Friday, September 11, 2020
Kurukshetra Magazine September 2020 (Hindi) PDF Download
VisionIAS
07:06
Kurukshetra Magazine September 2020 (Hindi) PDF Download
Click Here to download Kurukshetra Magazine September 2020 (Hindi) PDF
Click Here to Like our Facebook page for latest updates and free ebooks
Click Here to download Kurukshetra Magazine September 2020 (Hindi) PDF
Yojana Magazine September 2020 (Hindi) Pdf Download
VisionIAS
07:03
Yojana Magazine September 2020 (Hindi) Pdf Download
Click Here to download Yojana Magazine September 2020 (Hindi) Pdf
Click Here to Like our Facebook page for latest updates and free ebooks
Click Here to download Yojana Magazine September 2020 (Hindi) Pdf
Thursday, September 10, 2020
Daily Current Affairs, 10th September 2020
VisionIAS
17:06

1) World Suicide Prevention Day: 10 September

2) Andhra Pradesh CM launches ‘YSR Sampoorna Poshana’ scheme

3) AIM Launches Aatmanirbhar Bharat ARISE-ANIC Initiative

•The programme will be driven by Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO), four ministries including Ministry of Defence; Ministry of Food Processing Industries; Ministry of Health and Family Welfare; and Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs along with associated industries to facilitate innovative solutions to sectoral problems. The programme will support deserving applied research–based innovations by providing funding support of up to Rs 50 lakh for speedy development of the proposed technology solution and/or product.
4) India & Japan signs MoU on Reciprocal Provision of Supplies & Services

•The agreement will also improve the interoperability between the Armed Force of India and Japan thereby further increasing the bilateral defence engagements under the Special Strategic & Global Partnership between the two countries.
5) Andhra Pradesh CM flags off south India’s first Kisan rail

•On August 7, the first Kisan Rail was flagged off between Devlali in Maharashtra and Danapur in Bihar as a weekly service, which was later made bi-weekly due to increasing demand. Now the second Kisan Rail will benefit farmers of the states coming en route.
6) Paresh Rawal becomes new chairman of National School of Drama

•Rawal made his debut with the 1985 film Arjun. He played a supporting role in the film. He, however, gained recognition after the release of the 1986 blockbuster Naam.
7) ISA host World Solar Technology Summit

•The first World Solar Technology Summit (WSTS) is organised by the International Solar Alliance (ISA) along with Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI), as the convenor of ISA Global Leadership Task Force on Innovation, to focus on new Technologies and Innovations in the field of Solar.
•Nobel Laureate Dr Michael Stanley Whittingham also presented a Keynote address. He is an awardee of Nobel Prize in Chemistry (jointly with John B Goodenough & Akira Yoshino) in 2019 for the revolutionizing discovery of the lithium-ion batteries.
8) India Ratings forecasts contraction of 11.8% in FY21 GDP

•The Indian economy contracted by a record 23.9% in 1st (April-June) quarter of FY21, which is much higher than Ind-Ra’s forecast of 17.0% due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic (lockdown).
9) Bank of Baroda tops EASE 2.0 Index by IBA

10) SBI to launch new loan scheme SAFAL for organic cotton growers

11) Bhuvneshwar Kumar & Smriti Mandhana became the brand ambassadors of Playerzpot

•Bhuvneshwar Kumar is an iconic cricketer and an inspiration for the younger generation. Smriti Mandhana herself is a world-class performer and connects beautifully with sports, cricket, and even female audience.
Green-Blue Policy
VisionIAS
13:05
Why in news?
The Green-Blue policy is the focus of the Master Plan for Delhi 2041.
What is Master Plan for Delhi 2041?
- The Delhi Development Authority (DDA) is holding public consultations for the preparation of the Master Plan for Delhi 2041.
- It is a vision document for the city’s development over the next two decades.
- The existing Master Plan 2021 will be outdated next year.
- The agency wants to notify the new plan by the time that happens.
- The draft policy’s focus on water bodies and the land around it, which is referred to as the “Green-Blue policy”, would give the city a new shape.
What is Green-Blue infrastructure?
- ‘Blue’ infrastructure refers to water bodies like rivers, canals, ponds, wetlands, floodplains, and water treatment facilities.
- ‘Green’ infrastructure stands for trees, lawns, hedgerows, parks, fields, and forests.
- The concept refers to urban planning where water bodies and land are interdependent, and grow with the help of each other.
- They will offer environmental and social benefits.
How does DDA plan to go ahead with it?
- The DDA plans to deal with the multiplicity of agencies, which because of the special nature of the state, has plagued it for several years.
- It wants to map out the issues of jurisdiction, work being done by different agencies on drains, and the areas around them.
- Thereafter, a comprehensive policy will be drawn up, which would then act as the common direction for all agencies.
What is the plan for redevelopment?
- Delhi has around 50 big drains (blue) managed by different agencies.
- Due to their poor condition and encroachment, the land around them (green) has also been affected.
- The DDA, along with other agencies, will integrate them.
- They will remove all sources of pollution by checking the outfall of untreated wastewater as well as removal of existing pollutants.
- A mix of mechanised and natural systems may be adopted.
- Dumping of solid wastes in any of these sites will be strictly prohibited by local bodies, through the imposition of penalties.
What will the areas look like after redevelopment?
- Land around these drains, carrying storm water, will be declared as special buffer projects.
- A network of connected green space would be developed in the form of green mobility circuits of pedestrian and cycling paths.
- There is a plan to develop spaces for yoga, active sports (without formal seating), open air theatres, and other low impact public uses.
- The nature of use, extent of public access, type of vegetation, etc. shall be ascertained on a case-to-case basis through scientific assessments.
- Real estate would be developed along these integrated corridors.
What are the challenges?
- The biggest challenge here is the multiplicity of agencies.
- DDA wants to bring together different agencies like Delhi Jal Board, Flood and Irrigation Department, and municipal corporations as stakeholders in the project.
- In a city where even waterlogging turns into a blame game between different agencies, this will be a tough task.
- It will be tough, especially as the DDA has no supervisory power over these bodies.
- Cleaning of water bodies and drains has been a challenge for agencies in Delhi for years now.
- An IIT-Delhi report on 20 major sewer drains and 5 sites on the River Yamuna found abundant presence of coliform and other pollutants.
- Only rainwater is supposed to flow in these drains, but the study found sewage waste and even industrial waste in some.
- A similar attempt made by DDA earlier, where a special task force was created to check dumping of waste in Yamuna, has not been successful.
Source: The Indian Express
The HINDU Notes – 10th September 2020
VisionIAS
12:50

📰 Digital disconnect
Poor access to the Internet in many States must be bridged urgently to help e-learners
•The full report of the NSO’s survey of ‘Household Social Consumption on Education in India’, for July 2017-June 2018, highlights the poor state of computer and Internet access in several States. The disparities are glaring among different economic strata as well. The digital chasm that separates the privileged from the deprived remains unbridged years after the broadband policy of 2004, and its effects are painfully evident during the pandemic as students struggle to log on to online classes. While some poorly connected States may have improved since the survey period, the gaps are so stark that any development could only be modest. Only in Delhi, Himachal Pradesh and Kerala did the survey find Internet access exceeding 50% for urban and rural households taken together, while Punjab, Haryana and Uttarakhand exceeded 40%, unimpressive numbers still. Large States — Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka — had access below 20%. In today’s milieu, net access is critical, considering that even where mobile phones and laptops are available — some States provide them under student welfare programmes — they cannot be meaningfully used in its absence. If net connectivity is 5% to 10% in rural Odisha, Madhya Pradesh, Telangana, Karnataka and West Bengal, only a slim minority can hope to do any academic work. Many remote locations have reliability problems and power deficits, making it a challenge to keep gadgets operational even offline.
•Prime Minister Modi has acknowledged the digital divide by announcing in his Independence Day address that all villages would be connected with optical fibre cable in 1,000 days. This target, reflecting enhanced ambition, follows the one set in 2011 to link panchayats through a national optical fibre network — to raise administrative capacities through information infrastructure. Evidently, successive governments have dropped the ball. States have not shown the alacrity to make a big leap either, and the deficit has now dealt a blow to students. To make up for lost time, connectivity for education must be prioritised. Mapping the needs of each district based on the NSO data will help identify areas where children do need equipment and connectivity. Such efforts have been launched globally in the wake of COVID-19, some in partnership with the telecom sector to leverage its capacity for surveys and mapping. Some companies in India have made the valuable suggestion that their used desktop computers could be refurbished and donated, for which governments need to open a programme. On the network technology front, a new gigabit speed ‘wireless fibre’ standard is being viewed in developed countries as a leapfrog option to link inaccessible areas; it involves high capacity spectrum (E and V bands), and is commercially not contentious. The government needs to look at all possibilities and go into overdrive to bridge the digital divide.
📰 Realism and the undemarcated border
Notice UPSC Civil Services (Preliminary) Examination, 2020
VisionIAS
07:44
UPSC has released notice regarding Civil Services Preliminary Examination 2020, Exam scheduled on 4th October 2020.
Click Here to download Notice UPSC Civil Services (Preliminary) Examination, 2020
Click Here to Like our Facebook page for latest updates and free ebooks