6 January 2015

PM makes appointments to NITI Aayog


The Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi, has made the following appointments to the NITI Aayog: 

Vice Chairman
Shri Arvind Panagariya, Economist

Full-Time Members
Shri Bibek Debroy, Economist
Dr. V.K. Saraswat, Former Secretary Defence R&D

Ex-officio members
Shri Rajnath Singh, Union Minister
Shri Arun Jaitley, Union Minister
Shri Suresh Prabhu, Union Minister
Shri Radha Mohan Singh, Union Minister

Special Invitees
Shri Nitin Gadkari, Union Minister
Shri Thawar Chand Gehlot, Union Minister
Smt. Smriti Zubin Irani, Union Ministe

Infosys Prize conferred on six eminent scientists

Six eminent scientists, including Prof Jayant Haritsa of the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Bangalore and Prof Shubha Tole of the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR), Mumbai received the prestigious Infosys Prize 2014 at a ceremony here today.
 
Prof Haritsa is Professor, Supercomputer Education and Research Centre (SERC) and Chair, Department of Computer Science and Automation (CSA) at IISc. He has been awarded the prize for his contributions to the design and optimization of database engines.
 
Prof Tole is Professor, Department of Biological Sciences, TIFR. She has been chosen for her significant contributions to studying the hippocampus and amygdala – centres of learning and memory in the brain. Her work can lead to a better understanding of human behavior, cognition and emotions.
 
Mr Shamnad Basheer, founder and Managing Trustee, Increasing Diversity by Increasing Access (IDIA), Bangalore and Founder – SpicyIP, India was awarded the prize in Humanities for contributions to theanalysis of a range of legal issues, including pharmaceutical patent injunctions and enforcement.
 
In the area of Life Sciences, the prize was presented to Prof Madhu Sudan, Principal Researcher, Microsoft Research New England and Adjunct Professor, Electrical Engineering & Computer Science (EECS) department and Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL), MassachusettsInstitute of Technology (MIT). He was awarded for his seminal contributions to probabilistically checkable proofs and error-correcting codes.Dr Srivari Chandrasekhar, Scientist G, Organic Chemistry Division, Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, Indian Institute of Chemical Technology (CSIR-IICT), Hyderabad, received the prize for his contributions in the general area of synthetic organic chemistry with a special focus on the synthesis of complex molecules from natural sources.
 
In the category of Social Sciences, Prof Esther Duflo, Abdul Latif Jameel Professor of Poverty Alleviation and Development Economics, Department of Economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Founder & Director, Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL), United States, has been chosen for the prize for her pioneering contributions to development economics, especially work related to countries such as India and Africa.
 
Nobel Laureate and renowned economist Amartya Sen, the Thomas W. Lamont University Professor at Harvard University, felicitated the winners, who received a purse of Rs 65 lakh (over $ 100,000) each, a 22 karat gold medallion and a citation certificate describing their winning work. 
 
The prize purse was increased from Rs 55 lakhs to Rs 65 lakhs this year.
 
The members of the jury, Prof. Pradeep K. Khosla ? Engineering and Computer Science, Justice. Leila Seth – Humanities, Prof. Inder Verma – Life Sciences, Prof. Srinivasa S. R. Varadhan – Mathematical Sciences, Prof. Shrinivas Kulkarni – Physical Sciences, and Prof. Kaushik Basu – Social Sciences, cited the work done by the winners.
 

Funds crunch hits agriculture mission

NMSA dovetailed with five existing programmes

A funds crunch has led to some goals of the ambitious National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture (NMSA) being embedded into five existing programmes of the agriculture and cooperation department. The NMSA was one of the eight missions under the National Action Plan for Climate Change launched in 2008 which was aimed “at transforming Indian agriculture into a climate resilient production system through suitable adaptation and mitigation measures in the domain of crops and animal husbandry.”
According to the Mission document in 2010, implementation of the NMSA from 2011-2012 to the end of the 12 five year plan would require an additional budgetary support of Rs. 1,08,000 crore. However, official sources said there was a resource constraint and the Mission was dovetailed with five major existing programmes, including the National Mission on Food Security and the National Horticulture Mission, which have been restructured to meet with climate change requirements.
At least 60 per cent of funds was to be used for mitigating risks related to climate change, which is expected to impact crop yields and water resources. The major challenge is ensuring food security and livelihood. India and other countries urgently need to scale up adaptation and mitigation actions to deal with a warming planet and experts feel that much more needs to be done.
The restructured programmes have been operational since April 2014 and it will take at least two years to see some visible change, official sources said. There is more focus on organic farming, bio-fertilizers, soil-analysis-based nutrient application, micro irrigation — which has been extended to horticulture — and methods like the System of Rice Intensification (SRI) which uses less water. The government is asking States to encourage all these programmes as pilot projects or demonstration plots which can be scaled up. Every year, official sources said an additional 6 lakh hectares will be added under water saving schemes. Another aspect is crop diversification, especially in Punjab and Haryana, so farmers switch to less water-intensive crops.
There are 16 deliverables in the ongoing programmes. Of this, funds under the 12 five-year plan to the tune of Rs. 13,054 crore are available for four — water efficiency, soil management, natural resources management in rain-fed areas and improving farming systems. This year the focus is on micro irrigation, for which the government has allotted Rs. 1,684 crore.
There is also a decision to revisit the mission document and Ministries will be asked to fine-tune some of the missions to aim for some visual impacts. A major aspect of adaptation is also tackling livestock, since a large amount of emissions are from that sector. Apart from breed improvement, diet of the animals and waste disposal are the other big challenges. Crop varieties are also a focus area, with Indian Council of Agricultural Research developing 813 climate resilient crop varieties last year.

India does not have an official poverty estimate: Pronob Sen

National Statistical Commission Chairman Dr. Pronob Sen spoke exclusively to The Hindu about India’s outdated poverty data, the fallout of the scrapping of the Planning Commission and peculiarities in economic data series.  

Having scrapped the Planning Commission, what will be the impact if the Centre also suspends the five-year plans?
To access the World Bank’s IDA [International Development Association] funds a country must lay down its strategy for reducing poverty in a PRSP [Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper]. In India’s case, the plans were accepted to be the nationally developed and owned PRSP. We will be fine till the 12th Plan is on but
2017 onwards to continue receiving the $1-billion a year that we receive from the World Bank some PRSP will be needed. That will have to be looked into.
What is the downside of not having a Planning Commission?
The apprehension is that the Finance Ministry tends to be interested in finance and deficits, not development. Its primary role of managing finances on a day to day basis does not let it take long-term views.
Some of the jobs the Planning Commission did can be done by other bodies. For instance, evaluations and project appraisals. But the basic function of the Planning Commission was having a system-wide view of development interventions and being able to match with stated objectives of governance. A lot of things flow from that. In case of inter-ministerial disputes the Commission stepped in as it had both sides of the picture. Government works in silos and the Commission was a moderator. In its absence the silos are complete. Its most important function was not allocations but checks and balances. It was an independent voice. If a ministry said something the Commission could contradict. We have lost an independent voice.
Is the poverty-data issue resolved?
India’s poverty data is hugely outdated. The last BPL [Below Poverty Line] Census was done for the 9th five-year plan. We are right now in the 12th five-year plan. Many States are frustrated because at the end of the day without poverty data how do you ensure there is an equitable basis for allocations of funds. So, now States with good Statistical capacities are doing their own BPL Census. But States such as Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and Madhya Pradesh that have greater incidence of poverty are unable to do it. The Centre had submitted to the Supreme Court that it had put on hold the Tendulkar report on poverty. After that there has been no alternative. The UPA Government had appointed the Rangarajan Committee on Poverty. It submitted its report to the Prime Minister [Narendra Modi] but am not sure in the absence of the Planning Commission who is examining it or if it is being examined. Typically in the past these reports have overlapped so there has been no such gap in data.
How is the lack of poverty data affecting the poor?
If you ask today what is India’s official poverty estimate we don’t really know…I am not in a position to say what the estimate is. This is making a mockery of anti-poverty programmes. The absence of official poverty estimates impacts inter-state allocations of funds for anti-poverty programmes of various kinds as they are driven by poverty rates. Lots of things are tied to BPL cards. BPL identification is important as things stand there are Government schemes linked to BPL Status which is in desperate need to be updated. We can’t work with such an old list of BPL people. Lots of Government schemes are linked to BPL cards. The Central Government is just a financer. The delivery mechanism is in States. They set up institutions to channelise funds and deliver services.
The Planning Commission put its foot down so there is a poverty-based allocations formula for the existing schemes. But the question then is what happens for new schemes.
By when will we have updated data on the incidence of poverty in India?
Am not sure what the protocol now is on poverty data. Earlier Committees gave their recommendations on poverty estimates to the Planning Commission which examined them and submitted its recommendation to the Prime Minister who formally accepted or rejected it.
Is the sharp contraction of minus 4.5 per cent in the Index of Industrial Production (IIP) data for October attributable to statistical issues that have plagued the series in the past?
Compared to October 2013 October 2014 had 12 extra holidays which can be very disruptive. It is not that easy to adjust calendar months for working days in India as some parts of the country observe some religious holidays and others don’t. There are non-consistent holidays. A lot of Investment-bank research is using seasonally adjusted data for the IIP but am not sure that can be done. In the Indian context, unlike in the West, our festivals are based on the lunar calendar so there is always data mismatch. Before seasonally adjusting monthly data one needs to test for the stability of seasonal processes. At the NSC [National Statistics Commission], we applied 20 tests to national accounts data to identify which seasonality adjustments are okay and which not. We find it can be done for quarterly data yes but not monthly data. IIP cannot be seasonally adjusted.
What is holding up the release of the latest Religion Census data? When can we expect it?
The policy has been that we don’t ask about caste in the normal census. Since 1931 there has been no caste census in India because the goal earlier was to get away from caste and move to a casteless society. There was a demand from Parliament for the Caste Census to update the understanding of the Caste Structure of the country.

ISRO gears up to launch IRNSS 1D

After completing an eventful year, ISRO is gearing up for some satellite launches this year, with the IRNSS 1D being the first, which would put in place India’s own navigation system on par with the Global Positioning System of the U.S.
“The launch campaign for IRNSS 1D has come, which starts on January 16. Within two months, all components from other ISRO labs have to reach Sriharikota. The launch is likely after March 15,” a senior ISRO official told PTI.
IRNSS 1D is the fourth in the series of seven satellites, the national space agency is planning to launch to put in place the Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System (IRNSS).
While four satellites would be sufficient to start operations of the system, the remaining three satellites would make it more accurate and efficient.
The other launches also relate to the IRNSS series with the IRNSS1E and IRNSS1-F satellites to be launched before the year end, he said.
The first three satellites in the IRNSS series were launched from Sriharikota on July 1, 2013, April 4 and October 16 last year respectively.
The fully deployed IRNSS would consist of three and four satellites in GEO stationary and in inclined geosynchronous orbits respectively, about 36,000 km above the Earth.
The system would provide two types of services — Standard Positioning Service, which is provided to all the users and Restricted Service, which is an encrypted service provided only to the authorised users.
The IRNSS system was targeted to be completed by this year at a total cost of Rs. 1420 crore.
IRNSS is designed to provide accurate position information service to users in the country as well as the region extending up to 1,500 km from its boundary, which is its primary service area.
A select group of countries have their own navigation systems — Russia’s Global Orbiting Navigation Satellite System (GLONASS), United States’ Global Positioning System (GPS), European Union’s Galileo (GNSS), China’s BeiDou satellite navigation system and the Quasi-Zenith Satellite System.
ISRO not only launched a GLSV rocket, a GSLV Mk III, besides two PSLVs during 2014 but also successfully inserted its Mars orbiter into the Martian atmosphere and tested the re-entry of unmanned crew module from space.

Govt approves Neutrino Project

An underground laboratory will be set up near Pottipuram village, Theni district to study the properties of the neutrino.

Union cabinet headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi has approved setting up of India-based Neutrino Observatory (INO) in Bodi West Hills, Tamil Nadu.
The INO Project Director, and Senior Professor at Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai, Naba Mondal, in an email, said, the the cabinet has approved the project "at an estimated cost of Rs. 1500 crore.”
The project will be jointly supported by the Department of Atomic Energy and the Department of Science and Technology. The infrastructural support will be given by the Government of Tamil Nadu as the project is located in the State.
Prof. Mondal said, “This underground laboratory will be set up near Pottipuram village in the Bodi West Hills of Theni district, Tamil Nadu to study the properties of the neutrino.”
An Inter-Institutional Centre for High Energy Physics (IICHEP) will also be established in Madurai, which is about 110 km from the proposed site of the neutrino observatory.
Along with the setting up of the underground laboratory and the IICHEP, the Government of India has also approved the construction of a 50,000 tonne magnetised iron calorimeter detector (ICAL) to study the properties of the neutrino, in particular the mass hierarchy among different types of neutrino.
A press release from the organisation also said that the INO laboratory will host other experiments such as the neutrino-less double beta decay and the search for dark matter.
Prof Mondal, who heads the project, was earlier associated with the pioneering experiments at the the underground laboratory at Kolar Gold Fields.
Prof. K.Vijayraghavan, Secretary, Department of Science and Technology, Govt. of India said “combining high-end training in the best of experimental physics with the best of research, INO will be the agent of transforming physics of this kind in India and will make a global impact. The outcome of this investment will be extraordinary and long term.”
Prof. Mondal was confident that the project "would put India back on the world map of underground science, a position that was held during second half of the 20th century when Indian scientists had the privilege of working at the world’s deepest underground lab at Kolar Gold Mines."
This will be the second big project that the government has approved, the first being the thirty-metre telescope, which would come up in Hawaii.

Resolving the nuclear liability deadlock

By putting in place a comprehensive, fair and pragmatic legislation on civil nuclear liability, there is no reason why India cannot reap the long-term benefits of civilian nuclear energy and resolve a prickly foreign policy issue

On January 26, Barack Obama will become the first U.S. President to attend India’s Republic Day celebrations. It will also mark nearly 10 years since the first announcement on the India-U.S. civil nuclear agreement. In contrast to those heady days when the promise of nuclear power meeting India’s gargantuan energy needs was in the air, the present situation is bleak. A target of installing 63 Gigawatts of nuclear capacity by 2032 has been reduced to 27.5 Gigawatts and none of the landmark deals envisaged has been struck. The Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage (CLND) Act, 2010 which contains a speedy compensation mechanism for victims of a nuclear accident has been deemed responsible for this deadlock. Specifically, provisions on recourse liability on suppliers (Section 17(b)) and concurrent, potentially unlimited liability under other laws (Section 46) have been viewed as major obstacles in operationalising nuclear energy in India and bilateral relations with key supplier countries.
A question of recourse

Under Section 17(b), a liable operator can recover compensation from suppliers of nuclear material in the event of a nuclear accident if the damage is caused by the provision of substandard services or patent or latent defects in equipment or material. This is contrary to the practice of recourse in international civil nuclear liability conventions, which channel liability exclusively to the operator. Specifically, it contradicts Article 10 of the Annex to the Convention on Supplementary Compensation for Nuclear Damage (CSC), an international treaty which India has signed.
U.S. President Barack Obama’s visit is an opportunity to address misgivings over the nuclear liability law and to also meet foreign governments and the supplier community halfway on the issue.
That Section 17(b) is contrary to the global norm is undeniable. However when the global norm itself is inequitable, there are justifiable reasons to depart from it. The inclusion of Section 17(b) recognises historical incidents such as the Bhopal gas tragedy in 1984 for which defective parts were partly responsible. The paltry compensation paid to the victims was facilitated by gaps in legislation and an extraordinarily recalcitrant state machinery. This is not a peculiarly Indian phenomenon — accidents such as Three Mile Island occurred partially due to lapses on the part of suppliers. More recently, forged quality certificates were detected for parts supplied to nuclear plants in South Korea. That Section 17(b) incentivises supplier safety and reduces the probability of a recurrence of such instances is equally undeniable.
A step too far

India can retain Section 17(b) while ensuring compliance with its international legal obligations in two ways. First, the CSC allows countries to make reservations to certain provisions in treaties despite being signatories to them. India could make a reservation to Article 10 of the Annex to the CSC since it satisfies the requisite criteria for making a valid reservation under the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, thereby excluding its application. Second, Article XV of the CSC implies that the rights and obligations of States under general rules of public international law are exempt from the application of the CSC. One such principle of international law is the “polluter pays principle” — applicable both to the state and private entities. The principle comes into operation via the mechanism through which compensation can be recovered from a polluting entity for the environmental harm it causes. Exercising either of these options will allow India to retain Section 17(b) without violating the international treaty regime.
However in pursuing the safety of supply, Section 17(b) goes too far in keeping liability for suppliers entirely open-ended. If liability on suppliers is unlimited in time and quantum, the possibility of getting adequate insurance cover will reduce. Even if such insurance is available, it could make nuclear energy economically unviable. To address this, Rule 24 of the CLND Rules dilutes the right of recourse conferred by Section 17(b) by limiting compensation payable by suppliers to a specified amount and for a specified time period. Both these are made standard terms of the contract entered into between the supplier and operator.
Though the end that Rule 24 seeks to achieve is justifiable, the means adopted are questionable. Rule 24 arguably violates Article 14 of the Constitution of India because there is no specific power in the CLND Act to limit liability in the manner that Rule 24 does. Further, the terms of the contract potentially dilute Section 17(b), which gives operators an untrammelled right to proceed against the supplier by way of recourse. It is a basic principle of law that a contract cannot violate the provision of a statute — if it does so, it is opposed to public policy. For these reasons, Rule 24 should be deleted. The limitation on time during which the supplier can be held liable should be inserted by means of a provision in the main Act. This will ensure that not just the end but also the means of limiting liability are legally tenable.
As far as the limitation on the amount is concerned, without Rule 24, the liability for each supplier potentially extends to the general liability cap of Rs.1,500 crore. If all suppliers have to be insured up to this value, insurance costs will be unnecessarily pyramided. To address this, countries with a history of nuclear power have in place mechanisms to provide for insurance coverage through international insurance pools where insurers, operators and states share the risks of an accident, providing access to a wide pool of compensation. There are about 26 such pools in existence, which also provide reinsurance to each other. Insurance pools typically require members to be signatories to an international convention (such as CSC), and to allow reasonable inspections of their nuclear installations.
While provisions for the creation of a domestic insurance pool for operators exist in Sections 7 and 8 of the Act and Rule 3, they need to be made explicit and amended to include suppliers in order to prevent the pyramiding of insurance premiums. This is particularly relevant to India’s domestic nuclear suppliers who would otherwise need to individually take out coverage, which would be prohibitively expensive. In order to access international reinsurance pools, the Central government could utilise the provisions in Section 43 and 44 of the CLND Act (Power to Call for Information from Operators) to establish a satisfactory inspections regime.
Sanctity of a special mechanism

Finally, Section 46 of the CLND Act contradicts the Act’s central purpose of serving as a special mechanism enforcing the channelling of liability to the operator to ensure prompt compensation for victims.
Section 46 provides that nothing would prevent proceedings other than those which can be brought under the Act, to be brought against the operator. This is not uncommon, as it allows criminal liability to be pursued where applicable. However, in the absence of a comprehensive definition of the types of ‘nuclear damage’ being notified by the Central Government, Section 46 potentially also allows civil liability claims to be brought against the operator and suppliers through other civil law such as the law of tort. While liability for operators is capped by the CLND Act, this exposes suppliers to unlimited amounts of liability. Obtaining insurance coverage for any future liability costs on account of claims by victims in such a case would be next to impossible.
Section 46 should thus be limited to criminal liability, and should clarify that victims who suffer on account of ‘nuclear damage’ can institute claims for compensation only under the CLND Act and not by recourse to other legislations or Courts. A clarification issued by the Attorney General’s office, if not an amendment to the law itself, will provide much needed assurance to suppliers while furthering national interest.
The issue of the liability law has, for far too long, been a thorn in India’s bilateral relations especially with the United States. Mr. Obama’s visit provides a historic opportunity to address these misgivings and meet foreign governments, as well as the entire supplier community, Indian and foreign, halfway on the issue. This will signal the seriousness of the Government of India in setting its own house in order and put the ball firmly in the court of the supplier community. By putting in place such a comprehensive, fair and pragmatic legislation on civil nuclear liability, there is no reason why India cannot reap the long-term benefits of civilian nuclear energy and resolve a prickly foreign policy issue, the time for whose resolution has come.

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UKPCS2012 FINAL RESULT SAMVEG IAS DEHRADUN

    Heartfelt congratulations to all my dear student .this was outstanding performance .this was possible due to ...