The Centre for Science and Environment's 'State of India's Environment 2026' report is important for exam preparation because it connects environment with climate risk, disaster management, public health and governance. The report highlighted that, from January to November 2025, India saw extreme weather events on 99% of days. It covered impacts linked to floods, heatwaves, cold waves and air pollution across India. The report compiles and analyses official government data sources to present the state of the environment through data.

For prelims, the most direct facts are the publishing organisation, the report name, the January-November 2025 period and the 99% finding. In environment and ecology, science and technology, and current affairs questions, these details can appear as one-statement, two-statement or report-organisation matching questions. For mains, the same facts can support questions on climate adaptation, urban planning, health impacts of air pollution, preparedness for floods and heatwaves, and data-based policymaking.

Its static-GK linkage lies in climate change, extreme weather, pollution control, disaster risk reduction and environmental governance. The core takeaway is that extreme weather is no longer an occasional event in India; during January-November 2025, it was recorded on almost every day somewhere in the country. Aspirants should therefore treat this not only as a current-affairs fact but also as part of the wider debate on India's development policy, health security and climate resilience.