09 June 2025 Indian Express Editorial


What to Read in Indian Express Editorial( Topic and Syllabus wise)

Editorial 1 : Tailoring a sector

Context

India’s share of global apparel trade is only 3% and has stayed the same for the last 20 years.

A deep-rooted tradition

  • India has a deep-rooted tradition in textiles and apparel (T&A). The sector employs 45 million people and contributes 2.3 per cent to overall GDP.But its share in global trade remains low at 4.2 per cent, a mere $37.8 billion out of $897.8 billion.
  • India has set a target of $40 billion in apparel exports by 2030. But in the last few years, apparel exports have declined at an AAGR of –2 per cent.
  • If we had sustained the stronger AAGR of 8.5 per cent (2004-2017), we would reach $31 billion by 2030. And an AAGR of 8.5 per cent (2004-2023) suggests exports to reach $21 billion by 2030.
  • These numbers make it clear that without a significant shift in policy and strategy, the $40-billion goal will remain a pipe dream.

The constraint

  • Our research points to a fundamental constraint — India’s lack of scale. Put simply, we are too many, too small, and too dispersed.
  • Over 80 per cent of India’s apparel units are Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs).
  • China and Vietnam have built large-scale and export-oriented factories backed by integrated production systems.
  • Even Bangladesh has found a way to either scale up or have single-window “buying houses” that take large orders and then get executed from various factories.
  • The large scale helps them attract global buyers who demand volume. Scale also drives down unit costs, shortens delivery timelines, and generates mass formal employment.
  • For a country like India with a young population, the garment industry offers a wonderful opportunity to expand employment and grab a larger share of the global market.

A silver lining to achieve

  • To translate ambition into reality, India needs bold reforms enabling scale.
  • First, capital must be made accessible and affordable for scale-focused investments. A structured capital subsidy of 25-30 per cent, linked to the size of the unit, can provide the initial push.
  • Second, India’s 52 central labour laws have created rigidities, discouraging formal hiring and scale. They need flexibility. Overtime payments are mandated at two times the hourly wage, compared to the ILO standard of 1.25 times, adding to cost pressures.
  • A bold idea could be to link MGNREGA funds to subsidise labour costs in garment units. This could make labour-intensive units more competitive while generating productive employment on a sustainable basis.
  • Schemes like SAMARTH should be significantly scaled upto provide short-cycle, demand-linked skilling, especially for women.
  • India’s low female labour force participation and high youth unemployment demand job creation, not just income transfers.
  • Third, at least two of the seven PM MITRA parks should be designated as garment-focused hubs, particularly in states like Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, where labour costs are lower and worker migration to southern garment hubs is high.
  • Bringing manufacturing closer to the workforce can reduce costs, boost underdeveloped regions, and build more inclusive industrialisation.
  • Finally, India must rethink its incentive architecture. What the garment sector needs is an Export-Linked Incentive (ELI) rather than just a Production-Linked Incentive (PLI). Schemes that reward firms not just for producing more, but for competing and winning in global markets.

Way forward

  • The garment industry deserves focused policy attention because it sits at the intersection of mass employment and maximum value addition.  The global marketplace will not wait for India to get its act together.
  • Therefore, we need policies that are bold in design and swift in execution. We hope our policymakers can rise to this challenge.

 

Editorial 2 : Renewable and protected

Context

India’s wind sector must innovate and secure, not just scale.

India’s renewable energy

  • India, after all, aims to achieve 500 GW of non-fossil-based electric installed capacity by 2030, including an ambitious target of over 100 GW from wind
  • For years, the renewable energy sector has diligently optimised turbine efficiency, improved grid integration and focused on speedy deployment. These remain essential.
  • However, an equally pressing threat looms quietly in the background: Cybersecurity and the pace of maximum value addition and localisation in manufacturing.
  • Unlike finance or defence sectors, where digital safeguards have long been entrenched, robust cybersecurity measures are only now being introduced into India’s renewable energy framework.
  • And it’s about time. A compromised SCADA (Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition) system or remote-access breach could disable a wind farm — or multiple sites — in mere seconds.

The road ahead

  • The proposed amendment requires all operational wind turbine data to be stored within Indian territory.
  • Foreign entities will no longer be allowed to remotely access or control Indian wind farms, a clear attempt to eliminate vulnerabilities to external cyber threats.
  • More importantly, Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs)will be required to establish R&D facilities in India, signalling a decisive shift from passive assembly to active domestic innovation.
  • This aligns with NITI Aayog’s 2024 roadmap, emphasising localisation of both hardware and control systems.
  • Given the various global incidents where cyberattacks have crippled energy grids, India’s push for digital self-reliance isn’t just necessary — it’s urgent.
  • Mandating local R&D isn’t just about job creation or investment; it’s about creating wind turbine technology designed for India’s grid, climate, and challenges.
  • India — not China or Europe — must become the epicentre for wind turbine innovation and manufacturing.

The ways to achieve

  • Firstly,there is a greater need to build capacity for enforcement. Without a concrete monitoring mechanism, these rules risk becoming paper mandates.
  • Secondly, the amendment needs to articulate India-specific design adaptation clearly. Renewable energy projects here face extreme operating conditions — temperatures exceeding 45°C, saline coastal air, monsoon deluges, and erratic grid voltages.
  • Third, the policy skirts the need for embedded systems security. Today, power converters used in wind turbines and solar inverters in solar projects are effectively software-defined assets.
  • They depend on SCADA systems, PLCs, and firmware that may be compromised — often subtly and invisibly. Without mandatory audits of software stacks and hardware backdoors, especially from OEMs in adversarial jurisdictions, India’s wind and solar assets remain vulnerable.
  • To operate in India, vendors/OEMs must obtain certification and clearance from Indian authorities and adhere to Government of India (GOI) regulations.
  • These regulations should include provisions for force majeure situations, where vendor/OEM-supplied equipment may fail to receive support and patches, potentially leading to significant security breaches and national security risks.
  • This ensures that even in times of geopolitical uncertainty, India’s energy infrastructure remains operable, supported, and secure.

Way forward

  • Additionally, existing regulatory frameworks — like the Central Electricity Authority’s temperature thresholds or the National Institute of Wind Energy’s certification protocols — are treated as optional references, not core requirements.
  • This disconnect must be addressed if we want turbines that are not just “Made in India” but truly Engineered for India.

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