Project Glasswing | Indus River Dolphin | Light Pollution: Rising Threat from Artificial Light at Night (ALAN)

Project Glasswing

Syllabus: GS/ Science & Technology

Context

  • Anthropic has launched Project Glasswing, a global cybersecurity initiative linked to its advanced AI model Claude Mythos.
  • What is Project Glasswing?
  • Project Glasswing is a global cybersecurity initiative led by Anthropic.
  • It is a consortium of around 40 global technology firms and open-source contributors aimed at securing critical digital infrastructure, using advanced Artificial Intelligence.
  • The project provides early access to the Claude Mythos model to selected partners. It is backed by;
  • $100 million in AI usage credits,
  • $4 million support for open-source security.
  • Major participating firms include: Amazon Web Services, Apple, Google, Microsoft, NVIDIA etc.
  • Role of Claude Mythos
  • Claude Mythos is an advanced Large Language Model (LLM) with exceptional coding and vulnerability detection capabilities. It can;
  • Detects zero-day vulnerabilities (previously unknown flaws).
  • Identify decades-old bugs in widely used systems.
  • Combine vulnerabilities to gain system-level control.
  • Source: TH

Indus River Dolphin

Syllabus: GS3/Species in News

Context

  • The dolphin is one of the world’s most endangered freshwater cetaceans and a flagship species of the Indus river system.
  • Indus River Dolphin
  • Cetaceans are aquatic mammals which include whales, dolphins and porpoises.
  • Indus River Dolphin was once distributed across the Indus and its tributaries in Pakistan and northwestern India.
  • But its range has drastically contracted due to flow regulation, loss of connectivity, pollution, climate change and entanglement in fishing gears.
  • The Indus river dolphin is functionally blind, it relies entirely on echolocation to navigate, hunt and avoid obstacles.
  • indus river dolphin
  • Source: DTE

Light Pollution: Rising Threat from Artificial Light at Night (ALAN)

Syllabus: GS3/Environment

Context

  • A study published in the journal Nature has found that artificial light at night increased by 16% globally between 2014 and 2022.
  • The sharpest rise has been observed in Sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia, with India and China emerging as major contributors in Asia.
  • What Is Light Pollution?
  • Light pollution is the human-made alteration of outdoor light levels from those occurring naturally. In practical terms, it refers to unwanted, inappropriate, or excessive artificial lighting, primarily caused by Artificial Light at Night (ALAN).
  • It is increasingly recognised as an anthropogenic environmental pollutant. It is estimated that:
  • Over 80% of the world’s population lives under light-polluted skies;
  • Around 23% of Earth’s land area is affected by skyglow.
  • Causes
  • Rapid urbanisation: Today, about 55% of the global population lives in urban areas, and this is projected to rise to 68% by 2050, significantly increasing the demand for outdoor lighting.
  • Unregulated outdoor lighting: In poorly regulated systems (unshielded streetlights, billboards, façade lighting), 30–50% of emitted light is wasted upward or sideways, directly contributing to skyglow.
  • Vehicle-induced light pollution: Rapid growth in vehicle numbers increases headlight glare and roadway illumination.
  • India has over 30 crore registered vehicles, contributing significantly to urban night brightness.
  • Shift-based work: Expansion of 24×7 services (IT, healthcare, transport, manufacturing) leads to continuous lighting demand.
  • Impacts
  • Human Health: Exposure to artificial light at night suppresses melatonin production, leading to insomnia and other health issues.
  • Chronic exposure to light pollution has been linked to increased stress and reduced cognitive performance.
  • Environmental and Ecological: Nocturnal animals, migratory birds, and insects rely on natural light cycles.
  • Birds living in brightly lit areas tend to sing earlier at dawn and later at dusk, disrupting their natural rhythms and negatively impacting migration, feeding, and breeding patterns.
  • Similar effects occur in species like fireflies, whose communication suffers. Artificial lighting confuses navigation and feeding patterns.
  • Astronomy and Scientific Research: Brightening of the night sky hampers astronomical observations, especially near urban centers.
  • Energy Waste: Billions of units of electricity are wasted annually due to poorly directed lighting, increasing carbon emissions.
  • Government Initiatives to Curb Light Pollution
  • Energy Conservation Building Code (2017): The ECBC is a set of standards established by India’s Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) to promote sustainable design and reduce energy consumption by 25–50% in new commercial buildings.
  • Street Lighting National Programme (SLNP): Launched in 2015, to replace conventional street lights with smart and energy-efficient LED streetlights across the country.
  • Smart Cities Mission: Adaptive lighting is a core component of India’s Smart Cities Mission, designed to optimize energy consumption and reduce light pollution by dynamically adjusting street lamp intensity based on real-time traffic and time conditions.
  • Environmental Protection Act 1986: Provides umbrella power to the Central Government to regulate environmental pollution of all kinds.
  • Light pollution is not explicitly defined, but can be regulated as a form of environmental disturbance.

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