Business
Bringing Back the Extinct: The High Stakes Economics of De-Extinction
From woolly mammoths to dire wolves, scientists are getting closer to reviving extinct species. But as de-extinction moves from sci-fi to science labs, the real question is: what does it cost — and who pays the price?

In what sounds like a scene from Jurassic Park, biotech labs around the world are racing to bring extinct animals back to life — not in theory, but in practice. At the center of this movement is the concept of de-extinction, where genetic engineering is used to recreate species that disappeared from the planet centuries or even millennia ago.
Recently, researchers successfully created genetically modified wolf pups with DNA remarkably close to that of the long-extinct dire wolf — a prehistoric predator last seen over 10,000 years ago. This scientific feat is part of a much larger ambition to revive species like the woolly mammoth and the dodo, with hopes of reintroducing them into the wild.
But beyond the thrill of discovery lies a tough question: Can we afford to bring back the past?
The economics of de-extinction are complex. Creating and raising a genetically engineered animal isn’t cheap — the research, cloning, surrogacy, habitat preparation, and post-birth care can cost millions. While venture capital is flowing into biotech firms promising to resurrect the ancient, critics question whether this funding could be better spent protecting endangered species that are still alive — and in desperate need of conservation.
There are ethical dilemmas, too. The animals involved in surrogacy, the potential suffering of engineered species, and the risk of ecological imbalance all present moral gray areas. And what happens when an extinct species is reintroduced into an ecosystem that no longer resembles the one it once knew?
Then comes the business model. If de-extinction becomes a commercial service — part conservation, part spectacle — will it be driven by scientific integrity or by market demand? Will we have de-extinct animals housed in wildlife parks and exhibitions rather than roaming the wild?
Supporters argue that de-extinction could help restore lost biodiversity and even combat climate change, by rebalancing disrupted ecosystems. Critics warn it’s an expensive distraction from saving the living world.
In the end, de-extinction may be less about resurrection and more about reflection — a mirror held up to our choices as stewards of this planet. The science is catching up to imagination. Whether society is ready — financially, ethically, and environmentally — is still an open question.
Business
Drones, Defence, and Disruption: How India’s Drone Tech Is Taking Off
From border surveillance to battlefield support, drones are fast becoming a cornerstone of India’s defence strategy. With government backing and private innovation, the sector is entering a high-altitude growth phase.

India’s push for self-reliance in defence is reaching new heights — quite literally — as indigenous drone technology takes centre stage in both military operations and industrial policy.
Over the last two years, India has significantly accelerated its focus on unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) — not just as surveillance tools, but as force multipliers in combat, logistics, and border security.
What’s Driving the Drone Surge
- Defence Ministry Procurements: In 2023–24, the Indian armed forces placed large-scale orders for loitering munitions, tactical drones, and high-altitude surveillance UAVs.
- Make in India Push: Drones are now part of India’s Defence Production and Export Promotion Policy (DPEPP), with incentives for domestic manufacturers.
- Private Players Rising: Startups like ideaForge, Garuda Aerospace, and NewSpace Research & Tech are building combat-ready drones and bagging DRDO, Army, and global contracts.
- Geopolitical Urgency: Post Galwan and escalating tensions with China and Pakistan have made drone-based ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance) critical to border defence.
Use Cases in Defence
- Loitering Munitions: Kamikaze-style drones that self-destruct on target — used in tactical ops.
- Drone Swarms: Coordinated UAVs for offensive and defensive manoeuvres.
- Border Surveillance: Continuous monitoring of LOC, LAC, and infiltration-prone zones.
- Logistics and Medical Supply: High-altitude payload delivery in Siachen and remote bases.
Challenges Ahead
- Lack of component-level manufacturing (India still imports batteries, chips, and flight controllers)
- Airspace management and regulation
- Cybersecurity and jamming vulnerabilities
The Global Context
India is now actively positioning itself as an alternative to Israeli and Chinese drone systems, with a target to become a $5 billion drone economy by 2030. Collaborations with UAE, France, and the US are already underway.
The recent export approval of drones to Armenia, and military-grade UAV demonstrations at Aero India and DefExpo, mark a strong shift from consumer drones to strategic assets.
India’s drone sector is no longer just about aerial photography or agriculture — it’s about national security, sovereignty, and battlefield edge. As the skies above become a new domain of warfare, India is gearing up to lead the next era of drone defence innovation.
Business
Over 28,000 Indian Startups Shut Down in Just Two Years — Is the Boom Turning Into a Bust?
Between 2023 and 2024, over 28,000 Indian startups shut down — a 12-fold increase from previous years. Here’s what triggered the closures and what it means for the startup ecosystem.

India’s startup ecosystem, long hailed as the world’s third-largest and fastest-growing, is witnessing a dramatic correction. According to data accessed from official records and industry estimates, over 28,000 startups have shut down between 2023 and 2024 — a number that dwarfs the 2,300 closures recorded across 2019 to 2022.
This marks a 12x increase in shutdowns over the previous period and reflects the tightening grip of a prolonged funding winter, unsustainable burn models, and macroeconomic headwinds that have hit India’s new-age businesses hard.
📉 Year-wise Startup Closures
Year | Startups Closed |
---|---|
2019–2022 (combined) | ~2,300 |
2023 | 15,921 |
2024 | 12,717 |
2025 (till April) | 259+ |
(Source: Financial Express, MCA records)
What’s Causing the Spike in Shutdowns?

Experts say the trend is a result of accumulated fragility in the system. Between 2020 and 2021, an avalanche of funding encouraged rapid expansion, but few startups focused on unit economics or real revenue models.
- Funding Slowdown: VC investments dropped by over 40% year-on-year after 2022, forcing cash-strapped startups to either pivot or perish.
- High Burn, Low Return: Business models in edtech, fintech, and quick commerce struggled to maintain customer retention and profitability.
- Regulatory Pushback: Segments like crypto, lending apps, and edtech saw increased oversight, creating compliance pressures many couldn’t absorb.
- Mass Layoffs & Consolidation: Over 24,000 layoffs were recorded in 2023 alone, as firms trimmed operations or merged for survival.
Notable Shutdowns
- Lido Learning: Once a rising edtech player, Lido shut operations in early 2022 due to a capital crunch.
- ZestMoney: A once-prominent BNPL fintech firm that folded in 2023 amid regulatory and operational challenges.
- Udayy: A pandemic-era live learning platform that exited the space in 2022.
- Anar: A B2B SME networking app that shuttered in 2023, citing scale limitations.
Even lesser-known startups in healthtech, crypto, and D2C struggled to maintain runway as customer acquisition costs surged and investor patience wore thin.
The Bright Side? A Market Correction
While the volume of closures is sobering, investors and analysts say the “cleanup” was overdue.
“This is a correction, not a collapse,” said a Bengaluru-based VC partner. “What we’re seeing now is a much-needed shift towards sustainable models, real value delivery, and lean operations.”
New startup launches also slowed in 2024 — with only 5,264 new ventures registered, compared to 9,600 annually during the pre-COVID years.
Conclusion
India’s startup dream is far from over — but it’s becoming more grounded. The age of free cash flow with no profits is ending, and the winners of the next decade will be those who combine ambition with accountability.
Business
Hooked Young: The Growing Drug Crisis Among Youth in South India
From schoolbags hiding MDMA pills to vapes disguised as candy, a silent epidemic is gripping teenagers across South Indian states. Experts warn that the drug supply chain is faster and smarter than ever — and children are the new target.

What began as whispers in hostel corridors has now escalated into a full-blown public health and policing concern. Southern states like Kerala, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu are witnessing an alarming rise in synthetic drug abuse, with teenagers and young adults at the center of the crisis.
In a recent viral tweet, retired Air Marshal Anil Chopra flagged the disturbing trend: MDMA pills being sold in candy-like packaging, local supply chains delivering narcotics within hours, and children experimenting with highly addictive substances disguised as harmless fun.
The Drugs of Concern
- MDMA (Ecstasy): Marketed under names like Blue Butterfly, Tesla, or Superman, these designer drugs are being distributed in schools and colleges. Often colorful and candy-shaped, they lower inhibitions and increase the risk of dependence.
- Vapes Laced with THC or Synthetic Nicotine: Marketed as “flavored” devices, these are becoming a gateway for school-going children, especially in urban centers like Bengaluru and Kochi.
- LSD Tabs and Cocaine Microdoses: Previously seen only in high-end party circles, these are now available on encrypted Telegram groups with “guaranteed delivery” across Tier 2 cities.
The Modus Operandi: Fast, Digital, Hidden
Dealers are adapting. Using platforms like Instagram DMs, Telegram groups, and even food delivery-style drop services, narcotics are being dispatched faster than pizza. The buyers? School and college students with access to UPI wallets or crypto payments.
Ground Reports: What Police and Parents Are Saying
In Kerala, over 3,000 drug-related arrests were made in 2023 alone — a large number involving juveniles. A senior narcotics officer noted, “These aren’t hardened criminals. Many are 15–17-year-olds from decent families, trapped by peer pressure and tech-savvy peddlers.”
Parents are often unaware until too late. “We thought it was an energy drink or a protein supplement,” said one mother from Kozhikode whose son was hospitalized after consuming a THC-infused vape.
Why It’s Spreading
- Peer pressure + social media glamorization
- Easy access through quick delivery models
- Lack of awareness among parents and teachers
- Delayed regulatory enforcement on vaping and new synthetics
What’s Being Done
- Kerala and Tamil Nadu police have launched school-level awareness campaigns
- NCB and local enforcement are tracking crypto-linked drug deals
- New bans on flavored vape imports have been enforced, but black-market supply continues
- Mental health NGOs are stepping in with rehab and counseling support in colleges
Conclusion
This isn’t just a law-and-order issue — it’s a youth emergency. Unless parents, schools, governments, and tech platforms act in unison, a generation risks being lost to addiction dressed in glitter. The need of the hour is not just crackdowns but conversation, prevention, and support.
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