India’s maritime policy: how it has evolved and what lies ahead


India's Maritime Policy: Evolution and the Road Ahead

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Period Milestone
Ancient–Medieval Indian sailors conducted oceanic trade with Arabia, Southeast Asia, East Africa; the Chola navy was the dominant maritime power in the IOR (11th century). [S5]
Colonial era British India's maritime assets subordinated to imperial interests; Indian Ocean treated as a "British lake."
1947–1971 Post-Independence: minimal naval investment; 1971 Bangladesh War demonstrated naval power's decisive role (blockade of Chittagong).
1988 Operation Cactus — Indian Navy rapid intervention in Maldives; established India as regional security provider.
2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami — Indian Navy's HADR response shaped India's "first responder" identity.
2007 Freedom of the Seas articulation; India began articulating IOR as its strategic backyard.
2015 (October) PM Modi articulates SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region) in Mauritius; becomes India's overarching maritime doctrine. [S1]
2015 National Maritime Security Strategy (NMSS) 2015 released; first comprehensive maritime security framework.
2015 (March) Sagarmala Programme launched under Ministry of Ports, Shipping & Waterways — domestic maritime infrastructure pillar. [S2]
2019 (November) Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative (IPOI) launched at East Asia Summit, Bangkok — multilateral cooperation framework with 7 pillars. [S4]
2022 Maritime India Vision 2030 — 300+ projects for port-led development.
2023 Maritime Amrit Kaal Vision 2047 (MAKV) — long-term blueprint, 300+ strategic initiatives, 150+ stakeholder consultations. [S2]
2025 (March) MAHASAGAR Initiative — new doctrine for collective IOR security. [S1]

4. Core Static Facts

Key Doctrines / Frameworks

Key Programmes

Programme Ministry Year Purpose
Sagarmala Ports, Shipping & Waterways 2015 Port-led development, logistics cost reduction
MAKV 2047 Ports, Shipping & Waterways 2023 Blue Economy, world-class ports
IOS SAGAR Defence (Navy) 2024 Multinational ship-based training, IOR navies
IPOI External Affairs 2019 Indo-Pacific multilateral cooperation
AIKEYME Defence (Navy) 2024 Africa-India maritime engagement

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Environmental

Scientific / Technological

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. SAGAR stands for Security and Growth for All in the Region — articulated by PM Modi in Mauritius in 2015. [S1]
  2. MAHASAGAR (2025) is the expanded successor doctrine to SAGAR, themed "Collective Maritime Approach towards Countering Common Challenges." [S1]
  3. Sagarmala Programme implementing ministry: Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways (not Ministry of Defence). [S2]
  4. IPOI was launched at the East Asia Summit, Bangkok, November 2019 — not at a QUAD or G20 meeting. [S4]
  5. IPOI has exactly 7 pillars — Maritime Security, Ecology, Resources, Capacity Building, Disaster Risk Reduction, S&T Cooperation, Trade Connectivity. [S4]
  6. IFC-IOR (Information Fusion Centre – Indian Ocean Region) is located at Gurugram, established 2018. [S1]
  7. First-ever QUAD At-Sea Observer Mission was conducted in 2024. [S3]
  8. India's Anti-Piracy Act was passed in 2022 — India's first dedicated piracy legislation. [S1]
  9. INSV Kaundinya is an Indian Navy stitched-sail vessel that departed for Muscat, Oman on 29 December 2025. [S5]
  10. India's EEZ spans approximately 2.37 million sq km under UNCLOS provisions.
  11. IOS SAGAR inaugural mission: INS Sunayna with 44 personnel from 9 nations. [S1]
  12. Maritime Zones Act, 1976 is the domestic law operationalising India's UNCLOS maritime zone claims.
  13. AIKEYME = Africa India Key Maritime Engagement — launched alongside IOS SAGAR in 2024. [S1]
  14. Maritime Amrit Kaal Vision 2047 (MAKV) formulated after 150+ stakeholder consultations and analysis of 50 global benchmarks. [S2]
  15. India's coastline (mainland): 7,516 km; number of islands: 1,382.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping:

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II India's bilateral/multilateral relations; India and its neighbourhood; effect of policies of foreign countries on India's interests
GS-II Important international institutions; groupings and agreements involving India (QUAD, IORA, IPOI)
GS-III Infrastructure: ports, waterways; internal security — maritime security
GS-I (tangential) India's cultural heritage; ancient maritime history

Plausible Mains Questions:

  1. "India's maritime strategy has evolved from a 'continental' mindset to a 'blue water' vision. Critically analyse the SAGAR and MAHASAGAR doctrines in this context, and assess India's effectiveness as a net-security provider in the Indian Ocean Region." (GS-II / GS-III)

  2. "The Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative (IPOI) reflects India's effort to build a rules-based order in the Indo-Pacific. How does it differ from China's Maritime Silk Road, and what are its implementation challenges?" (GS-II)

  3. "Maritime security in India suffers from fragmented institutional architecture. Examine the coordination gaps and suggest a unified governance framework." (GS-III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
QUAD (Quadrilateral Security Dialogue) Core platform for India's Indo-Pacific maritime security cooperation
China's String of Pearls / BRI The strategic threat driving India's maritime policy evolution
Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA) India's multilateral Blue Economy and maritime governance platform
Blue Economy Economic dimension of maritime policy; MAKV 2047 and deep-sea mining
Sagarmala Programme Domestic infrastructure pillar of maritime policy; port-led development
India's Island Territories (A&N, Lakshadweep) Strategic maritime outposts; key to India's area-denial and surveillance
Samudrayaan / Deep Sea Mission Sci-tech dimension; deep-sea resource extraction, India's maritime frontier
UNCLOS Legal framework undergirding all maritime zone claims and disputes

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. SAGAR vs. MAHASAGAR confusion: SAGAR (2015, Mauritius) is the original doctrine; MAHASAGAR (March 2025) is the upgraded collective-security iteration. They are not the same thing — MCQs may test the year and location of each.

  2. Ministry confusion for Sagarmala: Sagarmala is under Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways — NOT the Ministry of Defence or Ministry of External Affairs.

  3. IPOI launch venue: IPOI was launched at the East Asia Summit (Bangkok, 2019) — aspirants confuse it with QUAD summits or G20.

  4. IFC-IOR location: Located at Gurugram (Haryana) — commonly confused with being a naval base or located in a port city.

  5. UNCLOS vs. Maritime Zones Act: UNCLOS (1982) is the international convention; India's Maritime Zones Act, 1976 predates it (India was proactive) and is the domestic enabling legislation — the year difference (1976 vs. 1982) is a frequent MCQ trap.


11. Sources