Why reverting to the karez system might save Balochistan’s water and drought crisis

There used to be 32 karez in this area but now only two are functional, one of which is around 200 years old.

Local children fetching drinking water from the karez. PHOTO: RINA SAEED KHAN

In an arid country like Pakistan, water in the form of rivers, glaciers and groundwater is life – it is what gives us sustenance. When there is too little, we have droughts, and when there is too much, we have floods. This is how it has been for centuries in this part of the world, and it remains how it is in Balochistan, home to the 7,000-year-old Mehrgarh civilisation.

Pakistan’s largest province is currently in the midst of a drought, and yet some districts have been flooded as well. I was part of a group of journalists from Islamabad who recently went to Quetta on a trip courtesy of the Heinrich Boll Foundation, in order to find out how the local communities are coping with drought.

Balochistan hosts only 5% of Pakistan’s population, and those people too are sparsely spread around depleting water sources. From Islamabad, we flew over what can only be described as a lunar landscape with rugged, bare mountains, to reach Quetta.

Due to years of regional instability and militancy in the area, this has been Pakistan’s most neglected province. Nonetheless, we found Quetta to be a peaceful city with bustling bazaars and clean roads. We were informed the insurgency is more or less over now, and the security situation has improved vastly. However, this province of 12 million people is now on the frontline of climate change, along with the vulnerable coastal and high mountain communities of Pakistan.
“There is less rain now, and basin-wise water availability is going down. We have 18 river basins, and without rainfall to recharge them they are becoming dry.”

This is what we were told at the office of the Balochistan Rural Support Programme (BRSP), a non-profit that is working in 25 out of the 32 districts in the province, with the help of local communities. They explained that water governance is weak, and the data regarding water resources is highly variable, which is why they need new technology to map their subsurface water. They also need to introduce sustainable irrigation systems (like drip and sprinkler irrigation) and shift to less water intensive crops like olives, instead of growing crops like apples. Most importantly, they need a series of small check dams to recharge their groundwater and revive their ancient karez system.
“Water is our most precious resource,” the BRSP told us as we set off for Pishin to see the karez they had recently restored.

There is a famous old guesthouse in Pishin town, known for its excellent chef and a lovely garden with towering maple trees. We planned to have lunch there. I was quite excited, as this would be the first time I would actually get to see a karez in real life. It is actually an ingenious way to bring down water from natural sources deep within the hills through a series of tunnels and wells that allow for air circulation. These tunnels, dug centuries ago by the local people, have to be maintained regularly as they can quickly fill with mud and rocks.

The towering maple trees of the famous guest house in Pishin


We drove to Khushab in Pishin, where a local support organisation under the BRSP is maintaining two karez. Before they took us to see one of them, they showed us a check dam under construction near the Zarghoon village.
“Once completed, this will collect all the rainfall (from the hill torrents) and store it. The reservoir will then recharge the groundwater in this area, benefitting all the four villages and 800 households in this area,” explained Akbar Tareen, the district programme manager for the BRSP.

Akbar Tareen explaining why small storage reservoirs are so important


Local community working on building the check dam in Khushab


The local villagers grow apple and apricot trees and plant tomatoes and onions. We were told that the groundwater has gone down to 1,000 feet here, and they hope it moves up to 400 feet eventually when the dam is filled during the coming winter rainfall.
“We need these kind of dams everywhere in Balochistan,” Tareen told us.

He added that this dam only cost Rs21 lakhs, with the community providing free labour in lining the walls with rocks. A tube well, we were told, costs between Rs20-25 lakhs, so the former is a much more sustainable and affordable option.


Another benefit of the dam will be stronger water flows in the karez located nearby in the settlement of Murgarki. We walked from our car to the hills to have a closer look, and the first thing I noticed was a large tree growing in the bleak, dusty landscape. Its roots received water from the karez and provided shade to those who come from afar to fetch water. We examined the narrow water tunnel as it came out of the ground and onto the surface. The water was cool; we were told it is full of minerals and is good drinking water.

The lovely shade tree growing right next to the karez


A closer look at the karez in Murgarki, Pishin


Unfortunately, as the karez moves down further into the settlements below, the flowing water gets contaminated as people come to it with their livestock. They even wash their clothes in the same water. The local people also use this water for irrigation, and have centuries-old water rights over the karez, ranging from a few hours to 15 minutes on a weekly basis. According to Mohammad Anwar, a local farmer,
“We can’t refuse anyone who comes to fetch water. This water comes from Allah, it is a free bounty, and there is a belief here that if we refuse anyone they will put a curse on it.”

Munawar explaining how the karez works and their water rights


The local community maintains the karez; a difficult job, as someone has to climb into the wells and tunnels below to clean them.

Workers have to climb into this narrow well and go down to the tunnel below


We were told by the local community that there used to be 32 karez installations in this area. Now, only two are functional, including the one we visited, which is around 200 years old. Nadir Baloch, who heads the BRSP, later informed us that most of the karez in Balochistan have dried out due to groundwater depletion.
“Fine, build the big dams – the country needs them. But we also need these small community built water storage structures that can help us recharge the groundwater,” he explained to us. “These will bring the karez back to life. For that we need funding from the government.”

Journalists meeting the local community in Khushab, Pishin


Dr Danish Mustafa, who teaches at King’s College London and is an expert on the karez system, once explained to me,
“The indigenous management of systems predicated upon extremes. In Balochistan, we have 6,000 years of cultural knowledge of droughts.”

Unfortunately, these indigenous systems of providing water have been replaced by unsustainable tube wells. The tube wells have sucked all the water out of the traditional karez system and have only made a few farmers rich while many others have become paupers. In fact, there has been a lot of migration from the area over time as smaller farmers lost their orchards, their status and their identity. According to Dr Mustafa,
“We should save the karez system where we can… it provides the cushion that keeps farmers anchored to their community.”

The karez system has been tried and tested for thousands of years and given the threat of climate change, particularly in a land like Balochistan, it is now more relevant than ever.
WRITTEN BY: Rina Saeed Khan

The writer is the new Chair of the Islamabad Wildlife Management Board (IWMB). She is an award-winning environmental journalist based in Pakistan. She holds an MA in Environment and Development from SOAS in London as a Chevening Scholar and received the Earth Journalism Award in Copenhagen in 2009 for her climate change reporting.

The views expressed by the writer and the reader comments do not necassarily reflect the views and policies of the Express Tribune.