Pakistan targets $600 million in seafood exports with China partnerships, aquaculture push

Pakistan targets $600 million in seafood exports with China partnerships, aquaculture push
Workers prepare to pack whole squids for exports at a fish factory at a fishery port in Karachi on November 22, 2019. (AFP/ file)
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Updated 3 min 49 sec ago

Pakistan targets $600 million in seafood exports with China partnerships, aquaculture push

Pakistan targets $600 million in seafood exports with China partnerships, aquaculture push
  • Minister says Pakistan ranked third globally in mud crab exports, seeks wider seafood markets
  • Exporters eye Chinese investment, new tech to expand aquaculture, frozen and freeze-dried foods

KARACHI: Pakistan has set a seafood export target of $600 million for the financial year 2025–26, the maritime affairs ministry said on Friday, as officials and exporters held talks with Chinese partners in Beijing this week to scale up aquaculture and frozen food ventures.

The fisheries sector earned $465 million in FY 2024–25, according to government data, with China the country’s biggest buyer. Officials say new memorandums of understanding and business-to-business deals signed with Chinese companies are central to lifting production and establishing Pakistan as a regional seafood hub.

“Pakistan aims to reach $600 million in seafood exports in the upcoming financial year,” Federal Maritime Affairs Minister Junaid Anwar Chaudhry was quoted as saying in a statement by his office after he met exporters in China, stressing that memorandums of understanding and business-to-business agreements would be central to boosting fisheries and establishing the country as a regional hub.

“Pakistan ranks as the third-largest global exporter of mud crabs, shipping over 3,000 tons of live mud crabs to China, its biggest importer,” he added.

Exporters said aquaculture collaboration with Chinese firms was key to accessing distant markets. 

Tariq Memon, international sales manager at Arabian Sea Products, was quoted in the maritime ministry statement as saying his company was developing holding systems to cultivate and preserve live mud crabs and lobsters. 

“This initiative, in partnership with Chinese firms, seeks to extend the survival time of live seafood to two or three weeks, enabling access to distant markets such as China,” he said.

Memon emphasized that success would hinge on technology transfer, investment, and aquaculture expertise from Chinese partners.

Pakistani companies also proposed joint ventures to expand beyond seafood. 

Saeed Ahmed Fareed, CEO of Legend International (Pvt) Ltd, said his Karachi-based firm, which operates a 65,000-square-foot processing facility with a daily capacity of 40 tons, was seeking Chinese collaboration in value-added frozen seafood and poultry products such as chicken feet. The company already holds approval from China’s General Administration of Customs (GACC).

“Collaboration would help both parties reduce costs, gain economies of scale, and broaden export reach to the US, Europe, and regional markets,” Fareed explained.

Other exporters, including Ali Reimoo of Karim Impex, said they were exploring opportunities in China and neighboring regions.

Beyond seafood, exporters highlighted the untapped potential of freeze-drying technology, widely used across Asia for fruit and vegetable exports. 

Asif Muhammad Ali Shah, director of Perfect Food Industries, said countries such as Thailand, Vietnam and China had established strong markets, but Pakistan lacked such facilities despite international demand for mango, guava, falsa, okra and bitter melon.

“Although countries like Thailand, Vietnam, and China supply freeze-dried fruits and vegetables, Pakistan lacks such facilities despite strong international demand,” Shah said, pointing to high equipment costs and lengthy processing times. 

He added that international buyers were ready to commit to annual contracts if local capacity was built, particularly for diaspora communities and niche markets abroad.

Minister Chaudhry said investments in cold chain infrastructure and freezing technologies had already laid the groundwork for future seafood-specific freeze-drying plants. 

“Current infrastructure and market trends indicate promising potential for growth in this sector in the near future,” he added.


Tents and tears: Pakistan flood survivors fear life after water recedes

Tents and tears: Pakistan flood survivors fear life after water recedes
Updated 5 sec ago

Tents and tears: Pakistan flood survivors fear life after water recedes

Tents and tears: Pakistan flood survivors fear life after water recedes
  • Floods have killed at least 183 in Punjab since June, displacing nearly 1.8 million
  • Officials say they are striving to meet women’s hygiene needs at relief camps

KASUR, Pakistan: Sitting on the edge of her bed at a school playground-turned-relief camp, Rubina Bibi’s voice trembled as she contemplated what would come next. 

Floodwaters that swept through her village in Punjab’s Kasur district destroyed her home. Now, she wonders where her family will go once the waters recede and the camp closes.

The 40-year-old’s family is among dozens sheltering in a government-run school in Kasur, some 15 kilometers from the flooded villages along the Sutlej river near Pakistan’s border with India. They live under makeshift tents and plastic sheets, alongside neighbors who, like them, have lost everything.

“We have lost everything, our home and belongings. The greatest worry is what will happen after the water recedes and we have to leave this camp? Where will we go,” she said.

“Nowadays the world feels so cruel, and we cannot bear the thought of our daughters living outside in the open.”

Punjab, which produces much of Pakistan’s wheat and rice and is home to half of the country’s 240 million people, has suffered the worst damage in this year’s monsoon season. Officials in the province reported that 49 people have died in the ongoing Ravi–Sutlej–Chenab flood wave, bringing Punjab’s monsoon death toll since mid-June to 183.

Nearly 3.9 million people have been affected and 3,900 villages submerged while authorities have shifted over 1.8 million residents to safer areas.

Across Pakistan, rain and flood-related incidents have killed 884 people since the start of the monsoon on June 26, according to the National Disaster Management Authority.

In Kasur’s Ganda Singh Wala area, close to the Indian border, floodwaters alone submerged 148 villages and destroyed crops on 70,000 acres, according to the district administration.

Authorities said they had evacuated nearly 76,000 people from the district.

STRUGGLES IN RELIEF CAMPS

At the District Public School camp in Kasur, about 350 people from 80 families have lived in temporary shelters for more than two weeks. Aid has trickled in, but uncertainty weighs heavily on the families.

“Our children need clothes as they have only one suit to wear and are roaming around in tattered shoes,” Rubina said, appealing to Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif to provide them with a permanent roof.

Nearby, Aisha Bibi, a young flood survivor, voiced the same fears: 

“We are very worried that once this camp is closed after the floodwater recedes, where we will go. It has become a great anxiety and depression for us affecting our mental health.”

Local officials acknowledge the scale of the psychological and social trauma. 

“These people are scared that they have to go back so consoling them for now is the biggest challenge,” said Sherina Junejo, an additional deputy commissioner in Kasur. “We are very hopeful that things are going to get better and they are going to go back to their homes and get settled.”

Junejo said the administration was striving to meet the hygiene and health needs of women at the camp to help families retain some dignity. 

“Hygiene kits are in place, sanitary napkins are in place and [we are] providing them with a fresh set of clothes and other relevant female hygiene items,” she said.

Authorities have also provided antenatal care for pregnant women, with a hospital set up in the female wing of the camp staffed by women doctors and attendants round the clock. 

“So, if something like that (medical emergency) were to occur, God forbid, we are equipped to address it,” Junejo added.

Mehrish Arshad, a nurse at the makeshift hospital, said diarrhea, fever, sore throats and related ailments were the main illnesses among children. 

“We received about 100 hygiene kits and we have provided them to all the ladies,” she said, noting that the camp currently had sufficient medical supplies.

Kasur Deputy Commissioner Imran Ali said damage assessment teams had already been formed by Punjab’s Communications and Works Department. 

“As the water recedes, we will be able to understand which structures got damaged to which extent and will be compensated accordingly,” he said.


Pakistan vaccinates over 18 million children in anti-polio campaign

Pakistan vaccinates over 18 million children in anti-polio campaign
Updated 26 min 37 sec ago

Pakistan vaccinates over 18 million children in anti-polio campaign

Pakistan vaccinates over 18 million children in anti-polio campaign
  • Drive targets 28.7 million children across 99 high-risk districts
  • Polio remains endemic only in Pakistan and Afghanistan

KARACHI : Pakistan has vaccinated more than 18 million children in the first five days of a nationwide anti-polio campaign, health authorities said on Friday, as the country grapples with a resurgence of the crippling virus that has caused 24 cases so far this year.

The weeklong drive, running from Sept. 1–9, is Pakistan’s fourth anti-polio campaign of 2025 and aims to immunize 28.7 million children under five across 99 high-risk districts, according to the National Emergency Operations Center (NEOC).

“So far, more than 18 million children have been vaccinated against polio,” the NEOC said in a statement. 

Vaccinations include 4 million children in Punjab, 7.6 million in Sindh, 3.7 million in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, 1.9 million in Balochistan, 368,000 in Islamabad, 112,000 in Gilgit-Baltistan and 164,000 in Azad Kashmir.

The campaign, conducted simultaneously with neighboring Afghanistan — the only other country where polio remains endemic — — was delayed in nine Punjab districts due to flooding and will begin in parts of southern KP, including Bajaur and Upper Dir, on Sept. 15.

Polio is an incurable, highly infectious virus that can cause lifelong paralysis and can only be prevented through repeated oral vaccination and routine immunization. Pakistan recorded 74 cases in 2024, a sharp rise from six in 2023 and just one in 2021, underscoring the challenge of eradication.

Pakistan has made major gains since the 1990s, when annual cases exceeded 20,000, reducing the toll to eight by 2018. But vaccine hesitancy, fueled by misinformation and resistance from some religious hard-liners, continues to hamper progress.

Health teams have also faced frequent militant attacks, particularly in KP and Balochistan, where vaccinators and security personnel have been killed while administering drops in remote communities. 

Officials say such violence, coupled with natural disasters such as the current flooding, are complicating nationwide eradication efforts.


Pakistan proposes scholars, students exchange with Bangladesh religious seminaries as ties thaw

Pakistan proposes scholars, students exchange with Bangladesh religious seminaries as ties thaw
Updated 34 min 12 sec ago

Pakistan proposes scholars, students exchange with Bangladesh religious seminaries as ties thaw

Pakistan proposes scholars, students exchange with Bangladesh religious seminaries as ties thaw
  • Bangladeshi delegation expresses regret over flood losses in meeting with religious affairs minister
  • Pakistan and Bangladesh have taken many steps in recent months to rebuild ties between each other

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Religious Affairs Minister Sardar Muhammad Yousaf has proposed a program to exchange with Bangladesh scholars and students of religious seminaries, the Pakistani religious affairs ministry said on Friday.

The statement came after a Bangladeshi delegation, led by Khalid Hussain, adviser to Bangladesh president on religious affairs, called on Yousaf to offer condolences over the loss of at least 46 lives in recent floods in Pakistan’s most populous Punjab province.

The meeting follows steps taken by both countries to rebuild ties in recent months, with Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar undertaking a landmark visit to Dhaka in August to reset regional relations amid shifting geopolitical alignments.

Yousaf told the Bangladeshi delegates the relations between the two countries are based on centuries-old, shared traditions, Islamic heritage, social values ​​and literary expression, according to the religious affairs ministry.

“Federal Minister Sardar Muhammad Yousaf proposed exchanges of scholars and students of madrassas of both countries,” the ministry said, adding that Hussain agreed to take steps to promote cooperation between the two religious affairs ministries.

The two sides also agreed to form a joint working group to promote interfaith harmony, according to the Pakistani ministry. The visiting Bangladeshi delegation will also participate in the two-day 50th International Seerat Conference in Pakistan, beginning on Sept. 9.

Pakistan and Bangladesh were once one nation, but they split in 1971 as a result of a bloody civil war, which saw the part previously referred to as East Pakistan seceding to form the independent nation of Bangladesh. In the years since, Bangladeshi leaders, particularly ex-PM Sheikh Hasina, chose to maintain close ties with India.

Ties between Pakistan and Bangladesh have warmed up since Hasina’s ouster as a result of a student-led uprising in August, witnessing a marked improvement. Both countries began sea trade last year, expanding government-to-government commerce in February.

Last month, both countries reaffirmed their commitment to strengthening bilateral ties and advancing regional cooperation, the Pakistani foreign office said, following a series of high-level engagements during Deputy PM Dar’s visit to Dhaka.


Punjab reels as Pakistan forecasts new river flood peaks, Sindh cities at risk

Punjab reels as Pakistan forecasts new river flood peaks, Sindh cities at risk
Updated 34 min 31 sec ago

Punjab reels as Pakistan forecasts new river flood peaks, Sindh cities at risk

Punjab reels as Pakistan forecasts new river flood peaks, Sindh cities at risk
  • Chenab at Panjnad, Indus at Guddu forecast to hit high flood levels this week
  • Nearly 3.9 million affected in Punjab; province bans wheat use for animal feed

ISLAMABAD/KARACHI: Pakistan on Friday warned of new flood peaks on the Chenab and Indus rivers and possible urban flooding in Sindh, as the monsoon continued to batter Punjab’s agricultural heartland and threaten millions downstream.

Punjab, home to half of Pakistan’s 240 million people and most of its wheat and rice production, has been hit hardest by this year’s monsoon. Provincial officials said 49 people have died in the current Ravi–Sutlej–Chenab flood spell, while the seasonal monsoon death toll for Punjab since mid-June has reached 183. 

Nationwide, flooding and rain-related incidents have killed 884 people since June 26 when the monsoon season started, according to the National Disaster Management Authority.

“A total of 3,892,000 people were affected due to the flood situation,” Punjab Relief Commissioner Nabeel Javed said in a statement, adding that 3,900 villages had been inundated. 

“Authorities have relocated over 1.8 million people to safer places, while 415 relief camps and 466 medical camps have been established.”

Another 398 veterinary camps were also set up, with 1.34 million animals moved to higher ground.

Punjab PDMA Director General Irfan Ali Kathia said civil administration, the army and other agencies were “on alert” and directed officials to ensure the protection of citizens’ lives and property.

The military said its teams were carrying out extensive rescue and relief work in southern Punjab, including farming districts such as Sahiwal, Khanewal, Muzaffargarh, Toba Tek Singh and Chiniot. At least 30 relief camps were established in Sahiwal after floods swamped 49 villages along the Ravi.

“Army rescue teams are actively engaged in Talamba, Mian Channu and Abdul Hakeem in Khanewal district, relocating thousands of people and livestock to safety,” the army said. 

In Muzaffargarh, troops evacuated residents from low-lying localities where floodwaters had breached protective structures.

NEW FLOOD WARNINGS, FOOD SECURITY

The Flood Forecasting Division (FFD) reported an “exceptionally high flood” in the Sutlej at Ganda Singh Wala, a border village opposite India’s Ferozepur district, and “very high” levels at the Ravi (Balloki, Sidhnai) and Chenab (Chiniot).

“Exceptionally high flood level will continue in River Sutlej at Ganda Singh Wala,” the FFD said in its weekly outlook. 

At Panjnad and Trimmu headworks, major barrage points in southern Punjab, the Chenab also remained in the “high” category.

The PDMA warned the Chenab at Panjnad was expected to reach “high to very high” flood levels within 24 hours, while flash flooding was likely in the hill torrents of DG Khan and Rajanpur from Sept. 7–9. 

The Indus at Guddu could also rise to “high to very high” flood from Sept. 7–8, while authorities cautioned of possible urban flooding in Sindh’s major cities, including Karachi and Hyderabad, during the same period.

Earlier on Friday, the High Commission of India in Islamabad informed Pakistan of “high flood” levels in the Sutlej at Harike and Ferozepur headworks, according to the Pakistan Commissioner for Indus Waters. The advisory warned that excess water releases could intensify the already critical situation downstream at Ganda Singh Wala and beyond.

Separately, the Punjab Home Department imposed Section 144, an emergency law that allows temporary bans, ordering feed mills that produce poultry and livestock feed to stop using wheat for the next 30 days so supplies can be diverted to flour mills for human consumption.

“Wheat is a basic food for human consumption and will now only be supplied to flour mills for production of flour,” the department said in its notification.

Provincial officials said feed mills were holding over 104,000 metric tons of wheat, originally intended for poultry feed. The move is aimed at ensuring uninterrupted supplies of flour as 1.3 million acres of cropland lie inundated across Punjab.

Hydrological reports show Pakistan’s Tarbela Dam has reached 100 percent of its capacity, while Mangla stands at 87 percent. On the Indian side, Bhakra (84 percent), Pong (98 percent) and Thein (92 percent) dams — all major reservoirs on the Sutlej and Ravi rivers — are also nearly full. 

Officials warned that further inflows could aggravate downstream flooding if controlled releases become necessary.


India warns Pakistan of fresh cross-border flooding as rains swell Punjab rivers

India warns Pakistan of fresh cross-border flooding as rains swell Punjab rivers
Updated 05 September 2025

India warns Pakistan of fresh cross-border flooding as rains swell Punjab rivers

India warns Pakistan of fresh cross-border flooding as rains swell Punjab rivers
  • Weather authorities have predicted more monsoon rains in most districts of Punjab till September 9
  • Sindh’s Sukkur, Ghotki, Larkana, Khairpur, Dadu and Jacobabad on alert as floodwaters move downstream

ISLAMABAD: India has warned Pakistan of fresh cross-border flooding in Sutlej as rains in upper parts of Pakistan continue to swell rivers in the eastern Punjab province, the Pakistani water resources ministry said on Friday, amid an already high flood situation at Trimmu and Panjnad headworks in the province.

Pakistan’s Punjab has been facing an emergency as monsoon floods have killed 46 people, displaced 1.8 million and inundated 1.3 million acres of agricultural land in the country’s breadbasket province over the last two weeks, official data shows. Another 3.9 million people have been affected.

The Indian high commission in Islamabad conveyed the warning to Pakistan through the ministry of water resources, which mentioned of the release of excess water in the Sutlej river from Harike and Ferozepur headworks in India, rather than the water-sharing Indus Waters Treaty, which India has said remains suspended.

The development comes as Chenab, Ravi and Sutlej continue to have a flood situation, particularly at the Trimmu and Panjnad headworks in Punjab’s Jhang and Bahawalpur districts, following fresh rains in upper parts of the country, according to the Punjab Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA).

“Citizens should take precautionary measures and never go near rivers for recreational activities,” the PDMA said on Friday, adding that monsoon rains were predicted in most districts of Punjab till Sept. 9.

“Refrain from fishing and other activities in rivers.”

In its report about losses from floods in Ravi, Sutlej and Chenab, the PDMA said the deluges have affected more than 3,900 villages. Relief Commissioner Punjab

“A total of 3,892,000 people were affected due to flood situation,” Punjab Relief Commissioner Nabeel Javed said, adding that authorities had relocated more than 1.8 million people to safer places.

A total of 415 relief camps and 466 medical camps have been set up in affected districts, according to the official. Another 398 veterinary camps have been set up to provide treatment facilities to livestock.

“In the affected districts, 1,342,000 animals were shifted to safer places during rescue and relief activities,” he added.

Monsoon season brings Pakistan up to 80 percent of its annual rainfall, but increasingly erratic and extreme weather patterns are turning the annual rains, which are vital for agriculture, food security and the livelihoods of millions of farmers, into a destructive force.

Rains, floods, landslides and similar incidents have killed at least 884 people nationwide since June 26, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA). The disaster has revived memories of the 2022 deluges, when a third of the country was submerged, over 1,700 people were killed and losses exceeded $35 billion.

The floods, which have been moving downstream from Punjab, have prompted authorities in the southern Sindh province to evacuate people to safety.

On Thursday evening, the NDMA said Sindh’s northern districts of Sukkur, Ghotki, Larkana, Khairpur, Dadu and Jacobabad were at risk, while southern districts of Thatta, Sujawal, Badin, Tharparkar, Umerkot, Sanghar, Karachi, Hyderabad and Jamshoro could see heavy downpours in the coming days.

“Your lives are precious, and no unnecessary risk should be taken in the face of natural calamities,” First Lady Aseefa Bhutto Zardari told communities, while inspecting protective structures and relief camps during a preparedness visit to embankments near Nawabshah.

“Effective coordination between departments, close monitoring, and advanced planning are essential if we are to manage this challenge successfully.”

Pakistan, which ranks among the world’s most climate-vulnerable nations, has experienced increasingly erratic, frequent weather events, including heat waves, untimely rains, storms, cyclones and droughts, in recent years, which scientists have blamed on human-driven climate change.

In May, at least 32 people were killed in severe storms in the South Asian country.