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Thursday, May 21, 2026

Prelims 2026: Why the Strait of Hormuz is India's Ultimate Energy Chokepoint

 

Prelims 2026: Why the Strait of Hormuz is India's Ultimate Energy Chokepoint

Geopolitics and maritime mapping are high-yielding areas for the UPSC Civil Services Preliminary examination. If there is one maritime bottleneck you must master this year, it is the Strait of Hormuz.

Geopolitical tensions in West Asia frequently threaten to disrupt this narrow passage. A breakdown of the core facts, mapping data, and exact statistical traps is essential for preparation.

1. The Mapping Core: Where Exactly is it?

UPSC frequently tests geographical boundaries and water bodies. The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow channel of water that functions as the single sea passage from the Persian Gulf to the open ocean.

Essential Geographical Triggers:

  • Connects: The Persian Gulf (west) with the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea (east).

  • Borders: It is sandwiched between Iran to the north and Oman (specifically the Musandam Peninsula exclave) and the UAE to the south.

  • Global Weight: Roughly one-fifth (20%) of the world's total petroleum and liquefied natural gas (LNG) consumption passes through this single waterway daily.

2. The Numbers Game: India’s Vulnerability Exposed

UPSC trend patterns show that statements containing proportions and data regarding import dependencies are common in economics and geography sections. The raw numbers show why any instability in Hormuz presents an immediate risk to India's energy security.

Fuel TypeIndia's Total Import DependencyShare Transiting Through Strait of HormuzActual Exposure (Calculated)
Crude Oil88%40%~35% of India's total oil needs rely on this channel.
Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG)50%55% to 60%~30% of our domestic gas mix passes here.
Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG)60%90%An overwhelming majority of cooking gas imports pass through it.

Prelims Trap: A question might claim that “India imports more than half of its total crude oil requirements directly through the Strait of Hormuz.” This is False. India imports 88% of its total crude, but out of that imported chunk, 40% comes through Hormuz. Keep this mathematical distinction clear.

3. Why This Matters for India (Mains Connection)

  • Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR): Because of our massive exposure to maritime choke points like Hormuz and the Bab-el-Mandeb (Red Sea), India maintains underground strategic fuel reserves in Vishakhapatnam, Mangaluru, and Padur to handle sudden supply shocks.

  • Inflation and Current Account Deficit (CAD): A conflict at the Strait spikes global Brent crude prices. Every ten-dollar increase in a barrel of oil expands India’s trade deficit and triggers domestic inflation.

4. Expected Multi-Statement Practice Question

Q. Consider the following statements regarding international maritime chokepoints:

  1. The Strait of Hormuz directly connects the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden.

  2. More than three-fourths of India's domestic Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) imports pass through the Strait of Hormuz.

  3. The northern coast of the Strait of Hormuz is bordered by Iran, while its southern tip is controlled by Oman.

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

  • Answer: (b)

  • Explanation: Statement 1 is incorrect; the Bab-el-Mandeb connects the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden. Hormuz connects the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman. Statement 2 is correct; 90% of India's LPG imports pass through it. Statement 3 is correct; Iran sits north, and Oman's Musandam Peninsula forms the southern boundary.

UPSC 2026 :Core Concept Sheets

 

UPSC 2026 :Core Concept Sheets 

1. Decoding India's Forex Box

Forex reserves are managed under the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), 1999. The absolute legal custodian and manager of these assets is the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).

The 4 Components & The Trap Points

  1. Foreign Currency Assets (FCA)

    • What it is: Investments in foreign government bonds, deposits with foreign central banks, and commercial banks abroad.

    • The Valuation Trap: It is NOT just US Dollars. It includes Euros, GBP, and Yen. If the Euro strengthens against the USD, India's Forex reserves will increase on paper, even if RBI didn't buy a single extra Euro. This is called the Valuation Effect.

  2. Gold Stock

    • Physical gold held by RBI. It serves as an ultimate backstop when fiat currencies lose value globally.

  3. Special Drawing Rights (SDR)

    • The IMF’s international reserve asset. (Detailed breakdown below).

  4. Reserve Tranche Position (RTP)

    • What it is: A portion of India's quota subscription with the IMF that we can withdraw in foreign currency without any interest or structural adjustment conditions. It is our own "liquid savings account" parked at the IMF.

2. The Anatomy of an SDR (Special Drawing Right)

The IMF created SDRs in 1969 to solve the problem of global liquidity limits.

Fundamental "True/False" Triggers for Prelims

  • Is it money? NO. It is neither a currency nor a direct claim on the IMF.

  • What is its real nature? It is a potential claim on the freely usable currencies of IMF members. It is an accounting unit (Book-keeping entry).

  • Can a private bank buy it? NO. SDRs cannot be held or used by private entities, corporations, or individuals. Only the IMF, member central banks, and a few designated international institutions can hold them.

  • Nicknames: Popularly called "Paper Gold" because it originally represented a fixed value in terms of physical gold.

The Elite Currency Basket

The value of 1 SDR is calculated daily based on a basket of 5 currencies. The weights are reviewed every 5 years based on the country's export performance and market openness.

                             SDR {Value} = {USD, Euro,RMB, Yen, GBP}

Chronology Trap: The Chinese Renminbi (Yuan) was added to the basket in 2016, marking the first time an emerging market currency entered the SDR framework.

Part 2: 25-Year UPSC PYQ Engine (1999–2025+)

This section catalogs every direct and closely related question asked on Forex, SDR, and the IMF framework. Notice how UPSC repeats the same core concept in different variations.

UPSC Prelims 2016

Q1. Recently, which one of the following currencies has been proposed to be added to the basket of IMF's SDR?

(a) Rouble

(b) Rand

(c) Indian Rupee

(d) Renminbi

  • Answer: (d)

  • Elimination Key: Simple current-affairs-linked static question. The Chinese Renminbi met the criteria of being a "freely usable currency."

UPSC Prelims 2013

Q2. Which of the following groups of items is included in India’s Foreign Exchange Reserves?

(a) Foreign currency assets, Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) and loans from foreign countries

(b) Foreign currency assets, gold holdings of the RBI and SDRs

(c) Foreign currency assets, loans from World Bank and SDRs

(d) Foreign currency assets, gold holdings of the RBI and loans from World Bank

  • Answer: (b)

  • Elimination Key: Loans from the World Bank or foreign nations are liabilities (debt), not reserve assets. Spotting "loans" allows you to instantly cross out options (a), (c), and (d).

UPSC Prelims 2022

Q3. With reference to the International Monetary Fund, which one of the following statements is correct regarding "Reserve Tranche"?

(a) It refers to a credit line granted by any multilateral financial institution to its members.

(b) It is a loan system of the World Bank.

(c) It is a credit system granted by the central bank of a country to its commercial banks.

(d) A credit cushion which an IMF member can access on its own account.

  • Answer: (d)

  • Elimination Key: Options (a) and (b) are wrong because it is specific to the IMF, not the World Bank or any generic multilateral institution. Option (c) describes domestic liquidity tools (like Repo/MSF), not international reserves.

UPSC Prelims 2001

Q4. "Special Drawing Rights" (SDR) issued by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) are in the form of:

(a) Paper Gold

(b) Golden bonds

(c) Digital Currency

(d) Special Balance Sheet Entry

  • Answer: (a)

  • Elimination Key: Direct historical nomenclature question. The IMF explicitly introduced SDRs as an alternative to gold reserves, earning it the moniker "Paper Gold."

UPSC Prelims 2014

Q5. If the Balance of Payments of a country is adverse, then which institution will help that country?

(a) World Bank

(b) International Monetary Fund

(c) Asian Development Bank

(d) World Trade Organization

  • Answer: (b)

  • Elimination Key: The World Bank focuses on long-term structural development and poverty reduction. The IMF is specifically engineered to handle short-term Balance of Payments (BoP) failures and macroeconomic stabilization.

Part 3: Mind-Map & High-Yield Summary Table

Use this comparative matrix to eliminate options during the actual exam:

Reserve ComponentLegal CustodianCan it be devalued by domestic policy?Key Metric to Watch for Prelims
FCARBIYes (Subject to global exchange rate swings)Non-USD currency performance impacts total value.
GoldRBINo (Has intrinsic global market value)Domestic inflation hedge.
SDRIMF (Allocated to India)No (Value tied to 5 diverse economies)Only official entities can hold it; not private hands.
RTPIMF (India's unconditional quota)No (Denominated in SDR values)Zero interest, unconditional emergency ac

विशेष और अथक प्रयास

 विशेष प्रयास (Vishesh Prayas) और अथक प्रयास (Athak Prayas) दोनों ही मेहनत और कोशिश को दर्शाने वाले शब्द हैं, लेकिन इनके उपयोग और गहराई में काफी अंतर है।

इन दोनों के बीच का मुख्य अंतर नीचे समझाया गया है:

बिंदुविशेष प्रयास (Vishesh Prayas)अथक प्रयास (Athak Prayas)
शाब्दिक अर्थSpecial Effort (एक खास या विशिष्ट कोशिश)Untiring / Relentless Effort (बिना थके की जाने वाली कोशिश)
मुख्य फोकसरणनीति और दिशा पर। जब आप किसी काम को पूरा करने के लिए सामान्य से हटकर कोई अलग, नया या अतिरिक्त कदम उठाते हैं।निरंतरता और मेहनत पर। जब आप बिना रुके, बिना थके, लगातार पूरी ताकत से कोशिश करते रहते हैं।
समय सीमायह अक्सर अल्पकालिक (Short-term) या किसी खास मौके/समस्या के लिए होता है।यह आमतौर पर दीर्घकालिक (Long-term) होता है, जो लक्ष्य मिलने तक जारी रहता है।

आसान उदाहरणों से समझें:

  • विशेष प्रयास (Vishesh Prayas):

    "परीक्षा में टॉप करने के लिए उसने कठिन विषयों पर विशेष प्रयास किया।"

    यहाँ इसका मतलब है कि उसने उन कठिन विषयों के लिए अलग से समय निकाला, विशेष स्ट्रेटेजी बनाई या किसी गाइड की मदद ली।

  • अथक प्रयास (Athak Prayas):

    "सालों के अथक प्रयास के बाद आखिरकार उसने सिविल सेवा परीक्षा पास कर ली।"

    यहाँ इसका मतलब है कि उसने बिना हिम्मत हारे, बिना थके, सालों तक लगातार दिन-रात कड़ी मेहनत की।

संक्षेप में: विशेष प्रयास का मतलब है 'स्मार्ट या एक्स्ट्रा कोशिश' और अथक प्रयास का मतलब है 'बिना थके लगातार की जाने वाली कड़ी मेहनत'।

Forest Rights Act

 Q.With reference to the Forest Rights Act, consider the following statements:

1. It seeks to recognise and vest forest rights in forest-dwelling Scheduled Tribes and other traditional forest dwellers.

2. The act allows for the collection of minor forest produce.

3. The law provides only for living and does not allow them to cultivate forest land.

How many of the statements given above are correct?

(a) Only one

(b) Only two

(c) All three

(d) None

Q .Who makes rules for the more convenient transaction of the business of the Government of India?

 Q .Who makes rules for the more convenient transaction of the business of the Government of India?

(a) Chairman of the Rajya Sabha

(b) President of India

(c) Speaker of the Lok Sabha

(d) Leader of the Lok Sabha

Explanation

— All executive action of the Government of India shall be expressed to be taken in the name of the President. Orders and other instruments made and executed in the name of the President shall be authenticated in such manner as may be specified in rules to be made by the President, and the validity of an order or instrument which is so authenticated shall not be called in question on the ground that it is not an order or instrument made or executed by the President.

— The President shall make rules for the more convenient transaction of the business of the Government of India, and for the allocation among Ministers of the said business.

Therefore, option (b) is the correct answer.

The Big Picture: Demystifying the ENSO Coupled System

 

The Big Picture: Demystifying the ENSO Coupled System

Many aspirants make the mistake of studying El Niño purely as a warming of the ocean. In the eyes of UPSC examiners, El Niño is a coupled ocean-atmospheric phenomenon. It is the golden thread connecting water temperatures in Peru to the price of pulses in an Indian market.

To truly understand how a disturbance in the Pacific Ocean suppresses rain over India, we have to look at the Walker Circulation—an atmospheric loop driven by a simple rule: air rises over warm water (creating low pressure and rain) and sinks over cold water (creating high pressure and dry skies).

🌊 The Two Faces of the Pacific

[NORMAL / LA NIÑA PHASE]
High Pressure (Dry/Cold)                               Low Pressure (Wet/Warm)
South America (Peru) <========== Trade Winds ========== Indonesia / India
                       (Pushes Warm Surface Water)

[EL NIÑO PHASE]
Low Pressure (Wet/Warm)                                High Pressure (Dry/Warm)
South America (Peru) ==========> Reversed Winds =========> Indonesia / India
                       (Warm Water Shifts East)

1. The Baseline: Neutral / La Niña Conditions

Under standard conditions, robust trade winds blow from east to west along the equator. They act like a broom, pushing warm surface water toward Indonesia and Australia.

As that warm water moves west, it leaves a vacancy along the South American coast. To fill the gap, cold, nutrient-rich water from the deep ocean rises to the surface near Peru—a process called upwelling. This nutrient boost sustains massive local fisheries.

  • The Atmospheric Result: Warm air rises over the western Pacific (causing low pressure and heavy rain over Southeast Asia and India), while cool air sinks over the eastern Pacific (causing high pressure and dry conditions over Peru).

2. The Disruption: El Niño Conditions

During an El Niño year, this entire engine stalls. The atmospheric pressure gradient flips—a shift known as the Southern Oscillation. The trade winds weaken significantly or reverse direction entirely.

Without the winds pushing it westward, the massive pool of warm surface water sloshes back eastward toward South America.

  • The Atmospheric Result: The convective low-pressure rain clouds move east with the warm water. Peru suddenly faces heavy rainfall and flooding, while the upwelling collapses, devastating their fishing industry. Meanwhile, a weak high-pressure zone settles over South Asia, suppressing the Indian monsoon.

📊 The Meterological Dashboard: How We Measure the Shift

When analyzing ENSO data, meteorologists look at three distinct indices. UPSC loves to use these exact technical parameters to construct confusing options:

MetricWhat It MeasuresThe El Niño FingerprintThe UPSC Trap to Avoid
Oceanic Niño Index (ONI)3-month running average of sea surface temperatures in the Niño 3.4 region ($5^\circ\text{N}–5^\circ\text{S}$, $120^\circ\text{W}–170^\circ\text{W}$).A sustained temperature anomaly of $\ge +0.5^\circ\text{C}$ across 5 consecutive overlapping periods.Examiners might switch the temperature threshold to a negative number or change the geographic coordinates. Negative anomalies ($\le -0.5^\circ\text{C}$) signify La Niña.
Southern Oscillation Index (SOI)The atmospheric pressure difference between Tahiti (representing the eastern Pacific) and Darwin, Australia (representing the western Pacific).Negative or Low SOI. This indicates that pressure has dropped in the east and risen in the west, weakening the trade winds.Remember the inverse relationship: Low/Negative SOI = El Niño. High/Positive SOI = La Niña.
Relative Oceanic Niño Index (RONI)Niño 3.4 temperatures calculated relative to the background warming of all tropical oceans combined.Isolates true, localized ENSO anomalies from generalized global warming.Climate Change Context: As global warming heats oceans globally, standard ONI can give skewed data. RONI adjusts for this rising baseline to provide highly accurate forecasting.

🌾 The Ground Reality: What This Means for India

With the IMD forecasting 2026 monsoon rainfall to sit at 92% of the Long-Period Average (LPA), the threat of an El Niño development landing between May and July directly impacts India's domestic stability.

What is the LPA? The Long-Period Average is the benchmark baseline used by the IMD to calculate whether a monsoon is deficient or normal. The current baseline is 87 cm, calculated over a 50-year historical window (1971–2020). A forecast of 92% lands squarely in the "Below Normal" bracket ($90–95\%$ of LPA).

1. The Double Blow to Crop Cycles

The Southwest Monsoon fuels the Kharif (summer) crop cycle. A delayed or deficient monsoon directly impacts water-intensive staples like rice, pulses, sugarcane, and oilseeds.

The crisis carries over into the next season: if the monsoon fails to replenish regional reservoirs, farmers face severe irrigation shortages for winter-sown Rabi crops (like wheat and mustard). This supply drop risks driving food inflation, lowering rural incomes, and straining the national economy.

2. Cascading Resource Scarcity

Beyond the fields, a weak monsoon accelerates the depletion of India's central reservoirs. This causes a dangerous over-reliance on groundwater aquifers as communities pump deeper to make up for the surface water deficit.

Furthermore, El Niño years are historically tied to intense heatwaves. When low rainfall is paired with high temperatures, it creates an environmental pressure cooker—increasing the risk of forest fires, straining urban power grids, and worsening public health challenges.

📌 Quick Summary Checklist for High-Yield Revision

  • Coupled System: ENSO combines an oceanic change (El Niño) with an atmospheric pressure change (Southern Oscillation).

  • Wind Direction: Trade winds blow East-to-West normally; they weaken or reverse during El Niño.

  • Upwelling: El Niño shuts down the cold, nutrient-rich upwelling off the coast of Peru.

  • Pressure Dynamics: El Niño causes Low Pressure over Peru (rain) and High Pressure over India/Indonesia (drought).

  • The Baseline Fact: India's current baseline LPA is 87 cm (1971–2020 data). 2026 predictions point to a Below Normal monsoon season.

UPSC Prelims 2026: Species in News Revision Quiz

UPSC Prelims 2026: Species in News Revision Quiz Analyzing the trends across past years shows that UPSC has significantly transformed how it asks questions on species. It moved from asking simple "match the following" questions about wildlife sanctuaries in the early 2000s to deep, micro-behavioral, and legal/scientific statement-based questions in recent years.

Here is a comprehensive compilation of landmark species-specific questions asked over the last few decades, organized from the most recent down to the foundational papers.

Practice questions on species  

Questions on species

 Analyzing the trends across past years shows that UPSC has significantly transformed how it asks questions on species. It moved from asking simple "match the following" questions about wildlife sanctuaries in the early 2000s to deep, micro-behavioral, and legal/scientific statement-based questions in recent years.

Here is a comprehensive compilation of landmark species-specific questions asked over the last few decades, organized from the most recent down to the foundational papers.

📅 The Modern Era (High-Fidelity Behavioral & Legal Questions)

UPSC Prelims 2024

Question: Consider the following statements:

  • Statement I: The Indian Flying Fox is placed under the “vermin” category in the Wild Life (Protection) Act, 1972.

  • Statement II: The Indian Flying Fox feeds on the blood of other animals.

Which one of the following is correct in respect of the above statements? (a) Both Statement-I and Statement-II are correct and Statement-II is the correct explanation for Statement-I (b) Both Statement-I and Statement-II are correct but Statement-II is not the correct explanation for Statement-I (c) Statement-I is correct but Statement-II is incorrect (d) Statement-I is incorrect but Statement-II is correct

  • Key Concept: This question targeted a bat species (highly relevant to the current 2026 bat report checklist). Answer is (c). Statement II is a trap—flying foxes are fruit-eating bats, not vampire bats.

UPSC Prelims 2023

Question: Consider the following heavy statement-based profiles:

  1. Some species of turtles are herbivores.

  2. Some species of fish are herbivores.

  3. Some species of marine mammals are herbivores.

  4. Some species of snakes are viviparous.

Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1 and 3 only (b) 2, 3 and 4 only (c) 2 and 4 only (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4

  • Key Concept: Broad biological traits. Answer is (d). (Dugongs are herbivorous marine mammals, green sea turtles are herbivorous, and species like vipers/sea snakes give live birth).

Question: Consider the following pairs (Species vs. Common Behaviour):

  1. Lion-tailed Macaque — Nocturnal

  2. Malabar Civet — Nocturnal

  3. Sambar Deer — Nocturnal

How many of the above pairs are correctly matched? (a) Only one (b) Only two (c) All three (d) None

  • Key Concept: Diurnal vs. Nocturnal rhythms. Answer is (b). Lion-tailed macaques are diurnal (active during the day), whereas civets and sambar deer are primarily nocturnal.

UPSC Prelims 2020

Question: With reference to Indian elephants, consider the following statements:

  1. The leader of an elephant group is a female.

  2. The maximum gestation period can be 22 months.

  3. An elephant can normally go on calving till the age of 40 years only.

  4. Among the States in India, the highest elephant population is in Kerala.

Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 4 only (c) 1, 3 and 4 only (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4

  • Key Concept: Core matriarchal mammalian behavior. Answer is (a). Karnataka, not Kerala, holds the highest population.

📅 The Intermediate Era (Ecological Roles & Adaptive Traits)

UPSC Prelims 2019

Question: Which of the following are true about the "Gharial" in its natural habitat? (a) It is found naturally only in the saltwater bodies of Odisha. (b) Chambal River is its premier natural habitat in India. (c) It has become completely extinct in the wild. (d) It is an invasive species introduced from Africa.

  • Key Concept: Riverine indicators. Answer is (b). National Chambal Sanctuary houses the vast majority of its remaining population.

UPSC Prelims 2014

Question: Which of the following organisms are known as filter feeders? (a) Catfish (b) Octopus (c) Oyster (d) Pelican

  • Key Concept: Ecological feeding mechanisms. Answer is (c).

UPSC Prelims 2012

Question: Consider the following animals of India:

  1. Sea cow

  2. Sea horse

  3. Sea lion

Which of the above is/are mammal/mammals? (a) 1 only (b) 1 and 3 only (c) 2 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3

  • Key Concept: Biological distinction among marine life. Answer is (a). Sea lions are mammals but are not found naturally in India.

📅 The Classic Era (Distributions, Biomes & Sanctuaries)

UPSC Prelims 2007

Question: Which one of the following animals is famous for its unique adaptation of the "Kharai" swimming trait across saline water systems? (a) Wild Ass (b) Desert Fox (c) Camel (d) Indian Gazelle

  • Key Concept: Regional unique adaptive traits. Answer is (c). This references the unique ecotype of the Kharai camel found in the Rann of Kutch.

UPSC Prelims 2002

Question: In which one of the following states is the Namdapha National Park located? (a) Arunachal Pradesh (b) Manipur (c) Meghalaya (d) Mizoram

  • Key Concept: General geography mapping. Answer is (a). Today, UPSC doesn't just ask where Namdapha is—they test that it acts as the specific habitat for the critically endangered White-bellied Heron.

🧠 Core Strategy Takeaway for Prelims 2026

Looking over these questions reveals how UPSC traps aspirants:

  1. Taxonomic Shifts: Interchanging Arachnid (Spiders) with Crustacean, or Mammal with Reptile.

  2. Feeding Habits: Testing whether an animal is an obligate herbivore (like the Dugong) or carnivore.

  3. State-wide Rank Pitfalls: Flipping peak population metrics (e.g., falsely stating Kerala instead of Karnataka for Elephants).

For the comprehensive 2026 species checklist you have compiled, look beyond basic flashcards and focus on how each animal lives and breathes.

Prelims 2026: Why the Strait of Hormuz is India's Ultimate Energy Chokepoint

  Prelims 2026: Why the Strait of Hormuz is India's Ultimate Energy Chokepoint Geopolitics and maritime mapping are high-yielding areas ...