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"Let there arise out of you a band of people inviting to all that is good enjoining what is right and forbidding what is wrong; they are the ones to attain felicity".
(surah Al-Imran,ayat-104)
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User Name: nrqazi
Full Name: Naeem Qazi
User since: 25/Nov/2007
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Pakistan: A Question of Water

 

20 August 2010

By Gwynne Dyer

This may not be the most tactful time to bring it up, with much of Pakistan underwater and many millions homeless, but Pakistan’s real problem is not too much water. It is too little water – and one day it could cause a war.

The current disastrous floods (to which the response of both the Pakistan government and the international community has been far too slow) are due to this year’s monsoon being much stronger than usual. But that is just bad weather, in the end: every fifty or one hundred years you can expect the weather to do something really extreme. It comes in various forms – blizzards, floods, hurricanes – but it happens everywhere.

The long-term threat to Pakistan’s well-being is that the country is gradually drying out. The Indus river system is the main year-round source of water for both Pakistan and north-western India, but the glaciers up on the Tibetan plateau that feed the system’s various tributaries are melting.

While they are melting, of course, the amount of water in the system will not fall steeply – but according the Chinese Academy of Sciences, some of the glaciers will be gone in as little as twenty years. Then the river levels will drop permanently, and the real problems will begin.

When India and Pakistan got their independence from Britain in 1947, there was plenty of waters in the Indus system for everyone. In fact, almost half the water was still flowing into the Arabian Sea unused. But the population has grown fast over the years, especially on the Pakistani side of the border – from 34 million in 1947 to 175 million now – and the amount of water in the rivers has not.

The per capita supply of water in Pakistan has fallen from over 5,000 cubic metres (175,000 cu.ft.) annually in 1947 to only about 1,000 cubic metres (35,000 cu.ft.) today, a level defined by the United Nations as “high stress”. Ninety-six percent of that goes to irrigation, and the Indus no longer reaches the sea in most years. That’s what has already happened, even before the melting of the glaciers has gone very far.

Fifteen or twenty years from now, the water shortage (and therefore also food scarcities) will be a permanent political obsession in Pakistan. Even now, Pakistani politicians tend to blame India for their country’s water shortage (and vice versa, of course). It will get worse when the shortage grows acute.

What turns a problem into a potential conflict is the fact that five of the six tributaries that make up the Indus system cross Indian-controlled Kashmir on their way to Pakistan. There is a treaty, dating from 1960, that divides the water between the two countries, with India getting the water from the eastern three rivers and Pakistan owning the flow from the western three. But the treaty contains a time-bomb.

India’s three rivers contain only about one-fifth of the system’s total flow. To boost India’s share up to around 30 percent, therefore, the World Bank arbitrators proposed that the treaty also let India extract a certain amount of water from two of Pakistan’s rivers before they leave Indian territory. The proposal was reluctantly accepted by Pakistan.

The amount is not small – it is, in fact, enough water to irrigate 320,000 hectares (1.3 million acres) – and it is a FIXED amount, regardless of how much water there actually is in the river. Now roll the tape forward twenty years: the glacial melt-water is coming to an end, and the total flow of the Indus system is down by half. But almost all of the loss is in Pakistan’s three rivers, since the smaller Indian three do not depend heavily on glaciers.

So India is still getting as much water as ever from the eastern three rivers, AND it is still taking its full treaty allocation of water from two of Pakistan’s rivers, although they do depend on glacial melt-water and now have far less water in them. As a result, India’s total share of the Indus waters rises sharply (and quite legally) just as Pakistanis start to starve.

In these circumstances, would an Indian government voluntarily take less water than the treaty allows? Get real. India will be having difficulties with its food supply too, though it will not be in such grave trouble as Pakistan. Any Indian government that “gave India’s water away” would promptly be driven from power – by parliament if it was the usual fractious coalition, or by voters at the next election if it were an unusually disciplined single party.

On the other hand, no Pakistani government, civilian or military, could just sit by as land that has been irrigated for a century goes back to desert and food rationing is imposed nationwide. Especially not if India’s fields just across the border were still green. That is the nightmare confrontation that lies down the road for these two nuclear powers.

Meanwhile, the homes of millions of Pakistanis are underwater. In terms of human suffering, it is twenty times worse than Hurricane Katrina was in the United States five years ago, and it needs a proportionate response now. But the future holds something much worse for Pakistan (and for India), unless they start revising this fifty-year-old treaty now, before the crisis arrives.

 

 Reply:   Response from a secretary Irrigation Punjab.
Replied by(nrqazi) Replied on (25/Oct/2011)

      I don't agree with the author's views. The core point he is making is that the glaciers of the Tibetan plateau are melting and sufficient water will not be available in the Indus, Jhelum and cherub rivers which were apportioned to Pakistan. The factual position is that the Indus is fed only partly from the Tibetan plateau and mostly from the the Saichin glacier. The scientific evidence shows that the Tibetan plateau glaciers are melting since they face the brunt of sun the glaciers have decreased drastically. However the Karakuram range , which lies beyond the Himalayas is in a monsoon shadow , lies at a very high altitude and is fed by the western influences which come in the winters. Therefore the evidence is that there is very little loss of glaciers in the Karakuram and these glaciers are likely to maintain their ice cover.
       The Jhelum river is fed , 80 %, from winter snows in Kashmir and 20 % by monsoon rains. So therefore this is also not going to face any decreased flows.
       The Chenab river emanates in Indian Kashmir and surrounding mountains and generates water from the summer monsoons. So if there are good monsoons Chenab will have good flows.
       India has serious  a problem. The rivers that flow from the Tibetan plateau are going to face serious problems as the Tibetan is fast losing glacier cover and rivers such as Ganges and Brahmaputra will not run at their present levels.
       Pakistan's problem is not saving the water that is generated every year and allowing it to go waste into the sea. The  average each year, recorded for the last 100 years is 20 million acre feet ( maf ).  Tarbela holds 7 maf ! Pakistan needs new dams specially Kalabagh and akhori. Basha is the wrong choice as it will take 15 years to make and Pakistan will be in serious water trouble in 7 years. Akhori is the dam to make as it can be constructed in 6 years.
       Pass this on to your friend . No need to be despondent unnecessarily.
 
        JAVED MAJID    

 


 
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