Gravel accumulating in the outlets of Sawar Dam | Balochistan Irrigation Department
The locality of New Town in Gwadar houses working-class Baloch, most of whom reside in shanties by the roadside. It is difficult to escape the feeling that they are living in medieval times even though modern Gwadar is built up as a neoliberal dream.
Two drums have been kept in front of Ashraf’s hut along with bushes. “I get these drums filled every day, when water trailers pass through our area. Sometimes I pay them a small amount, at other times some good tanker drivers give us water free of charge.”
When asked about the taste of water, he retorts: “What is taste? Water is water … at least, I get water to drink.”
To rid the city of such cases, there is a need to go back to the drawing board and assess realities anew. In coastal areas, claim water experts and officials, water can be supplied by two ways: dams and desalination plants. If neither exist, the situation resembles that of Gwadar, where there is almost total reliance on water trailers to fill the vacuum.
“Our folly was been to populate first then plan,” argues Naseem. “We should have first ensured supply of potable water before populating the city.”
Government officials in Gwadar are currently putting all their eggs into the Sawar Dam basket. Situated across the River Sawar, 75 kilometres north-east of Gwadar district, the dam is being constructed at a cost of 948.653 million rupees. Covering an area of 4,500 acres, it has a reservoir life of 30 years.
“Farm families will benefit as 4,500 acres of barren land will be made cultivable,” explains an irrigation department official in Gwadar. “Water for drinking and other domestic requirements will also become available to those living near the dam. Water will also be supplied to the Karwat Industrial Estate.”
Since last year, government officials have been claiming that the Sawar Dam is ready to function except that the pipelines linking the dam to Gwadar needed to be laid out. The same line is pulled out once again by government officials.
Nevertheless, Shakeel Baloch seems confident: “In a Public Sector Development Program (PSDP) scheme, two billion rupees have been allocated to provide water to Gwadar from the Sawar Dam. I am pretty sure this crisis will likely end in a year or so.”
“Sawar Dam will provide five million gallons of water to Gwadar but it is also rain-dependent,” observes GDA’s Dr Sajjad Hussain. “The rebuilding of the Shadi Kaur Dam will take one-and-a-half years. And in future, the Shadi Kaur Dam will be connected with Sawar Dam.”
Construction of dams and storage of water in these dams fall under the domain of the irrigation department. Officials of the department claim that they are building up dams, including Basol, Kanero and others. And while some of these dams are ready, there has been no rainfall yet to fill them up.
Siddique Baloch, on the other hand, was not impressed with how dams are being built up and water stored there. “When the Shadi Kaur was first constructed,” he recalls, “it was washed away. Since there are no checks and balances, these dams in Gwadar and its surrounding areas can get washed away any time due to heavy rain or floods.”
Unfortunately beyond these grand schemes, government plans about providing potable water to Gwadar are almost non-existent. Back in January this year, then federal minister for planning, development and reform Ahsan Iqbal had visited Gwadar and directed the authorities concerned to immediately resolve the issue of potable water shortage in Gwadar. This meeting was attended by officials from the Balochistan governemnt’s planning ministry and the GDA.
And yet, a drought-like situation persists in the area even today. Karezes, the indigenous method of tapping groundwater, have gone dry while underground water levels have gone from bad to worse. Several meetings such as the one conducted by Iqbal have been held in Quetta and Gwadar for Gwadar’s needs, but all in vain. In the past, as the crisis assumed catastrophic proportions, water was brought to Gwadar from Karachi via a large Pakistan Navy ship. No permanent measures appear to be anywhere near completion.
Ultimately, Pakistan’s reliance on CPEC provides a saving grace.
“Through the CPEC project, pipelines are to be given for the Sawar and Shadi Kaur dams,” explains Dostain Jamaldini, the incumbent chairman of the Gwadar Port Authority (GPA).
“There is also one desalination plant which the GDA will complete. This will provide five million gallons of water,” adds Shakeel Baloch.
On the other hand, however, Dr Sajjad Hussain concedes that had existing desalination plants not fallen into disrepair, it would have been providing two million gallons of water. “I personally think that desalination plants should be outsourced and given to a company,” he says. “The desalination plants approved under CPEC will take one-and-a-half years to complete. Despite challenges, we hope we will end this crisis. The water of Akra Kaur Dam will also get treated. Dam water is sweet, it does not have any major issues.”
But for Dr Ahmad, it is clear that the government cannot run desalination plants even if it were to establish them. What the government ought to do is to subsidise water instead.
“The least the role of the government in this regard, the better the quality of potable water the people will have access to,” argues the doctor. “Private firms will fix a price for water, the government should provide subsidy to the people. Suppose one litre of water is sold at two rupees, one rupee will be paid by citizens and the other by the government.”
But who will create this plan, given that government officials in Quetta remain either tight-lipped or absent when it comes to the water emergency in Gwadar?
“Clean drinking water is a provincial subject,” replies the doctor. “It is the provincial government of Balochistan that ought to make a master plan for providing clean drinking water to Gwadar and beyond.”
The writer is a member of staff. He tweets @Akbar_Notezai