For the first time in history, massive rainfall in March and April 2015 raised the country’s stock of water to 8.91 million acre feet (MAF) -File photo However, there is still a long way to go with climate models and more mass balance studies need to be done on large glaciers in this region to find out if they are growing or receding. Currently, less than 10 actual mass balance studies are being conducted, according to Shrestha. Mass balance is simply the gain and loss of ice from the glacier system; glaciers losing more mass than they receive will be in negative mass balance and so will recede. Overall, glaciers in the region are losing their mass due to progressive global warming and then there is the addition of ‘black carbon’ from local sources such as the burning of biomass, diesel fumes and other aerosols that are making them melt faster.
According to Arif Anwar, the IWMI expert based in Lahore who spoke about the state of the Lower Indus Basin, “Pakistan uses 63pc of the water of the Indus and 93pc of this water is used for agriculture … 300 million people live in the Lower Indus Basin and are dependent on this basin”. The irrigation system set up here is the largest contiguous irrigation system in the world and the agriculture done in the Indus Basin contributes to one quarter of Pakistan’s GDP.
However, the bad news is that water per capita is shrinking to a level that is unsustainable. “We are at the limits of our water resources,” pointed out Anwar. “Groundwater has saved Pakistan but that is also threatened by over-extraction and [water scarcity] is going to hit our cities the worst.” Over the past few decades, the water economy of Pakistan has survived largely because of the tapping of groundwater by farmers, villagers, urban dwellers and industries. Groundwater levels are now dropping fast and urgent steps need to be taken to recharge the groundwater.
According to Anwar’s research, Quetta, Peshawar and Lahore are going to face water shortages very soon. In fact, in Quetta the water crisis has already started and it will hit Lahore soon, since it is growing faster than the rest of Pakistan. We are not responding through better management fast enough to the water challenges, considering a growing population that places an increasing demand on water supply. With climate change, land degradation (as farmlands and wetlands are turned into housing) and a business-as-usual approach, we are clearly headed for disaster. “Water is not saved here — as more water becomes available, more land comes under cultivation,” explained Anwar. “We need better water management and more storage in the Indus.”
The Indus is literally the lifeline of the country and we need to be looking at the impacts of climate change on our water resources more seriously. We need to be talking about this challenge at various forums and raising awareness about the impending water crisis in the media, as veteran journalist Joydeep Gupta, the head of the Third Pole Network from India pointed out.
IWMI has been working on solutions that should be brought to the attention of our policy makers, farmers and urban dwellers: developing new storage and improving water infrastructure (repairing barrages and canals), growing more food with less water (using better water conservation technologies) and better managing groundwater resources.
Published in Dawn, Sunday Magazine, March 6th, 2016