Climate-driven floods push Pakistan to confront water infrastructure failures

Climate-driven floods push Pakistan to confront water infrastructure failures
An area surrounded by floodwater is seen after torrential rains on the outskirts of Narowal, Pakistan, on August 27, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 29 August 2025

Climate-driven floods push Pakistan to confront water infrastructure failures

Climate-driven floods push Pakistan to confront water infrastructure failures
  • Experts say Pakistan’s 30-day storage capacity leaves it far more vulnerable than India’s 124-day buffer
  • India’s dams face storage shortfalls of their own, limiting their capacity despite large numbers of reservoirs

ISLAMABAD: As record monsoon floods batter Pakistan’s Punjab province, officials are calling for urgent investment in dams and water infrastructure, arguing that India’s stronger flood defenses have limited damage on its side while Pakistan reels from rising death tolls and mass displacement.

This week, swollen rivers in Pakistan’s Punjab have submerged more than 1,600 villages, displaced over 1.1 million people and pushed nationwide fatalities since June, when the monsoon season began, past 820. The mass evacuations began after heavier-than-usual monsoon rains and the release of water from overflowing dams in India triggered flash floods in low-lying border regions in Pakistan.

Experts say Pakistan’s meager storage capacity leaves it acutely vulnerable to both floods and droughts, a risk compounded by climate change, which is making the monsoons more erratic and intense each year.

By contrast, India has invested far more heavily in dams and reservoirs, giving it a significantly larger buffer against floods and droughts, Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal said on Thursday during a briefing to the prime minister in flood-hit Narowal district.

“We must identify those gaps in our infrastructure,” He said. “If you look at the River Ravi, India has made very strong spurs, embankments and dams on its side that they throw all the water at us as per their will.”

PM Shehbaz Sharif also called for urgent construction of reservoirs and dams as swollen rivers devastated the breadbasket province of Punjab.

“We have to build the capacity for water storage. If there is storage, there will be a shortage of flash floods. Cascading will also be controlled,” the premier said in televised comments. 

“This is the work that we must start today.”

According to the Indian Central Water Commission, India has a live water storage capacity of about 257.8 billion cubic meters (BCM), or around 209 million acre-feet, enough to hold water for 124 days. Pakistan’s total storage capacity is just 14 million acre-feet, which experts say is sufficient for only 30 days.

While rains and floods have killed nearly 820 people in Pakistan since June, over 1,200 have died in India nationwide, which has a population over five times larger than Pakistan.

Iqbal said climate change was the “new normal” but not unmanageable if systemic weaknesses were addressed, arguing that India suffered less damage from this season’s floods while Pakistan was overwhelmed. 

India, as the upstream country in the Indus Basin — a river system governed by a 1960 treaty between the two nations — can regulate flows to Pakistan through infrastructure such as the Ranjit Sagar (Thein) Dam on the Ravi, the Ferozepur Headworks barrage on the Sutlej, the Baglihar and Salal dams on the Chenab, and the Kishanganga Hydroelectric Project on the Jhelum.

These projects — located in Indian Punjab and Jammu and Kashmir — are used to store water, generate electricity, and control seasonal river flows, giving India leverage over the timing and volume of water entering Pakistan.

But experts note that India’s water storage picture is not without its own challenges. 

Despite ranking third globally in the number of large dams built, India’s combined live storage capacity is considered inadequate to fully meet its water security needs. Insufficient infrastructure limits its ability to hold back and store water under the Indus Waters Treaty with Pakistan, constraining both domestic use and strategic flexibility.

Indeed, as Pakistan’s Punjab reeled under a flood emergency, in neighboring Indian-administered Kashmir’s Jammu region too, some of the heaviest rains in decades for the month of August have also wrought havoc, triggering flash floods and landslides.

Homes have been submerged and roads and bridges damaged, forcing Indian authorities to evacuate thousands of people living in flooded areas. At least 115 people have been killed in Jammu and scores injured just in August.

In Pakistan, it is also the first time in 38 years that the Ravi, Sutlej and Chenab rivers have been in high flood simultaneously, forcing rescue workers to intensify operations across multiple districts, according to the provincial irrigation department.

POLITICAL AND FINANCIAL BURDENS

Experts say Pakistan’s weak infrastructure is less about technical capacity and more about political and financial constraints.

“Pakistan has lagged behind India in building dams and water infrastructure largely due to fragmented governance, insufficient and inconsistent funding, political opposition and over-reliance on international financing,” Ahmed Kamal, former chief engineering adviser and chairman of the Federal Flood Commission, told Arab News.

He said such factors undermined “cohesive long-term planning and execution,” with inter-provincial disputes stalling major projects. 

For example, the long-proposed Kalabagh Dam on the Indus River has faced decades of opposition from Sindh province, where politicians and farmers fear it would give Punjab greater control over water flows and reduce supplies to downstream communities. The controversy has made Kalabagh one of Pakistan’s most divisive infrastructure projects, effectively blocking progress on what engineers argue could have added badly needed storage capacity.

“After Mangla and Tarbela [dams], Pakistan paused dam building for 40 years before starting the Mohmand and Diamer-Bhasha projects,” Kamal said.

The Mangla Dam, built in the 1960s, and Tarbela, completed in the 1970s, remain Pakistan’s largest reservoirs and hydroelectric projects, critical to irrigation and power generation. By contrast, Mohmand is a smaller dam now under construction in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, while Diamer-Bhasha, planned in Gilgit-Baltistan, is a vast project envisioned as one of the world’s tallest concrete dams but repeatedly delayed by financing and political disputes.

Many experts suggest building smaller water-retention structures — such as check dams and delay-action dams, which slow down floodwaters to recharge groundwater — along with rainwater harvesting and conservation practices.

A deeper challenge also lies in governance, with political instability and frequent leadership changes undermining consistent long-term planning.

Dr. Rashid Aftab, director at Islamabad’s Riphah Institute of Public Policy, said India’s relative political stability had allowed consistent long-term planning, while Pakistan’s frequent leadership changes had produced short-term approaches.

“On one hand, they [India] naturally enjoy the advantage of being upstream in the Indus Basin, and on the other, they pursue policies with strong political will and greater fiscal space to invest in water infrastructure,” Aftab said.

Because India sits upstream of Pakistan on the Indus river system, it can regulate water flows before they cross the border — an asymmetry that has shaped decades of tensions between the two countries.

Aftab noted that India had invested not only in large dams but also in groundwater recharge through rainwater harvesting and extensive canal networks. 

Pakistan, by contrast, has relied on external loans and has limited fiscal space to fund its own projects.

“Currently, Pakistan’s total water storage capacity is only around 14 million acre-feet, enough to last just 30 days,” Aftab said, urging Islamabad to accelerate large dam construction while also expanding small and medium reservoirs, check dams, and water conservation projects.


Pakistan PM in China on six-day visit to meet President Xi, attend regional summit

Pakistan PM in China on six-day visit to meet President Xi, attend regional summit
Updated 8 sec ago

Pakistan PM in China on six-day visit to meet President Xi, attend regional summit

Pakistan PM in China on six-day visit to meet President Xi, attend regional summit
  • Shehbaz Sharif will interact with Chinese business leaders and corporate executives to discuss trade and investment
  • Over 20 foreign leaders, including India’s Modi and Russian President Vladimir Putin, will attend the regional summit

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif is due to arrive in China on Saturday for a six-day visit to attend a regional summit and hold meetings with President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Qiang, with political, economic and investment ties topping the agenda.

Sharif’s visit, from Aug. 30 till Sept. 4, underscores the strong and multifaceted partnership between the two countries, which spans defense, diplomacy and economic cooperation.

China has long been Pakistan’s largest investor and its closest strategic ally, anchored by the multibillion-dollar China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). Both sides are working to advance into “CPEC 2.0,” focused on industrialization, agriculture, energy and connectivity.

“Departing on a historic visit to China! Will participate in the SCO (Shanghai Cooperation Organization) Council of Heads of State Meeting in Tianjin,” Sharif said on X on Saturday morning. “I look forward to meeting H.E. President Xi Jinping and other world leaders to further build upon our bilateral ties with China.”

China has long sought to present the SCO as a counterweight to Western-led power blocs and has pushed for greater collaboration between its 10 members.

More than 20 foreign leaders including Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Russian President Vladimir Putin will attend the regional security bloc’s largest meeting since it was founded, China’s Assistant Foreign Minister Liu Bin said Friday. Top politicians from member states or guest countries such as

Belarus, Iran, Kazakhstan, Pakistan, Turkiye and Vietnam are also among those taking part.

Pakistan’s foreign office earlier said that Sharif’s meetings with President Xi and Premier Li will focus on multifaceted dimensions of Pakistan-China bilateral cooperation.

“He would also attend the military parade with President Xi and other world leaders being held in Beijing to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the World’s Anti-Fascist War,” it said, using a term widely employed in China to describe World War II.

Sharif would also interact with Chinese business leaders and corporate executives to discuss trade and investment and address a Pakistan-China Business-to-Business (B2B) Investment Conference in Beijing, according to the foreign office. Sharif’s engagements are part of leadership-level exchanges that both governments describe as vital to maintaining their “all-weather strategic cooperative partnership.”

The foreign office said the visit will reaffirm support on core interests, strengthen bilateral cooperation and ensure regular consultations on regional and global developments.

Sharif also visited China in June 2024, when he held talks with Xi and Li in Beijing, toured cultural and educational sites in Xi’an, and announced that 1,000 Pakistani students would receive agricultural training in China.

That five-day trip included meetings with leading Chinese companies in the energy and technology sectors, as the government strives to encourage foreign investors to explore manufacturing and other opportunities in Pakistan.


Authorities postpone anti-polio drive in nine Punjab districts due to flood situation

Authorities postpone anti-polio drive in nine Punjab districts due to flood situation
Updated 20 min 40 sec ago

Authorities postpone anti-polio drive in nine Punjab districts due to flood situation

Authorities postpone anti-polio drive in nine Punjab districts due to flood situation
  • Pakistan’s polio program announced an anti-polio vaccination campaign in 99 districts across the country
  • The development days comes after Pakistan confirmed two more polio cases, bringing the 2025 tally to 23

KARACHI: Pakistani health authorities have postponed an anti-polio campaign in nine districts in the eastern Punjab province due to floods, the country’s polio program said on Friday.

Rivers in Pakistan, particularly Chenab, Ravi and Sutlej, have swelled to dangerous levels due to record monsoon rains and excess water released from upstream India, forcing hundreds of thousands to evacuate in the most populous Punjab province.

Pakistan’s polio program has announced an anti-polio vaccination campaign in 99 districts across the country, starting Sept. 1, with an aim to inoculate more than 28 million children against the crippling disease.

But the flood situation has forced health authorities to postpone the drive in Lahore, Sheikhupura, Kasur, Okara, Gujranwala, Sialkot, Multan, Muzaffargarh and Bahawalpur districts.

“The polio campaign in other parts of the country will start from September 1,” the polio program said in a statement. “The campaign in Rawalpindi, Attock, Mianwali, Faisalabad, DG Khan, Rajanpur and Rahim Yar Khan districts [of Punjab] will be held as per schedule.”

Polio is a highly infectious and incurable disease that can cause lifelong paralysis. The only effective protection is through repeated doses of the Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) for every child under five during each campaign, alongside timely completion of all routine immunizations.

Pakistan confirmed two new polio cases in its northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province this week, bringing the total number of children affected by the virus this year to 23. The country and neighboring Afghanistan remain the only two where polio is still endemic.

Pakistan made significant progress in curbing the virus, with annual cases dropping from around 20,000 in the early 1990s to just eight in 2018. It reported six cases in 2023 and only one in 2021, but saw a sharp resurgence in 2024 with 74 cases recorded.

The polio program urged the masses to cooperate with vaccinators whenever they visit them: “Parents are appealed to make it mandatory for their children below 5 years of age to be given polio drops.”
 


Pakistan power minister warns solar net-metering may raise national costs

Pakistan power minister warns solar net-metering may raise national costs
Updated 30 August 2025

Pakistan power minister warns solar net-metering may raise national costs

Pakistan power minister warns solar net-metering may raise national costs
  • Net metering lets users generate solar power, sell excess to the grid for credit or cash
  • PM Shehbaz Sharif has directed further cuts in power tariffs, Sardar Awais Leghari says

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Power Minister Sardar Awais Leghari on Friday warned that the use of solar net-metering facility could add an extra burden of Rs3-4 per unit on consumers, if allowed to continue unchanged.

Solar net-metering is a policy that allows homeowners and businesses to generate power using solar panels and export excess energy to the national grid. In Pakistan, it is a billing system through which consumers receive credits or monetary compensation for the surplus power they sell to the grid.

Approved in 2017 to promote solar energy, Pakistan’s net-metering policy pays Rs21 per unit for surplus solar power, including a Rs1.90 subsidy. In April last year, the energy ministry said the subsidy burden falls on the government and other consumers to benefit affluent households with solar panels.

Around 0.6 percent of total electricity consumers in Pakistan are net-metering users out of which 80 percent belonged to affluent areas of major cities while the remaining 99.4 percent of electricity consumers bear the burden of the net-metering costs, the energy ministry said in January this year.

“As for the matter of net metering, if it is allowed to continue in the same manner, then 200,000 to 300,000 people will benefit from it while placing an additional burden of Rs3-4 on the entire nation,” Leghari said at a press conference in Lahore.

Around 18 million consumers are already receiving electricity at a 70 percent discount, which was up from nearly six million consumers in recent years, according to the minister. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has directed further cuts in electricity prices and officials at the energy ministry are “exploring different options” to achieve this.

Leghari had called for revising Pakistan’s existing net-metering system in January this year, saying that it was becoming unfeasible for the government.

“Solar net-metering has to change,” Leghari said while addressing a conference in Islamabad. “It is impossible for us to sustain the same cost of buying power from distributors the way we are.”

Pakistan has ideal climatic conditions for solar power generation, with most parts of the country receiving over nine hours of sunlight daily. According to the World Bank, utilizing just 0.071 percent of the country’s land area for solar photovoltaic (solar PV) power generation could meet Pakistan’s electricity demand.

The South Asian country, home to 241 million people, aims to transition to 60 percent renewable energy by 2030 and reduce projected emissions by 50 percent. However, despite a recent surge in solar power adoption, it remains far behind in achieving this goal.


‘Eye in the sky’: Pakistan’s space agency turns to satellites for relief amid devastating floods

‘Eye in the sky’: Pakistan’s space agency turns to satellites for relief amid devastating floods
Updated 30 August 2025

‘Eye in the sky’: Pakistan’s space agency turns to satellites for relief amid devastating floods

‘Eye in the sky’: Pakistan’s space agency turns to satellites for relief amid devastating floods
  • SUPARCO provides real-time satellite imagery to track flood-hit areas, speed up evacuations
  • Independent satellite links allow critical data to keep flowing even when regular networks fail

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s national space agency SUPARCO is using satellite mapping and real-time imagery to help guide rescue and relief operations, officials said on Friday, as monsoon floods have devastated much of the country, killing over 800 people since the beginning of the season and destroying farms and livestock.

The agency established its Space Application Center for Response in Emergency and Disasters (SACRED) in 2014 to provide space-based support for natural disasters, from floods and droughts to glacial lake outburst floods (GLOFs), earthquakes and landslides. With extreme weather striking more frequently, SACRED is now central to disaster management planning across the country.

Speaking to Arab News on Friday, a SUPARCO official explained that satellites serve as the “country’s eyes in the sky,” capturing and monitoring areas cut off by rough terrain or extreme weather, and delivering crucial information, and satellite mapping to track and respond to the unfolding disaster.

“We [SUPARCO] provide real-time imagery of the affected flood area to different institutions at the national level and provincial level,” Jahanzeb Khan, General Manager Image Processing at SUPARCO told Arab News.

“The rapid response is very important. We capture satellite images of flood-hit areas in near real time and send them to the relevant departments within an hour to speed up rescue operations and save lives,” he said, adding that pre-disaster images are also compared with fresh ones to provide critical insights, helping authorities act faster on the ground.

Aisha Rabbia, General Manager Satellite Planning, said the agency constantly monitors river shifts, dam heights, and changing water levels through its own satellites and international collaboration for timely action.

“We now have four remote sensing satellites of our own that provide real-time data, and through international collaboration we get additional recordings as well,” she said.

The official explained that space-based imagery enabled authorities to draw up timely evacuation plans even if conventional communication networks fail, as SUPARCO operates its own independent link system.

“Even in case of a complete communication breakdown, our satellites ensure the flow of critical data to the relevant departments,” she added.

Rabbia said the agency supports post-disaster recovery by helping assess crop losses, guiding urban planning in hard-hit areas, and aiding rehabilitation efforts through satellite analysis.

“Space-based technology shortens the response time as work that normally takes a day is done in hours,” she continued. “We capture imagery both day and night, without limitation. So, damage assessment and recovery planning can begin immediately.”

She said weather satellites were not in SPARCO’s resources, but they would be available soon since they were included in an upcoming plan.

Another official, Dr. Muhammad Farooq, Director SACRED, stressed the need to shift from a reactive to a proactive approach, saying SUPARCO has recently developed a Disaster Risk Assessment initiative for the National Disaster Risk Management Fund (NDRMF), known as the Natural Catastrophic Modeling Project, or simply the NatCat Project. 

“This flagship initiative of NDRMF helps disaster managers identify the most vulnerable or high-risk areas so they can take preventive measures and reduce potential damage through better planning,” he added.
SUPARCO currently operates six satellites, including two for communication and four for earth observation (EO).

“With two more EO satellites due to be launched by the end of this year, SUPARCO will be in an even stronger position to provide satellite data for national institutions, including disaster management agencies,” Farooq said.

The flood emergency, fueled by torrential monsoon rains and excess water released from upstream dams in India, has made Punjab, the country’s breadbasket and home to over half of Pakistan’s 240 million people, one of the worst-hit regions.

The disaster officials reported 20 deaths in the province this week, more than 429,000 people evacuated, and 1,769 villages inundated affecting 1.45 million people.


Salman Agha, Haris Rauf star as Pakistan beat Afghanistan in UAE tri-series opener

Salman Agha, Haris Rauf star as Pakistan beat Afghanistan in UAE tri-series opener
Updated 29 August 2025

Salman Agha, Haris Rauf star as Pakistan beat Afghanistan in UAE tri-series opener

Salman Agha, Haris Rauf star as Pakistan beat Afghanistan in UAE tri-series opener
  • Skipper Agha’s unbeaten 53 and late stand with Nawaz lift Pakistan to 182-7 in Sharjah
  • Rauf takes 4-31, including Rashid Khan’s wicket, as Afghanistan fall 39 runs short of target

SHARJAH: Skipper Salman Agha hit an unbeaten half century and fast bowler Haris Rauf grabbed four wickets as Pakistan upstaged Afghanistan by 39 runs in the tri-series opener in Sharjah on Friday.

Agha hit a 36-ball 53 not out with three sixes and as many boundaries which lifted Pakistan to 182-7 in their 20 overs.

Pacers Rauf took 4-31 and Shaheen Afridi 2-21, while spinners Mohammad Nawaz (2-23) and Sufiyan Muqeem (2-25) dismissed Afghanistan for 143 in 19.5 overs before a noisy capacity 16,000 crowd at the Sharjah stadium.

Afghanistan matched Pakistan with opener Rahmanullah Gurbaz, 27-ball 38 with a six and three boundaries, adding 51 for the second wicket with Sediqullah Atal, who made 23.

It was Rauf who changed the game with a two-wicket 12th over sending Atal and Karim Janat back without conceding a run.

Afghanistan skipper Rashid Khan smashed five sixes and a four in his whirlwind 16-ball 39 but fell to Rauf to end his team’s fight.

Earlier, Pakistan was lifted by Agha’s fourth T20I half century.

Agha anchored the innings admirably well after opener Sahibzada Farhan smashed two sixes and a boundary in his 10-ball 21 after Pakistan won the toss and batted.

Agha added 53 for the fifth wicket with Nawaz whose 11-ball 21 had two sixes and a boundary as the duo helped Pakistan get 51 runs in the last five overs.

Pakistan play hosts United Arab Emirates on Saturday.

All three teams face other each other twice with the top two playing the September 7 final.