Atal Innovation Mission & SIRIUS sign MoU for promotion of innovative cooperation between students of India & Russia – Pragnya IAS Academy – News Analysis.

Atal Innovation Mission & SIRIUS sign MoU for promotion of innovative cooperation between students of India & Russia.

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To promote innovative cooperation between students of India and Russia, a Memorandum of Understanding was exchanged between India’s Atal Innovation Mission (AIM) and the Russian Federation’s SIRIUS Educational Foundation in the presence of the Prime Minister of India Shri. Narendra Modi and the President of Russia H.E. Vladimir Putin, in New Delhi on 5th October 2018. The AIM and SIRUS Education Foundation were represented by Mission Director Shri. R Ramanan and Ms. Elena Shmeleva respectively.

The MoU hopes to remove cultural and language barriers between students of Russia and India, share the best practices in the promotion of educational, scientific, innovative achievements, promote innovative cooperation, and search and develop talented youth of both countries fostering a knowledge driven innovation ecosystem in both the countries.

“The Atal Innovation Mission continues to grow steadily in its effort to spread the joy of innovation throughout the country. This MoU with SIRIUS Educational Foundation is a step in the right direction. International collaboration will broaden our students’ minds, deepen curiosities, and sharpen their intellect”, said Mr. Ramanan.

About AIM-SIRIUS Innovation Festival 2018

To promote a spirit of collaborative innovation, young innovators of Atal Tinkering Labs and SIRIUS Educational Foundation came together at a four-day Indo-Russian ATL innovation boot-camp from October 1st to October 4th. The boot-camp was organized by Atal Tinkering Labs, Atal Innovation Mission, with support from Department of Design, IIT Delhi. The innovations developed across space technology, healthcare, smart mobility, clean energy and agricultural technology were showcased to Prime Minister of India and President of Russia on October 5th.

About Atal Innovation Mission

Atal Innovation Mission (AIM) is NITI Aayog’s flagship initiative to promote a culture of innovation and entrepreneurship in India. AIM has been established to create and promote an ecosystem of innovation and entrepreneurship in a holistic manner through various initiatives at school, university and industry levels. AIM also serves as a platform for promotion of world-class Innovation Hubs, Grand Challenges, Start-up businesses and other self-employment activities in India, leveraging state of the art, advanced and affordable emerging technologies.

The Atal Innovation Mission has thus two core functions:

1. Innovation promotion: to provide a platform where innovative ideas are generated.

2. Entrepreneurship promotion: Wherein innovators would be supported and mentored to become successful entrepreneurs at Incubation Centres.

About SIRIUS Educational Foundation

Fund “Talent and success” is an unitary, non-profit, non-standard educational organization. The activities of the Foundation are aimed to identify and support children and young people who have shown outstanding abilities. Providing assistance in obtaining general and additional education for such personalities, including education in the fields of arts, natural sciences, physical culture and sports. (Source: pib)

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Atal Innovation Mission & SIRIUS sign MoU for promotion of innovative cooperation between students of India & Russia.

Successful night trial of Prithvi-II Missile – Pragnya IAS Academy – News Analysis.

Successful night trial of Prithvi-II Missile.

India’s Strategic Force Command on Saturday successfully test-fired its indigenously developed nuclear capable Prithvi-II missile during night time as part of a user trial by the Army from a test range in Odisha, defence sources said.

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The surface-to-surface missile, which has a strike range of 350 km, was launched from a mobile launcher from launch complex-3 of the Integrated Test Range (ITR) at Chandipur near Balasore around 8.30 pm, they said.

Prithvi-II was previously successfully test-fired during night time on February 21 this year from the ITR at Chandipur.

The missile is capable of carrying 500 to 1,000 kilogramme of warheads and is thrusted by liquid propulsion twin engines. The state-of-the-art missile uses advanced inertial guidance system with manoeuvring trajectory to hit its target, they said.

The missile was randomly chosen from the production stock and the entire launch activities were carried out by the specially-formed Strategic Force Command of the Army and monitored by the scientists of Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) as part of training exercise, they said.

“The missile trajectory was tracked by radars, electro-optical tracking systems and telemetry stations by the DRDO along the coast of Odisha,” the sources said.

The downrange teams on board the ship deployed near the designated impact point in the Bay of Bengal monitored the terminal events and splashdown.

On November 21, 2016, two Prithvi-II missiles were successfully test fired in salvo mode in quick succession from the same base.

Inducted into the Armed forces of the country in 2003, the nine-metre-tall, single-stage liquid-fuelled Prithvi-II is the first missile to have been developed by the DRDO under the Integrated Guided Missile Development Programme, the sources said.

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Successful night trial of Prithvi-II Missile.

India, world’s second-largest coal consumer, awaits grim climate report – Pragnya IAS Academy – News Analysis.


India, world’s second-largest coal consumer, awaits grim climate report.

Here is the problem for India: It is the second-largest coal consumer after China, putting at risk the lives of 600 million Indians to disasters caused by climate change.

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Recent extreme weather events, such as floods in Kerala, wildfires in Uttarakhand and heat waves in the north and east, have demonstrated how vulnerableIndia is to climate change. Such events, which cause widespread destruction and impact the availability of food and water, are likely to become more frequent and intense in India because of rising average temperatures.

A new report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), a global body of climate change scientists, is being released on October 8, 2018. This report will be an assessment of how effective the initiatives of all nations, including India, are in mitigating the rise in global temperatures.

Early leaks of the report indicate its findings are likely to be disquieting. “Climate scientists are struggling to find the right words for very bad news,” said the headline of a story in the Washington Post on October 3, 2018.

In the next 10 years the world may reach its carbon pollution quota, the amount of carbon it can release into the atmosphere before global temperature rises by 1.5 deg C, the Washington Post report said. This could be disquieting news for India, the world’s third- largest carbon polluter after China and the United States.

The IPCC report is also likely to recommend “stricter” climate actions by governments, allowing the use of only a third of the coal being consumed today by 2030, Bloombergreported on September 30, 2018, quoting the leaked draft of the report. The aim is to keep warming down to 1.5 deg C since the industrial era began in 1800.

Here is the problem for India: It is the second-largest coal consumer after China, putting at risk the lives of 600 million Indians to disasters caused by climate change.

Coal currently feeds about 27% of the world’s and 60% of India’s energy demand. “Under a bolder outlook that assumes quicker action to protect the atmosphere, coal use would fall to 13% of the energy market by 2040,” Bloomberg said on September 30, 2018, referring to the IPCCs draft recommendation.

As a part of the 2015 Paris Agreement to limit global temperature rise to 1.5-2 deg C, India had agreed to cut carbon pollution by raising its renewable-power capacity to 40% by 2030–from 20% in 2018–increase its forest cover, build climate-resilient cities and improve solid-waste management.

Here is where India stands on these pledges today:

• Currently, renewable power capacity in India is 20% of installed capacity.

• The country’s forest area rose by 1% over the two years to 2017, covering 24% of India. But the figure is likely exaggerated and includes degraded forests and plantations, FactChecker reported on July 4, 2018.

• Only 24% of the country’s solid waste collected annually by municipalities is processed.

Are India’s nationally determined contributions (NDCs) to reduce greenhouse emissions ambitious enough to help limit global warming to 1.5 deg C? No, according to the Climate Action Tracker, an independent scientific group tracking climate actions of the nations.

India’s commitments “are not fully consistent” with the Paris Agreement, the report said. If India achieves all its targets, warming could be held below 2 deg C but would still be “too high” to be consistent with the 1.5-deg-C limit.

Four looming climate-change threats for India.

Increasing heat wave episodes: If there are no changes in the current emissions and environment policies, India’s average annual temperatures are expected to rise 1.5-3 deg C by 2050. Temperatures will rise by 1 degrees C-2 degrees C even if preventive measures on the lines of the Paris Agreement are implemented, said a June 2018 World Bank study.

Over 4,800 Indians died due to heat waves across the country over four years to 2017, with the highest number of deaths in 2015. These heat-wave events are likely to worsen: Under the current emission scenario, they could increase by 75 times by the end of the century, gripping the entire stretch from Uttar Pradesh in the north to the southern peninsular. Their frequency will also increase by 3-9 events in the next 30 years, reaching 18-30 events by the final quarter of the century.

The frequency of severe heat waves in India will rise by 30 times by the end of the century, even if India adhere to the Paris Agreement and the global mean temperature rise is limited below 2 deg C. If not, even a humid seaside city like Kolkata could experience temperature conditions equivalent to its deadly 2015 heatwave every year.

Looming water crisis: The other effects of a 2-deg C rise in the global mean temperature over India could be on the availability of water. The annual runoff in the Ganga river basin is expected to decrease by about 20% and this could worsen the current water crisis.

Nearly 600 million Indians are facing high-to-extreme water stress because more than 40% of the annually available surface water is being used. About 200,000 people are dying every year due to inadequate access to safe water, a situation likely to worsen because of water shortages by 2050.

Lower living standards for 600 million Indians: By 2050, rising temperatures and changing monsoon rainfall patterns could cost India 2.8% of its gross domestic product and could lower the living standards for nearly 600 million people living in “hotspots” — areas vulnerable to changes in average temperature and rainfall, according to the June 2018 World Bank study.

Chhattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh are predicted to be India’s top two climate hotspot states by 2050, followed by Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, and Maharashtra. Jharkhand, Haryana, Andhra Pradesh, Punjab and Chandigarh make up the rest of the 10 worst-affected states. In all 10 states, hotter days and erratic rainfall would increase the stress on farmers, said the study.

Seven of the top 10 most-affected hotspot districts will be in the Vidarbha region of Maharashtra, the report said. “These hotspots are not only necessarily regions where the temperature will be higher, but they are also defined by the local population’s socio-economic capacity to cope with the climatic changes,” said the report.

Nutrition crisis: The rise in carbon dioxide (CO2) in atmosphere is making our food less nutritious, according to a September 2018 study by the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health at Harvard University. It is also making crops such as rice and wheat less nutritious and could result in 175 million people–1.9% of the global population–becoming zinc-deficient and 122 million protein-deficient by 2050.

India could be the country worst hit with world’s largest number, about 50 million people—the population size of Andhra Pradesh—becoming zinc-deficient and 38 million—equal to the combined population of Haryana and Uttarakhand –becoming protein-deficient.

India will also see more than 500 million women and children becoming vulnerable to diseases associated with iron deficiency due to inadequate nutrition, as per the Harvard study. (Source: The Business Standard)

 

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India, world’s second-largest coal consumer, awaits grim climate report.

‘Solar alliance must be agile, results-oriented’ – Pragnya IAS Academy – News Analysis.

‘Solar alliance must be agile, results-oriented’.

French minister of state for ecological and inclusive transition, Brune Poirson, is set to co-chair on Wednesday the first assembly of the International Solar Alliance (ISA). In an interview to Vishwa Mohan, she responded to questions on range of issues relating to solar energy and climate change.

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Q. How would the first Assembly of the ISA drive the solar rich nations towards the global renewable energy goal?

A.. It is an opportunity to set high standards for the ISA’s governance and working methods. The ISA must be agile, transparent, efficient, and results-oriented. Its missions necessitate strong leadership and an inclusive approach towards all stakeholders. Adopting clear, transparent and efficient procedures and work programmes is a prerequisite for meeting the ambitious goal of the Alliance: mobilizing 1000 billion USD and installing 1 TW (terrawatt) by 2030. France is fully committed to facilitate and support initiatives that would help meet these goals.

Q. How would France contribute towards it in terms of finance, technology and extending other supports?

A.As President Emmanuel Macron announced last March, the French Development Agency has pledged to invest more than 1 billion euros in solar energy projects in ISA countries between 2016 and 2022. I am happy to announce that, to date, more than 800 million euros have already been committed for 34 projects in 23 countries. We will continue to support ISA countries in identifying and financing new projects.

The French private sector is also deeply committed to the ISA. Together with their Indian partners, these French business organizations have established a dedicated private sector body to interact with, inform and advise ISA officials for the organisation’s activities.

Q. Are the current Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC) pledges under the Paris Agreement enough to face the challenges of climate change?

A.To date, NDC pledges under the Paris Agreement are clearly not sufficient to meet the 2°C target as they would lead to an increase of mean temperature of 3 to 4°C. We’ve known this since the COP21 when these pledges were made. That is why the Paris Agreement anticipates the necessity for each review of NDC to enhance the ambition. This is a ratcheting up process that might eventually drive collective efforts towards the 2°C target.

Q. What more can be done to keep the global temperature rise within 2 degree Celsius and make efforts towards 1.5 degree Celsius goal as pledged under the Paris Agreement?

A.Once the electricity sector is fully decarbonized, essentially two key emitting sectors will remain: transportation and agriculture. It will require major technological breakthrough to make zero-emission vehicles affordable and profound changes in the farming process. Note that land use will be critical to provide the negative emissions we need to be net zero as soon as possible. This is the only credible GHG sink we have.

Q. Has the US move to withdraw from the Paris Agreement affected the progress towards its implementation?

A.The US withdrawal is clearly not neutral on the implementation of the Paris Agreement. In fact, it could have blocked the progress of some countries and critically undermines our collective ability to reach its goal.
That is why President Macron decided to launch the One Planet Summit, to address this rise of climate scepticism with action. Action and massive redirection of financial flows toward low-carbon opportunities are the best answer to preserve the 2015 Paris Agreement momentum. Action makes its implementation irreversible. This irreversibility was clearly reaffirmed by all the leaders who participated in the OPS last week in New York.

Q. Pre-2020 actions of developed countries and their low financial contribution under GCF are still the major sticking points. Do you think the countries will finalise the rules for implementation of Paris Agreement without resolving those issues at COP24 in Poland?

A.Action against climate change is required urgently. That is why the EU and its member States have exceeded their 2020 target and intend to increase their efforts. Financing for climate action is crucial. It is essential that the GCF succeeds and that its next Board in October approves new projects, paving the way to its replenishment. To accelerate action, President Macron convened the One Planet Summit and additional commitments were made last week in New York. As for the rules of implementation of the Paris Agreement, they will enable us to fully implement the Agreement and guide our action. We must therefore adopt them at COP24. We have to fight on all fronts at the same time: action, finance, rules. (Source: The Economic Times)

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‘Solar alliance must be agile, results-oriented’.

Indian astronaut may go to International Space Station for training in 2022 – Pragnya IAS Academy – News Analysis.

Indian astronaut may go to International Space Station for training in 2022.

The International Space Station is a habitable artificial satellite in low Earth orbit.

An Indian astronaut may travel to the International Space Station (ISS) on board a Soyuz spacecraft for a short training mission in 2022, a Russian media report said on Wednesday, citing a source in the Russian space industry.

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“The Russian side has offered Indian colleagues to conduct a short visit to the ISS. The flight should take place in 2022 before or after India’s independent manned space mission. The agreement is expected to be signed in the near future,” state-run Russian news agency Sputnik quoted the source as saying.

The International Space Station is a habitable artificial satellite in low Earth orbit.

In his Independence Day speech from the ramparts of the Red Fort, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had announced an ambitious mission of sending an Indian astronaut to space by 2022 on board domestically-developed ‘Gaganyaan’, when India celebrates the 75th anniversary of independence.

If successful, India would be the fourth nation to send a human in space after the US, Russia and China.

Rakesh Sharma, a former Indian Air Force pilot, was the first Indian to travel to space. Sharma was a part of the Soviet Union’s Soyuz T-11 expedition, launched on April 2, 1984, as part of the Intercosmos programme.

India-born Kalpana Chawla and Indian-origin Sunita Williams are among the known names to have gone to space.

Chawla was one of the seven crew members who perished in the space shuttle Columbia disaster during re-entry into the earth’s atmosphere in 2003.(Source: The Business Standard)

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Indian astronaut may go to International Space Station for training in 2022.

India’s ‘Operation Samudra Maitri’ to help tsunami-hit Indonesia – Pragnya IAS Academy – News Analysis.

India’s ‘Operation Samudra Maitri’ to help tsunami-hit Indonesia.

Following widespread destruction in Indonesia, Indian government has launched major operation to provide assistance to the earthquake and Tsunami victims.

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India has dispatched two aircraft and three naval ships carrying relief material to the country.

What is Operation Samudra Maitri?

“Operation Samudra Maitri’ for humanitarian assistance was launched after a telephonic conversation between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Indonesian President Joko Widodo on October 1, and following Indonesia’s acceptance of international aid,” the Ministry of External Affairs said in a statement.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi held a telephonic conversation with Indonesian President Joko Widodo on Monday and offered all possible assistance.

Indian planes, warships carry medical aid

Two Indian Air Force aircraft — C-130J and C-17 departed on Wednesday morning with medical personnel and relief material.

The C-130J aircraft is carrying a medical team along with tents and equipment to set up a field hospital. The C-17 aircraft is carrying medicines, generators, tents and water to provide immediate assistance, the MEA said.

Three Indian Navy ships — INS Tir, INS Sujatha and INS Shardul — have also been mobilised to carry out humanitarian assistance and disaster relief. These ships are likely to reach the Central Sulawesi province of Indonesia on October 6, the ministry said.

The ships are carrying 30,000 litres of bottled drinking water, 1500 litres of packed juices, 500 litres of milk and 700 kg of biscuits.

7.5 quake triggered Tsunami wave

A massive 7.5 magnitude earthquake struck the Indonesian province of Sulawesi on Friday triggering a tsunami wave of 2 ft.

The twin quake-tsunami decimated parts of the central Indonesian island of Sulawesi and left more than 1200 dead.

About 1,700 homes in one Palu neighbourhood were swallowed up, with hundreds of people believed buried, the national disaster agency said.

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India’s ‘Operation Samudra Maitri’ to help tsunami-hit Indonesia.

The Oonth Kadal project has made its entry into UNESCO’s Tentative List of World Heritage Sites – Pragnya IAS Academy – News Analysis.

The Oonth Kadal project has made its entry into UNESCO’s Tentative List of World Heritage Sites.

Germany sees Valley’s Mughal-era bridge unifying cultural heritage.

German deputy chief of mission to India Jasper Wieck, who on Monday signed an agreement on conservation of 17th Century Mughal-era bridge in Srinagar, said the move is aimed at reclaiming the part of our common identity.

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“Cultural heritage unites us in admiration to the beauty. It has unifying impact despite diverse religious, ethic and nationalist identities,” said Dr. Wieck.

He signed the pact with the Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage (INTACH), Kashmir chapter, next to the Black Pavillion at Shalimar garden, which was restored with German help in 2015. An amount of ₹32 lakh will be granted for the conservation of 17th Century Mughal-era Oonth Kadal, hump of a camel-fashioned bridge, located at the middle of the picturesque Dal lake.

“Germany has taken up 50 projects under the conservation programme in India at the cost of ₹ 8.5 crore. Such projects have a great socio-economic impact. From restorers, to up-skilling of artisans to attracting tourists, it generates a positive conditions,” said Dr. Wieck.

The Oonth Kadal project has come as a shot in the arm for the six Mughal gardens located near the Dal lake, which has made its entry into UNESCO’s Tentative List of World Heritage Sites.

“Oonth Kadal is part of the Mughal gardens. It’s the buffer in the lake and the bride would be used by Mughal nobles to reach the gardens. It opens up like a book towards the Zabarwan hills with Mughal gardens in its lap,” said INTACH, Kashmir chapter chief, Saleem Beg.

The entry of Mughal gardens into UNESCO’s Tentative List of World Heritage Sites reflects the acknowledgement of the creative genius, said Mr. Beg.

Built in 1670s, Oonth Kadal attracted foreign photographers and Bollywood directors, who shot many songs around it. Of late, it was crumbling due to the apathy shown towards conservation by the local authorities.

Meets Governor

Dr. Wieck also called on Governor Satya Pal Malik at the Raj Bhavan and “discussed matters relating to further strengthening of the Indo–German understanding and about various political, economic and social issues relating to J&K”.

“The two discussed including the development of modern infrastructure in various sectors like tourism, energy, aviation etc, launching of welfare schemes for old aged, widows, disabled and other disadvantaged sections of the society,” said a Raj Bhawan spokesman (Source: Livemint)

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The Oonth Kadal project has made its entry into UNESCO’s Tentative List of World Heritage Sites.

India not in favour of reopening some clauses of Paris agreement: Official – Pragnya IAS Academy – News Analysis.

India not in favour of reopening some clauses of Paris agreement: Official.

India is not in favour of reopening some clauses of the Paris agreement on climate change and this has been largely accepted, a top Environment Ministry official said Monday.

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Environment Secretary C K Mishra said India will not be adversely impacted in the wake of the Trump administration pulling out of the historic climate agreement.

The Paris agreement aims to strengthen the global response to the threat of climate change by keeping a global temperature rise this century well below two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels and to pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase even further to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

“In all our negotiations, that we are having today or we are going to have tomorrow, the US is part of it. There has been a talk of reopening of some of the clauses of Paris agreement.

“India is not in favour and that has been largely accepted. So as of now, if the the US is with us, it strengthens the climate change negotiations, but I dont think we are having an adverse impact affect as far as negotiations are concerned,” Mishra told reporters.

He was asked whether there will be any adverse effect on India after US pulled out of the Paris agreement.

The Paris agreement, signed in 2015 also aims to strengthen the ability of countries to deal with the impacts of climate change. (Source: The Business Standard)

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India not in favour of reopening some clauses of Paris agreement: Official.

India sees highest seizure of black spotted turtles – Pragnya IAS Academy – News Analysis.

India sees highest seizure of black spotted turtles.

Study analysed data from seven South Asian countries.

India accounts for 29% of black spotted turtles (Geoclemys hamiltonii) seized from across seven countries in South Asia, states a recent report by TRAFFIC, an international network monitoring trade in wildlife.

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Classified as vulnerable by the IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) Red List of threatened species, the black spotted turtle or spotted pond turtle is native to South Asia, and a heavily trafficked chelonian. The medium-sized freshwater turtle has a black shell with yellow streaks. The species was once smuggled for its meat and is now sought after as an exotic pet.

The report titled ‘Black Spotted Turtle Trade in Asia II: A Seizure Analysis’ records seizures of 10,321 specimens in 53 instances across seven countries between April 2014 and March 2016.

The highest number of seizures occurred in India, accounting for a total of 3,001 (29.33%) specimens. Of the 53 seizures across these seven countries, 38% (or 20) seizures were from India.

India is followed by Southeast Asian countries such as Thailand (1,995 specimens or 19%) and Hong Kong (1,775 specimens or 17%), followed by Bangladesh (1,197 specimens or 12%). The remaining specimens were seized from China, Pakistan and Singapore.

Chennai hub

In India, the species is distributed across the north, northeast and a few parts of central India in States such as West Bengal, Assam, Bihar, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand, and parts of Madhya Pradesh, Punjab, Rajasthan and Meghalaya. But an analysis of the trade route places Chennai as an important centre for the trade.

Saket Badola, head of TRAFFIC India, told that as Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra fall completely out of the distribution range of the species, it proves that these States are used as trade routes. Seizure data indicates that black spotted turtles are transported to Chennai by car or train, and subsequently smuggled to other parts of the region.

Smuggling hotspots

In the past, Chennai has been identified as a major transit hub for illegal international trade in the Indian star tortoise, another species smuggled in large numbers. The report points out that four incidents of seizure have been reported in Chennai; two each in Nagpur, Mumbai and Kolkata; and three in Dhaka.

The 42-page report describes the India-Bangladesh border, part of the species’ natural range, as another hotspot for trade in the black soft-shelled turtle.

Bangladesh capital Dhaka “is in closer proximity to the Indian Black Spotted Turtle trade hotspots than most large Indian cities and may therefore function as a regional collection centre,” the publication states.

Huge increase

The seizures of 10,321 turtles in a period of two years marks a huge increase from the 2,171 turtles seized in 26 cases recorded between January 2008 and March 2014.

Explaining the rise in seizures, Dr. Badola said that alongside the increase in demand for such turtles, the alertness of enforcement agencies and their focus on the species had increased.

The report also highlights that 47% of the seizures involved smuggling via commercial flights. Of the 55 suspects arrested for smuggling black spotted turtles, the number of known convictions were only 20, a phenomenon that experts described as lacunae in the preparation of cases, and in procedural lapses in prosecution.

Apart from increasing public awareness, the report emphasises the need for better law enforcement and cooperation among international authorities.(Source: The Hindu)

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India sees highest seizure of black spotted turtles.

India, U.S. sign landmark military communications, security agreement COMCASA – Pragnya IAS Academy – News Analysis.

India, U.S. sign landmark military communications, security agreement COMCASA.

India and U.S. will also hold a first-ever tri-service exercise on the east coast of India in 2019, announces Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman.

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India and the United States on Thursday began a new generation of military and security cooperation by signing Communications Compatibility and Security Agreement (COMCASA).

An announcement on the significant agreement came at the end of the inaugural 2+2 ministerial dialogue between the two countries that also focused on ensuring maritime freedom and international law in the India-Pacific region.

“They welcomed the signing of a Communications Compatibility and Security Agreement (COMCASA) that will facilitate access to advanced defence systems and enable India to optimally utilise its existing US-origin platforms,” a joint statement issued at the end of the bilateral dialogue declared.

The bilateral dialogue was attended by U.S. Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo and Secretary of Defense James N. Mattis and their Indian counterparts Sushma Swaraj and Nirmala Sitharaman.

India and the U.S. would also hold a first-ever tri-service exercise on the east coast of India in 2019, Ms. Sitharaman announced.

An important element of Thursday’s discussion was starting the process of closer private defence industry collaboration that would allow Indian defence manufacturers to join the U.S. military supply chain.

The two defence ministers also announced their readiness to begin negotiations on an Industrial Security Annex (ISA) that would support closer defence industry cooperation and collaboration.

Signing of deal years ago

India and the U.S. signed the General Security Of Military Information Agreement (GSOMIA) years ago and it allows the sharing of classified information from the U.S. government and American companies with the Government of India and Defence Public Sector Undertakings (DPSU) but not with Indian private companies.

An ISA is required to enable private Indian participation in defence production and is particularly important as India opens up defence manufacturing to the private sector in a big way.

To further defence innovation, a Memorandum of Intent was signed between the U.S. Defense Innovation Unit (DIU) and the Indian Defence Innovation Organization — Innovation for Defence Excellence (DIO-iDEX), which will look into joint projects for co-production and co-development projects through the Defense Technology and Trade Initiative (DTTI).

Both sides maintained that the Indo-Pacific region has emerged as an important part of bilateral cooperation and emphasised need to keep it open for maritime trade and free of disputes.

What is COMCASA:

This will enable greater communications interoperability between the militaries of India and the U.S.

India and the U.S. on September 6 signed the foundational or enabling agreement COMCASA on the side-lines of the inaugural 2+2 dialogue.

COMCASA stands for Communications Compatibility and Security Agreement and is one of the four foundational agreements that the U.S. signs with allies and close partners to facilitate interoperability between militaries and sale of high end technology.

COMCASA is an India-specific version of the Communication and Information on Security Memorandum of Agreement (CISMOA). It comes into force immediately, and is valid for a period 10 years.

COMCASA allows India to procure transfer specialised equipment for encrypted communications for US origin military platforms like the C-17, C-130 and P-8Is. Currently, these platforms use commercially available communication systems.

The joint statement issued after the 2+2 dialogue said that it would facilitate access to advanced defence systems and enable India to optimally utilize its existing U.S.-origin platforms.

Specific additional provisions have been incorporated in the text to safeguard our security and national interests.

This will also enable greater communications interoperability between the militaries of India and the US. Data acquired through such systems cannot be disclosed or transferred to any person or entity without India’s consent.

Both countries will implement this agreement in a manner that is consistent with the national security interests of the other.

India had signed the General Security Of Military Information Agreement (GSOMIA) in 2002 and the Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA) in 2016. The last one remaining is the Basic Exchange and Cooperation Agreement for Geo-spatial Cooperation (BECA).

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India, U.S. sign landmark military communications, security agreement COMCASA.