NATIONAL TECHNOLOGY DAY AND INDIA’S SCIENTIFIC PROGRESS
NATIONAL TECHNOLOGY DAY AND INDIA’S SCIENTIFIC PROGRESS
Why in the News?
- India observed National Technology Day with leaders highlighting the role of science, innovation, and technological self-reliance in national development.
- The occasion emphasised India’s growing focus on research, indigenous technology, and strategic capabilities.
Significance of National Technology Day
- Commemoration of Pokhran tests: The day marks the successful Pokhran-II nuclear tests conducted in May 1998 under the leadership of Atal Bihari Vajpayee.
- Recognition of scientists: It honours the contribution of India’s scientists, engineers, researchers, and technologists to nation-building.
- Promotion of innovation: The day highlights the importance of research and development (R&D) in strengthening India’s economy and strategic autonomy.
- Self-reliance focus: Leaders reiterated the importance of technology in achieving the vision of Atmanirbhar Bharat through indigenous innovation.
- Strategic capability building: Advances in defence, space, digital infrastructure, and emerging technologies were highlighted as pillars of India’s future growth.
India’s technological progress and initiatives
- Digital transformation: India has expanded digital governance through platforms such as Digital India and digital public infrastructure initiatives.
- Space achievements: Indian Space Research Organisation continues to strengthen India’s global standing through satellite launches and deep-space missions.
- Defence indigenisation: The government has promoted domestic manufacturing under initiatives such as Make in India in the defence sector.
- Research encouragement: Policies increasingly focus on encouraging startups, innovation ecosystems, and scientific talent development.
- Emerging technologies: India is investing in sectors such as Artificial Intelligence, semiconductors, cybersecurity, and quantum technology to build future readiness.
Pokhran-II nuclear tests● Operation Shakti: Conducted in May 1998 at Pokhran Test Range, demonstrating India’s nuclear weapons capability. ● Strategic significance: Established India as a declared nuclear weapons state with credible deterrence capability. ● International response: The tests initially attracted sanctions from several countries but later strengthened India’s strategic negotiations globally. ● Nuclear doctrine: India later adopted the principles of credible minimum deterrence and No First Use policy. ● UPSC relevance: Important for GS Paper III under science and technology, defence technology, nuclear policy, and strategic affairs. |

