
Soaring electric truck sales deal new blow to diesel use in China
The boom in electric truck sales in China follows that of electric cars and the rise in recent years of LNG-powered heavy trucks. Those factors, combined with slowing economic growth, have stifled its oil consumption growth.
Sales in the world's biggest market for new energy trucks are estimated to have risen 175 per cent year-on-year to 76,100 in the first half of this year, or about a quarter of new truck sales, according to consulting firm Sublime China Information (SCI). Electric models, still mostly used for short-haul runs in ports, mines or steel mills, accounted for over 90 per cent of that increase.
The rapid pace has surprised analysts who have revised down diesel demand forecasts as a result and brought forward their predictions for a peak in Chinese oil demand.
SCI's analyst Xu Lei said he cut the firm's China diesel demand expectations by 1 per cent -2 per cent given the boom in electric truck sales.
"The surge in electric heavy trucks was a surprise and has become a new factor accelerating China's oil consumption to peak, most likely this year," said Ye Lin, vice president at Rystad Energy, who had previously expected a 2026 peak.
The transport sector, which burns about two-thirds of all diesel in China, will use 40 per cent less by 2030, cutting overall
diesel consumption
by about a quarter compared to 2024 levels, according to Rystad.
Diesel consumption this year is forecast to fall by 11.3 million tons, or 6.3 per cent, on par with last year's drop, according to SCI.
Beijing to Yunnan
After more than six years behind the wheel of a diesel truck, Li Shuai, who drives for a cement plant in Hebei province near Beijing, switched to an electric truck six months ago.
"Charging infrastructure has improved noticeably in the past half year, making things much more convenient," Li, 38, said. "It is even possible to drive an empty truck more than 2,000 km from Beijing to Yunnan to pick up goods without worry."
The rapid buildup of charging infrastructure, primarily through industrial corridors, is underpinning adoption, although charge times that can stretch to 90 minutes and limited charger availability in some areas remain issues.
Teld, an EV charging infrastructure provider that has built more than 2,400 truck charging stations across China, officially opened an 800 km corridor in March linking Shanxi and Shandong provinces, a key route through the country's coal-producing region.
At a charging station next to the Hebei cement plant, car and truck chargers sit side by side in the dusty lot. Owner Yongji Liu had originally only planned to service EVs but said "the electric truck market is growing so fast that we also installed chargers for trucks".
Cheaper than alternative
The booming market for
electric trucks
is partly due to cheap electricity and government subsidies introduced last July of up to 95,000 yuan ($13,264) for new vehicles, analysts and truckmakers said.
While diesel trucks are cheaper upfront, higher fuel costs make them more expensive after a million kilometers of driving.
Once fuel is included, diesel trucks cost about 2.25 million yuan ($314,000) at the million-kilometer mark, roughly 10 per cent more than LNG trucks and 15% more than electric trucks, according to GL Consulting.
Rising fuel costs have also eroded some of the price advantage enjoyed by LNG trucks, which along with limited refueling stations in some regions, have hindered their growth, said SCI analyst Wang Neng.
SCI forecasts LNG truck sales to hit around 92,000 units in the first half, down 15 per cent from a year earlier, although the surge in electric adoption is more than offsetting the impact on diesel consumption.
China's second-best-selling electric truck maker Sany says the growth potential for electric trucks is greater than for passenger EVs because lower operating costs bolster the profitability of corporate users.
"We expect electric heavy trucks to account for 70 per cent to 80 per cent of new sales within as little as two to three years, driven by lower operating costs and more comprehensive charging infrastructure," said Zhaoting Yue, SANY's vice president of international marketing.

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Mint
20 minutes ago
- Mint
EM Funds Adjust Bets as ‘Sell the Dollar' Trade Loses Appeal
(Bloomberg) -- The dollar's bounceback in July is convincing some emerging-market investors to bet it will keep rising in coming months. T. Rowe Price Group Inc. says it now favors dollar-denominated emerging market bonds rather than local-currency ones as a tactical trade. Barclays Plc is telling its clients to avoid shorting the greenback versus its Asian peers, while Fidelity International says the higher-for-longer US interest rates make it less attractive to borrow the dollar to fund carry trades. Fund managers and analysts alike are reappraising the 'Sell the Dollar' trade as the greenback's revival sapped some of the optimism toward developing-nation assets. Bets the dollar would continue to fall pushed the MSCI emerging-market equity index to a more than three-year high last month, and a similar gauge of currencies to a sixth monthly gain in June. 'I'm weighted towards' dollar-denominated emerging-market bonds for now, given their attractive coupons, said Leonard Kwan, a fund manager at T. Rowe Price in Hong Kong. There's likely to be a 'consolidative period for the dollar over the next three-to-six months,' which will challenge the returns from local-currency debt, he said. Emerging-market dollar bonds handily outperformed their local-currency counterparts last month, with a Bloomberg gauge of the securities returning 0.9%, while one measuring local-currency debt fell by the same amount. A similar trend was seen in currencies. Bloomberg's dollar spot index climbed 2.7% in July, snapping a six-month losing streak, while MSCI's emerging-markets currency index fell 1.2%. On Friday, the greenback tumbled after soft US jobs data prompted traders to boost bets that the Federal Reserve will cut rates as soon as next month. The dollar gauge still gained 1% for the week, its best since November. 'We remain reluctant to jump into outright' trades betting the dollar will weaken against Asian currencies into the summer, Barclays strategists including Lemon Zhang wrote in July 24 note. 'Instead, we have recommended going long the US dollar against some low yielders in the region with stretched valuations and idiosyncratic risks,' such as the Thai baht and Hong Kong dollar, they said. Barclays also favors what it calls relative-value trades that avoid the dollar altogether — such as betting the Singapore dollar will weaken against its Chinese counterpart, and going short the baht versus the South Korean won. Investors who have been using the dollar as a funding currency for carry trades may also want to seek other options, according to Fidelity. Carry trades involve borrowing in a currency with relatively low interest rates and investing in another offering higher returns. 'Given that US dollar interest rates may remain relatively higher for some time, it may be worth considering alternative funding currencies that offer lower costs while maintaining similar risk profiles,' said Lei Zhu, head of Asian fixed income at Fidelity in Hong Kong. Possibilities include borrowing in the Hong Kong dollar, which has lower short-term fund rates than the greenback, or even the Chinese yuan, she said. Meanwhile, the dollar's revival in July is making it cheaper for Asian funds to hedge their holdings of greenback-denominated assets. The aggregate hedging cost for local-currency funds, as measured by dollar-Asia forward implied yields from eight economies and the equivalent US secured overnight refinancing rate, fell five percentage points last month, the first drop this year, data compiled by Bloomberg show. 'With the dollar strengthening again, unhedged or underhedged entities may view this as an opportunity to reduce their US dollar foreign-exchange exposure and to rebalance their positions,' Fidelity's Zhu said. --With assistance from Matthew Burgess and Malavika Kaur Makol. More stories like this are available on
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Business Standard
an hour ago
- Business Standard
Tamil Nadu unveils TN Rising conclaves, first edition in Thoothukudi
As part of its long-term vision of becoming a $1 trillion economy, Tamil Nadu has announced the launch of a new series of Regional Investment Conclaves—TN Rising—focusing on balanced regional development and sustainable industrialisation. The inaugural conclave will be hosted in Thoothukudi, a city strategically located on Tamil Nadu's southern coastline with strong port infrastructure, abundant renewable energy potential, and growing global investor interest. Designed to catalyse growth in Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities, these conclaves reflect the state's commitment to driving a more equitable and distributed model of economic development. This event marks a significant shift in how investment dialogues are structured, taking them beyond capital cities and into emerging industrial corridors that are fast transforming into global supply chain hubs. 'These Regional Investment Conclaves called 'TN Rising' are an opportunity for us to show the world that Tamil Nadu is further on the rise as a global industrial powerhouse, and that our potential lies across the length and breadth of the state,' said TRB Rajaa, state industries minister. The regional conclaves build on Tamil Nadu's continued success in attracting large-scale investments, particularly in high-growth sectors such as electronics, electric vehicles (EVs), green energy, and advanced manufacturing. By shifting focus to regional centres, the state aims to unlock the economic potential of every district, leveraging local infrastructure, skilled talent pools, and sector-specific advantages. Thoothukudi, the host city for the first conclave, has recently garnered national and international attention following the announcement of a major investment by Vietnamese EV manufacturer VinFast, which is establishing its integrated production facility in the district. This development complements a growing list of transformative projects across Tamil Nadu's emerging districts. Notably, the state recently announced plans for a semiconductor park in Coimbatore, targeting precision manufacturing and chip packaging industries, alongside the development of industrial parks across several districts in the state. 'Thoothukudi, with its port strength and green energy potential, is the perfect place to launch this series of conclaves. Be it Hosur, Trichy, Thoothukudi, or Coimbatore, several regions in Tamil Nadu outside of Chennai have a compelling industrial story to tell, and we're going to showcase them on a global stage. These conclaves will be platforms where local aspirations meet global capital, where investors see firsthand the talent, infrastructure and ambition that defines the Tamil Nadu growth story,' Rajaa added. The Thoothukudi conclave is expected to convene a cross-section of stakeholders including global investors, policymakers, industry leaders, sectoral experts, and academia. It will serve as a platform for new investment announcements, signing of memoranda of understanding (MoUs), and curated sectoral highlights that explore opportunities in green energy, electronics manufacturing, port-led development, and workforce skilling. Each conclave is expected to contribute significantly to job creation at the local level, with an emphasis on generating employment for youth and first-generation workers. In parallel, the state is already deepening its focus on employability enhancement through tailored skill development initiatives under Naan Mudhalvan, particularly in partnership with industry and academic institutions. Another key focus of these conclaves is to foster the growth of local micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), enabling them to become integral parts of global and domestic supply chains and benefit from increased market access, technology partnerships, and capacity building. The state has maintained its leadership in sectors such as automobiles, electronics, textiles, and renewable energy, and is now expanding its reach into semiconductors, EVs, green hydrogen, and precision engineering. Following Thoothukudi, subsequent editions of the Regional Investment Conclaves will be organised in other high-potential zones including western, central, and northern Tamil Nadu. Each conclave will highlight the unique strengths of its respective region while aligning with the overarching strategy of inclusive, innovation-led growth.


Indian Express
an hour ago
- Indian Express
UPSC Key: India-US trade deal, Portuguese-era arsenal, and the Cholas
Important topics and their relevance in UPSC CSE exam for August 3, 2025. If you missed the August 2, 2025, UPSC CSE exam key from the Indian Express, read it here. Syllabus: Preliminary Examination: Current events of national and international importance Mains Examination: General Studies-II: Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India's interests. General Studies-III: Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation, of resources, growth, development and employment. What's the ongoing story: FOLLOWING US President Donald Trump's tariff sledgehammer, the government has kicked off an exercise to thrash out concessions across sectors that can be offered in the tariff negotiations later this month. Key economic ministries have been asked to see what they can still afford to offer to sweeten New Delhi's deal when the US team is here on August 25. Key Points to Ponder: • What is the rationale given by America for imposing a 25 per cent tariff on India? • What are the recent agreements signed between India and the USA? • What are the recent trade agreements signed by India with other countries? • What is the status of trade and economic cooperation between India and Russia? • Why does America want India to reduce defence and energy imports from Russia? • What are the concerns related to GM food crops in India? • What is trade rebalancing? • What are Quality Control Orders (QCOs), and what is the purpose of having them? • What are the TRUST initiatives? Key Takeaways: • To reach an agreement, the Trump administration has been demanding much more than what the government has offered in its market access commitments, including lowering of tariffs across the board and removal of non-tariff trade barriers. • As policymakers grapple with Trump's announcement of a 25 per cent tariff on goods from August 7, alongside an additional but unspecified 'penalty' for its defence and energy imports from Russia, economic ministries have started sending in sectoral tariff concessions in their jurisdictions. • India was one of the first countries the Trump administration had expected to sign a deal with, but slow progress has been a source of frustration for Washington DC. Like countries around the world scrambling to deal with Trump's tariff threats, India had largely adopted a principled, but non-confrontational, stance in an attempt to balance selective concessions with caution to safeguard its economic growth, and circumvent a backlash from domestic producers. • What complicates the equation for India is that the Chinese are at an advanced stage of negotiations towards a deal, which could have a favourable tariff rate and potential waivers on secondary tariffs, including possibly the tariff on account of Russian oil imports and the proposed 10 per cent BRICS tariff. • Tariff rebalancing, if done right, could potentially offer an impetus to the economy, given that the biggest beneficiaries of tariff protection, especially the non-tariff barriers such as an increasing array of QCOs (quality control orders), are the big players. MSME units have been calling for these QCOs to be removed, especially in areas such as steel and textiles. • Since 1991, New Delhi has gradually reduced its average tariff from nearly 79 per cent in 1990 to around 12 per cent in 2013, following which it has gone back up to 16-17 per cent by 2023. Sectors such as agriculture, dairy and automobiles, continue to be protected, even as the Ministry of Commerce and industry maintains that its trade measures are WTO-compliant. • Unlike its response during Trump's first term, where retaliatory tariffs were imposed, New Delhi has desisted from retaliating and is working on strategic concessions in sectors that the US is keen to target, while adhering to its own broad red lines. This involves areas symbolic of trade openness, including nuclear energy, fossil fuels and defence procurement. • Once the official level discussions wrap up, there is a sense that a final call on the deal could come down to a conversation between the two leaders, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Trump. This is especially so since it is Trump who is the trade negotiator-in-chief. Do You Know: • QCOs are a key mechanism through which India is not only raising quality standards to enter the global value chain, but is also restricting imports from China. Economy: Why US President Donald Trump's 'dead economy' jibe at India fails to stand up to scrutiny • US President Donald Trump may have referred to India as a 'dead' economy, but the numbers tell a different story. • The most recent collaboration between India and the US was seen last week as the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) placed the NISAR satellite, a first-of-its-kind collaborative project between India and the US, into its intended orbit. • When Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the US in February, the two countries announced cooperation on several initiatives including the Transforming Relationship Utilizing Strategic Technology (TRUST) initiative — a bilateral initiative for cooperation in the recovery and processing of critical minerals such as lithium and rare earth elements. • A move towards stronger trade ties was also discussed in detail during Modi's US visit, with the countries agreeing to double their bilateral trade to $500 billion by 2030. India's trade relationship with the US has already been strengthening. • In 2024, the total goods trade between the two nations stood at $129.2 billion, with the US' exports to India rising 3.4 per cent to $41.8 billion, while its imports were up 4.5 per cent at $87.4 billion, resulting in a deficit of $45.7 billion for the US. • India's share in US' smartphone imports surged to nearly 36 per cent in the first five months of 2025, driven mainly by Apple's iPhones, from about 11 per cent in 2024. China, which continues to dominate the category, saw its share drop from 82 per cent to 49 per cent over the same period. • Trump's often-cited charge against India has been of it being a 'Tariff King', and India in response has made a conscious effort to broadcast the message that it is not. In the Union Budget for 2025-26, presented in February, duties on the top 30 US goods imported by India were reduced. • Modi and Trump had also agreed to renew the 10-year defence framework, with the American President having mentioned increasing military supplies to India and ultimately providing the F-35 stealth fighter. • While there are some downside risks to the Indian growth story from Trump's threat of a 25 per cent tariff on Indian goods and a 'penalty' for its energy and arms imports from Russia, even a 20-40 bps decline in the growth rate to 6 per cent or so will not stop the economy from being the fastest growing large economy in the world. • But these hardly make an economy 'dead' — especially one which the IMF estimates as the fifth-largest in the world with a GDP of $3.9 trillion in 2024. And it's only going to get better — by 2028, the IMF expects India to overtake Germany and Japan and rise to the third spot, only behind the US and China. Other Important Articles Covering the same topic: 📍What Trump is actually doing — and why India needs to press reform & reset 📍Is India's economy 'dead' as Donald Trump claimed? Previous year UPSC Prelims Question Covering similar theme: (1) With reference to the Indian economy, consider the following statements: (UPSC CSE 2022) 1. If the inflation is too high, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is likely to buy government securities. 2. If the rupee is rapidly depreciating, RBI is likely to sell dollars in the market. 3. If interest rates in the USA or European Union were to fall, that is likely to induce RBI to buy dollars. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3 Previous year UPSC Mains Question Covering similar theme: 'What introduces friction into the ties between India and the United States is that Washington is still unable to find for India a position in its global strategy, which would satisfy India's National self-esteem and ambitions'. Explain with suitable examples. (UPSC CSE 2019) Syllabus: Preliminary Examination:Current events of national and international importance Mains Examination: General Studies-I: Modern Indian history from about the middle of the eighteenth century until the present – significant events, personalities, issues. What's the ongoing story: The discovery of cannonballs during an excavation process in Goa in March this year has shed more light on a Portuguese-era arsenal, where coins were minted and warships built, a report submitted by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) to the state's Tourism Department shows. Key Points to Ponder: • Why did the Portuguese come to India? • Who were the first Europeans to arrive in India and the last to leave? • Who led the Portuguese conquest of Goa in the early 16th Century? • Where did the Portuguese set up their factories? • Know about the important Portuguese General • Why did the Portuguese conquer Goa? Key Takeaways: • The report, submitted in June, says the 'arsenal' also consisted of a gun foundry, a naval dockyard, and an elephant stable. 'European weaponry and naval equipment were either stored or manufactured on the site,' the report says. • In March 2025, the ASI Goa circle directed the state's tourism department to halt the excavation work for a project in Old Goa, to allow 'proper documentation' after some cannonballs were discovered at a site. • As per the report, the Goa Tourism Development Corporation (GTDC) had secured a central government grant to upgrade and provide visitor amenities at the Basilica of Bom Jesus. The work was going on west of the church complex to develop a Heritage Interpretation Centre and a parking lot. • Citing authors and historians of Portuguese maritime and colonial history, the report concludes that the area of discovery of cannonballs on March 22 is 'analogous with the location of arsenal' identified in the historical accounts over the years. • 'This arsenal area lies within the city walls of Old Goa, which was the… capital of Portuguese Estado da India (State of India),' the report says. • As per the ASI report, General Afonso de Albuquerque, who led the Portuguese conquest of Goa in the early 16th Century, initiated the complex's development and 'its grandeur was documented by European travellers'. • 'Sources suggest that the arsenal may have predated Portuguese conquest and existed during the Adil Shahi period, implying it was a prominent edifice even before Albuquerque's arrival… When Albuquerque entered Goa, he found at the dock 40 large ships, 26 brigs, numerous fustas, and other materials related to warfare,' the report says. • The arsenal was subsequently restructured. 'By 1540, about 700 workers were employed and the arsenal reached its zenith by the late 16th century,' it said. The report said that French navigator Francois Pyrard de Laval, during his 1608 visit, described it as 'well-fortified and equipped with stone-built rooms for artisans to reduce fire hazards.' • A major fire broke out on June 9, 1753, damaging part of the arsenal. 'It was renovated and expanded in 1773. However, with the decline of Portuguese influence, the arsenal lost its importance and was closed in 1856,' the report adds. • In the book, The Portuguese in India [volume 1], British civil servant Frederick Charles Danvers wrote that when Albuquerque entered Goa in 1510, 'accompanied by his captains, about 1,000 Portuguese and 200 Malabarese' and received the keys of the fortress from the Governor and principal Moors of the city, he found 'a large quantity of artillery and stores, besides forty ships and sixteen fustas, quantities of merchandise, and some spacious stables containing 160 horses…'. Do You Know: • Portugal's first direct contact with India was when the explorer Vasco da Gama reached Calicut, today's Kozhikode in Kerala, in May 1498. da Gama had traversed a long and arduous way — setting sail from Portugal, he had circled Africa through the Cape of Good Hope to finally reach the Malabar coast. • It was this journey, and the full discovery of the prosperous trade flourishing along the entire route, that fuelled the Portuguese determination to dot the Indian Ocean with military posts. The desire for riches, as well as rivalry with the Muslims, who were in power along this route, were the reasons for this. • A mere six years after da Gama, the Portuguese State of India had been established. The first viceroy, Francisco de Almeida, was based in Fort Manuel, in today's Kochi. • Among the Portuguese possessions in India was the island of Bom Bahia — later Bombay and today's Mumbai — until it was given as Catherine de Braganza's dowry to Charles II of England in 1661. • Albuquerque, who had come to succeed Almeida, had been asked to conquer the ports of Hormuz, Aden, and Malacca by his King. However, he realised that a permanent base in Goa, then under the Sultan of Bijapur, would be very helpful to the Portuguese ambition of controlling maritime trade routes of the East. • Albuquerque's decision of conquering Goa also came on the advice of one Timoji or Timmayya, on whose motivations as well as identity some debate exists. What is known, however, is that Timmayya and his men fought alongside Albuquerque. • Albuquerque's first conquest of Goa in February-March of 1510 was almost a walkover. The Sultan's rule was unpopular among the Hindus of Goa, who were happy to back the Portuguese against him. However, the Sultan's forces soon drove Albuquerque and his men out. • After enduring a tough monsoon stranded in the river Mandovi, the Portuguese forces, replenished by more men and ships from the homeland, launched a fresh assault in November, and retook the city. Other Important Articles Covering the same topic: 📍How Portuguese saved Daman from the Mughals 📍The Portuguese conquest of Goa: Here are 3 key parts of that story UPSC Prelims Question Covering similar theme: (2) Consider the following fruits: (UPSC CSE 2025) I. Papaya II. Pineapple III. Guava How many of the above were introduced in India by the Portuguese in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries? (a) Only one (b) Only two (c) All the three (d) None Syllabus: Preliminary Examination: Current events of national and international importance Mains Examination: General Studies-II: Structure, organisation and functioning of the Executive and the Judiciary—Ministries and Departments of the Government; pressure groups and formal/informal associations and their role in the Polity What's the ongoing story: Using technology 'thoughtfully and inclusively…can bridge the persistent gaps in our justice system', said Supreme Court judge Justice Surya Kant Saturday, and underlined that it cannot, however, replace the human element and 'the heart of justice must remain human'. Key Points to Ponder: • How can technology bridge the gaps in the justice system? • What are the problems facing the judicial system of our country? • What are the tech initiatives that are implemented in the justice delivery system? • What are the challenges in the use of technology? • How is artificial intelligence being implemented in the judicial system? • What are virtual Lok Adalats? Key Takeaways: • Justice Kant said: 'With the right vision and safeguards, technology can break geographical barriers, democratise legal awareness, and bring legal aid to the doorstep — or rather the palm of every citizen. If harnessed thoughtfully and inclusively, it can bridge the persistent gaps in our justice system.' • Emphasising the need 'to address the challenges faced by linguistic and cultural minorities,' Justice Kant said that 'digital platforms must not only be multilingual but also culturally nuanced' and 'when citizens see their own stories, customs, and worldviews reflected in legal education content, barriers of alienation and mistrust crumble, making way for genuine engagement and confidence in the system.' • Justice Kant called for holding virtual Lok Adalats by harnessing secure video platforms but cautioned that 'the excitement of technology must be tempered with restraint. The digital divide is very real.' • 'No technology is neutral. The tools we build reflect the values we embed in them. As we digitise legal aid, we must design systems with built-in ethics. Privacy must be paramount…' he said. Do You Know: • Lok Adalats are an alternative dispute redressal mechanism, where the aim is to settle or compromise cases amicably. While litigants get the benefit of swift justice and substantially reduced litigation costs, as per the Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987, the decision of the court is binding and it cannot be appealed against. • According to NALSA, under the Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987, the award (decision) made by the Lok Adalats is deemed to be a decree of a civil court and is final and binding on all parties and no appeal against such an award lies before any court of law. • If the parties are not satisfied with the award of the Lok Adalat though there is no provision for an appeal against such an award, but they are free to initiate litigation by approaching the court of appropriate jurisdiction by filing a case by following the required procedure, in exercise of their right to litigate. • When a matter is filed in a Lok Adalat, the court fee is not payable. If a matter pending in the court of law is referred to the Lok Adalat and is settled subsequently, the court fee originally paid in the court on the complaints/petition is also refunded to the parties. Other Important Articles Covering the same topic: 📍Justice at your fingertips: How AI is helping Delhi's judges, lawyers deal with caseload 📍Tech integration must not be at cost of right to be heard: Supreme Court judge Previous year UPSC Prelims Question Covering similar theme: (3) In India, Legal Services Authorities provide free legal services to which of the following type of citizens? (UPSC CSE 2020) 1. Person with an annual income of less than Rs. 1,00,000 2. Transgender with an annual income of less than Rs. 2,00,000 3. Member of Other Backward Classes (OBC) with an annual income of less than Rs. 3,00,000 4. All Senior Citizens Select the correct answer using the code given below: (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 3 and 4 only (c) 2 and 3 only (d) 1 and 4 only Syllabus: Preliminary Examination: Indian Polity and Governance-Constitution, Political System, Panchayati Raj, Public Policy, Rights Issues, etc. Mains Examination: General Studies-II: Functions and responsibilities of the Union and the States, issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure, devolution of powers and finances up to local levels and challenges therein. What's the ongoing story: With Odisha and Chhattisgarh having BJP governments, both the states are likely to go for an 'amicable solution' in the long-standing dispute over Mahanadi water sharing. Key Points to Ponder: • What do you understand by the interstate water dispute? • What are the constitutional mechanisms to deal with river water disputes in India? • What are the major river water disputes between states? • What is the Central Water Commission? • What is the inter-state water tribunal? • What are the challenges in resolving the water disputes between states? Key Takeaways: • The issue is pending with the Mahanadi Water Disputes Tribunal formed by the Centre in March 2018 following a Supreme Court direction. • Odisha Chief Minister Mohan Charan Majhi, who chaired a meeting over the issue on July 23, wrote a letter to his Chhattisgarh counterpart Vishnu Deo Sai two days later seeking a 'mutually beneficial settlement'. Sai responded to Majhi on Friday saying the former's proposal is under 'active consideration'. • In his letter, Majhi proposed a joint committee led by officials of the Central Water Commission and comprising officials from both the states to facilitate dialogue and technical negotiations to reach a 'mutually beneficial settlement'. • River Mahanadi that flows through Chhattisgarh and Odisha is a major source of water for agriculture, industry and hydropower generation. • Official sources said the Mahanadi has a total catchment area of 141,600 square kilometres, of which 53.9 per cent is in Chhattisgarh, 45.73 per cent in Odisha and a very small part in Madhya Pradesh. • As the river caused massive flooding, Odisha in 1953 had constructed a massive 25-km long earthen dam at Hirakud in Sambalpur district to reserve water for irrigation facilities in western region of the state and for power generation. Odisha in 2016 claimed a minimum flow of 12.28-million-acre feet of Mahanadi water at Hirakud dam. • The neighbouring states locked horns over Mahanadi water since 2016 after Odisha alleged 'unilateral' construction of multiple barrages by Chhattisgarh in the upper catchment areas that resulted in reduction of flow into Odisha, the lower riparian state, during non-monsoon seasons. Do You Know: • Article 262(1) of the Constitution states that 'Parliament may by law provide for the adjudication of any dispute or complaint with respect to the use, distribution, or control of the waters of, or in, any inter-State river, or river valley'. • Parliament passed the Inter-State River Water Disputes Act of 1956. It allows for the referral of such a disagreement to Tribunals upon receipt of an application from a State if the Union Government is persuaded that the dispute 'cannot be settled by negotiations'. Other Important Articles Covering the same topic: 📍Explained: Why rule change in BBMB has become a flashpoint between Centre and Punjab Previous year UPSC Mains Question Covering similar theme: 📍Constitutional mechanisms to resolve the inter-state water disputes have failed to address and solve the problems. Is the failure due to structural or process inadequacy or both? Discuss. (2013) Syllabus: Preliminary Examination: History of India and Indian National Movement Mains Examination: General Studies-I: Indian culture will cover the salient aspects of Art Forms, literature and Architecture from ancient to modern times. What's the ongoing story: Arup K Chatterjee writes: Once again, public discourse is abuzz with the legacies of the Cholas — thanks to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's recent visit to Gangaikonda Cholapuram, their erstwhile capital. Key Points to Ponder: • Who were the Cholas? • What are the specific features of the temple architecture of the Cholas? • Who are the important Chola leaders? • Who established the Chola dynasty? • What are the major historical sources to understand the Chola dynasty? • What is the three-tiered system of the Chola polity? • Know about the meaning of: Ur, Nadu, and Brahmadeya. Key Takeaways: • The Cholas occupy a hallowed space in Indian imagination for their pioneering experiments in democracy, but one needs to look beyond their basilica-like monuments, gilded Natarajas and temple vimanas (the towering structure above the inner sanctum) piercing the skylines of Thanjavur, Gangaikonda Cholapuram, and Darasuram. • Relatively forgotten by nationalists, the Cholas underwent an image makeover around the 1930s. Kanisetti says Sastri and Majumdar found romanticised examples of enlightened Chola imperialism to counter Britain's pride in its Roman past. • Unsurprisingly, Kalki Krishnamurthy's novel Ponniyin Selvan (1950-54) edified Chola king Rajaraja I as an amalgamation of Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel and C Rajagopalachari. • While most historians date the Cholas between the 9-13th century, ambitious ones have gone back to the Sangam period (between 350 BC and 1279 AD). In the latter periodisation, the Tamil confederacy was defeated by Kalinga in 155 BC, and re-emerged in 850 AD under Vijayalaya, who, with Pallava approval and Velir solidarity, seized Thanjavur. • History enthusiasts are generally captivated by Chola polity's three-tiered system, constituted by nadu (supra-village), ur (village) and brahmadeya (Brahminical agrahara) assemblies, with nagarams (merchant-towns) governed by nagarattars. Simultaneously, Chola temples emerged as economic hubs endowed with devadana (land grants), and empowered as rheostats of irrigation and artisanal production. • Much euphoria has revolved around the concept of Chola elections by kudavolai (lottery) among the local committees. These offered a democratic veneer, but the franchise remained narrowly circumscribed within clannish coteries, while state commissioners retained veto power. • Chola patronage of merchant guilds (ayyavole and manigramam) forged expansive trade-relations with South-East Asia and Sung China, while ships requisitioned from those guilds enlarged Chola warrior fleets. Revenues were reploughed for naval expansion in a commercial empire spanning over 2,200 miles — from Bengal to Sri Lanka and the Malay Archipelago. • Chola naval ascendancy clubbed martial hegemony with mercantile collaboration, provisioning warships, recruiting mariners and amassing siege-equipment without democratic will. This was at odds with the dharmic ideal of righteous rule. Though 11th-century Chola navies realigned trade from the Persian Gulf to the Indian Ocean, their profits were not redistributed for the upkeep of coastal nagarams. • The Cholas were not classical democrats. The real reason behind their return to public discourse is not democracy but the same political impulse that led Margaret Thatcher to turn to the Victorians, or the Victorians to turn to the Greeks. Do You Know: • Three royal temples – the Tanjore Brihadēśvara, Gangaikoṇḍacōl̥apuram, and Darasuram Airavatēśvara – built between the 11th and 12th centuries CE, are the finest examples of the Cholas' artistic brilliance. These temples were inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site as the 'Great Living Chola Temples' in 1987. These state temples were laid out in a manner that they served as focal points of their capitals. These shrines not only outweigh the earlier shrines in terms of their spatial elaboration, but also in their overwhelming monumentality. • Prime Minister Narendra Modi on July 27 unveiled a commemorative coin and inaugurated an exhibition on Rajendra Chola's northern conquest. Rajendra I, the maritime monarch of the Chola dynasty, inherited a powerful kingdom from his father Rajaraja I and expansion of the Chola empire continued under him. • To commemorate his successful northern expedition, Rajendra Chola, also known as Rajendra the Great or Gangaikonda Chola (the Chola who conquered Ganga), established Gangaikonda Cholapuram and ceremonially poured Ganges water brought back by his army into a vast man-made reservoir known as the Cholagangam tank, locally referred to as Ponneri. • After establishing his dominance within India, Rajendra Chola I then led several successful maritime campaigns, extending the boundaries of his empire and the reputation of his dynasty as one of the foremost Naval powers of India. He has campaigns from the Ganga to Suvarnadwipa (an ancient term for islands in Southeast Asia, including Java and Sumatra) that turned the Cholas into a pan-Asian maritime empire. Other Important Articles Covering the same topic: 📍Why Chola architecture represents a high watermark in the evolution of temple 📍UPSC Issue at a Glance | Revisiting Chola dynasty and Rajendra I's achievements: Insights into governance, society, architecture, and more Prelims Question Covering similar theme: (4) Which of the following parts of a temple structure is not correctly matched? (a) entry hall : mukhamaṇḍapa (b) pillared hall : ardhamaṇḍapa (c) vestibule : gopuram (d) sanctum : garbhagṛha UPSC Mains Question Covering similar theme: Chola architecture represents a high watermark in the evolution of temple architecture. Discuss. (UPSC CSE 2013) Subscribe to our UPSC newsletter. Stay updated with the latest UPSC articles by joining our Telegram channel – IndianExpress UPSC Hub, and follow us on Instagram and X. 🚨 Click Here to read the UPSC Essentials magazine for July 2025. Share your views and suggestions in the comment box or at Khushboo Kumari is a Deputy Copy Editor with The Indian Express. She has done her graduation and post-graduation in History from the University of Delhi. At The Indian Express, she writes for the UPSC section. She holds experience in UPSC-related content development. You can contact her via email: ... Read More