Science, Technology & Environment looks like the widest, most unpredictable corner of CLAT Current Affairs — but it is far more learnable than it seems. The exam rarely wants a textbook fact. It gives you a passage, and then asks you to read it carefully and reason. Strong background knowledge just lets you read faster and avoid traps. This chapter on science technology and environment for CLAT builds that durable, evergreen base.
Why this topic rewards calm reading
Current Affairs including General Knowledge is roughly a quarter of the CLAT paper — the joint-largest section. Within it, science, technology and environment recur every year, partly because environment overlaps so heavily with law: treaties, statutes, tribunals and rights. Those legal angles are stable, so you learn them once and use them for years.
Separate two kinds of fact. Durable facts — what ISRO does, what the Paris Agreement is for, what the NGT handles — change slowly and are worth learning. Headline facts — a launch date or this year's summit host — change constantly and are best picked up from the passage. This chapter builds the durable layer.
India's space programme: ISRO
The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) is India's national space agency. It designs and launches satellites, builds launch vehicles (rockets) and runs scientific and exploration missions, and is known for delivering ambitious missions at relatively low cost. It is a recurring CLAT theme.
- ✓Launch vehicles — ISRO's workhorse rockets carry satellites into orbit; the reliable medium-lift vehicle and the heavier-lift vehicle handle different payload sizes.
- ✓Satellites — communication, weather, remote-sensing and navigation satellites support telecom, disaster warning, agriculture and mapping.
- ✓Exploration missions — lunar and interplanetary missions study the Moon and Mars and build India's scientific standing.
- ✓Applications — satellite data feeds into weather forecasting, fisheries, farming, urban planning and rescue operations.
Defence and DRDO: the basics
The Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) develops technology for India's armed forces — missiles, radars, aircraft systems and electronic-warfare equipment. It sits within the Ministry of Defence and is central to India's push for self-reliance in defence manufacturing.
- Missile systems — DRDO develops a family of missiles of different ranges and roles.
- Indigenisation — the goal of designing and building defence equipment in India rather than importing it.
- Dual-use tech — many defence technologies (materials, electronics, navigation) also have civilian uses.
Key technology themes
You do not need to code or engineer anything for CLAT. You need to grasp a few big technology ideas conceptually, because passages increasingly frame them as legal and policy debates — about rights, regulation, privacy and the economy.
Health and biotech basics
Health stories appear regularly, especially around disease outbreaks and medicine. Two evergreen concepts cover most of what you need.
- ✓Vaccines — preparations that train the body's immune system to recognise and fight a specific disease, building immunity without the person having to suffer the illness first.
- ✓Epidemic vs pandemic — an epidemic is a disease spreading rapidly within a community or region; a pandemic is one that has spread across countries or continents on a very wide scale.
- ✓Biotechnology — using living systems (or their parts) to make products and processes, from medicines and vaccines to improved crops.
- ✓Public health response — surveillance, quarantine and vaccination, often raising legal questions about individual liberty versus community safety.
Environment: where current affairs meets law
The environment block deserves the most attention: it is the part most tightly bound to law, and the facts are wonderfully durable. Treaties, named bodies and core principles change slowly, so time spent here pays off across many papers.
Climate-change frameworks
Climate change is governed by a stack of international agreements that build on one another. Learn the chain — it is a CLAT favourite.
- UNFCCC (1992) — the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, the parent treaty in which countries agreed to tackle climate change. It set up the overall structure but few hard targets.
- COP — the Conference of the Parties, the annual meeting of countries under the UNFCCC where decisions are negotiated. Each is numbered (COP1, COP2, and so on).
- Kyoto Protocol (1997) — an early agreement under the UNFCCC that set binding emission-reduction targets, but only for developed countries.
- Paris Agreement (2015) — adopted at COP21, it asks all countries to set their own climate pledges (called nationally determined contributions) and aims to limit the rise in global average temperature well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels.
Biodiversity conventions
Alongside climate, a second family of treaties protects living things and habitats. CLAT loves to test which convention covers what, so keep them straight.
- ✓CBD — the Convention on Biological Diversity, the broad treaty for conserving biodiversity, using it sustainably and sharing its benefits fairly.
- ✓CITES — the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, which regulates and restricts trade in threatened plants and animals.
- ✓Ramsar Convention — the treaty for the conservation and wise use of wetlands, which lists wetlands of international importance.
- ✓Common thread — these are international agreements; countries pass their own domestic laws to give effect to them at home.
Major environmental conventions at a glance
| Convention | Focus | In one line |
|---|---|---|
| UNFCCC (1992) | Climate change | The parent framework treaty on global warming. |
| Kyoto Protocol (1997) | Emission targets | Binding cuts for developed countries only. |
| Paris Agreement (2015) | Climate pledges | All countries set their own self-determined goals. |
| CBD | Biodiversity | Conserve and sustainably use biological diversity. |
| CITES | Wildlife trade | Regulates trade in endangered species. |
| Ramsar | Wetlands | Conservation and wise use of wetlands. |
India's environmental laws and bodies
India backs these international goals with its own institutions. You do not need section numbers — just the role of each body in general terms.
- National Green Tribunal (NGT) — a specialised body that hears environmental cases quickly, ordering remedies, compensation and penalties for environmental harm. Think of it as a fast-track green court.
- Pollution control concept — pollution control boards at the central and state level set standards, grant clearances and monitor air, water and waste pollution.
- The right to a clean environment — Indian courts have read a clean and healthy environment into the right to life under Article 21, linking environmental protection to a Fundamental Right.
Sustainable development and the SDGs
Sustainable development is the idea of meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs — balancing economic growth, social welfare and environmental protection. It is the philosophy that connects almost every environment story.
The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are a set of global goals adopted by United Nations members covering poverty, hunger, health, education, clean water and climate action. In a passage, SDGs usually appear as the yardstick against which a policy is judged.
Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
How to read a sci-tech or environment passage
The passages here can be dense with jargon. A steady method beats panic every time.
- 1
Find the topic and the takeIn the first read, identify what the passage is about and the author's stance — supportive, critical or neutral. Most questions hinge on tone and main idea.
- 2
Box the proper nounsMark treaties, bodies and missions (UNFCCC, NGT, ISRO). Your background knowledge tells you instantly what each is, so you read faster.
- 3
Separate fact from opinionUnderline what is stated as fact versus what is the author's argument. Inference questions test whether you can tell them apart.
- 4
Answer from the passageEven if you know more than the passage, answer using only what it states or clearly implies. Outside knowledge helps you read — it must not override the text.
- 5
Eliminate, then decideCut options that are too extreme, off-topic or contradict the passage. CLAT answers are usually the measured, well-supported choice.
Worked examples in CLAT style
Based only on the passage, which statement is correct?
▸ Show solution
A country wants to clamp down on the smuggling of an endangered tiger species across its borders. Which convention is most directly relevant?
▸ Show solution
Which course of action best fits the idea of sustainable development as described?
▸ Show solution
Which dispute is the National Green Tribunal, as described, most suited to hear?
▸ Show solution
Which statement can be inferred from the passage?
▸ Show solution
- Current Affairs incl. GK is ~25% of CLAT; this topic is passage-based — comprehension beats cramming.
- ISRO runs India's satellites, launch vehicles and exploration missions; DRDO develops defence technology.
- AI, semiconductors, digital public infrastructure and cybersecurity matter mainly as policy and rights debates.
- Climate chain: UNFCCC (parent) → Kyoto (binding, developed only) → Paris (all countries, self-set pledges).
- Biodiversity treaties: CBD = biodiversity, CITES = wildlife trade, Ramsar = wetlands — one word each.
- The NGT fast-tracks environmental cases; a clean environment is read into the right to life (Article 21).
Common traps to avoid
- ✓Confusing Kyoto (binding, developed nations) with Paris (self-set pledges, all nations).
- ✓Mismatching a convention with its subject — keep CITES = trade, Ramsar = wetlands, CBD = biodiversity.
- ✓Letting outside knowledge override the passage when the two disagree — the passage wins.
- ✓Picking the most extreme option; CLAT answers are usually the balanced, well-supported choice.
- ✓Treating a cure and a vaccine as the same thing — a vaccine prevents by building immunity.