 2025


  IAS Parliament Current Affairs August 2025


  IAS Parliament Current Affairs July 2025


  IAS Parliament Current Affairs June 2025


  IAS Parliament Current Affairs May 2025


  IAS Parliament Current Affairs April 2025


Keeping up with UPSC Current Affairs through IAS Parliament

Preparing for the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) examination is an exceptionally demanding process, requiring not only a solid grasp of core subjects but also a thorough and up-to-date understanding of current affairs. Given the vastness of the UPSC syllabus, current events play a critical role in shaping the examination questions. Success in the UPSC requires aspirants to stay continuously informed about the latest national and international developments.

The IAS Parliament platform is a highly reliable and comprehensive resource specifically designed to meet this need. It provides crucial news and insights across a spectrum of relevant topics, including:

  • Government Policies & Schemes, Bills, and Acts
  • Current Events of National & International Importance
  • Indian Politics and Indian Economy
  • History of India and the Indian National Movement
  • General Science & Environment

The platform also covers vital sectors such as agriculture, education, and health. By providing regular updates on governmental functions and departmental activities, IAS Parliament serves as an ideal and centralized source for current affairs preparation.

In-Depth Daily Content and Analysis

To ensure aspirants are comprehensively prepared, IAS Parliament offers a structured and rich daily content schedule:

  • Daily News Digest: A summary of the day's most critical news, perfect for aspirants with limited time.
  • Prelims and Mains Focused Articles: Five Prelims-focused articles and two Mains-focused articles are posted every day, providing tailored content for both stages of the exam.
  • Fact-Oriented Content: The platform also posts ten "one-liners" daily, which are predominantly fact-oriented, aiding in the quick recall of essential data points.
  • Expert Analysis: A dedicated team provides insightful articles and expert opinions on various issues. This in-depth analysis is invaluable for developing a deeper understanding of topics and for formulating well-reasoned arguments, which is particularly beneficial for the Essay Paper.

Assessment and Skill Enhancement

Beyond informative articles, the IAS Parliament integrates essential tools for self-assessment and progress tracking:

  • UPSC Quiz Section: Aspirants can consistently test their knowledge with quizzes based on the latest news.
  • Daily Practice Questions: The platform posts five Prelims quizzes and two Mains questions every day, enabling aspirants to continuously assess their preparation level and track progress over time.

To maintaining a rigorous focus on current affairs is fundamental to UPSC preparation. The IAS Parliament stands out as a one-stop-shop that provides reliable, comprehensive, and regularly updated coverage of current affairs. Its user-friendly interface and diverse range of resources—from daily digests and focused articles to quizzes and analytical content—make it an indispensable tool for every serious UPSC aspirant aiming for success.

Also Read: