Water crisis

Letter April 06, 2025
Water crisis

The worsening water crisis in Sindh demands immediate attention before it escalates into an irreversible disaster. The province’s groundwater levels are plummeting at an alarming rate due to excessive extraction, poor management and climate change. If left unchecked, this crisis will cripple agriculture, threaten livelihoods and exacerbate urban water shortages.

Sindh’s agrarian economy, which feeds millions, relies heavily on groundwater. However, unchecked tube-well usage and inefficient irrigation practices have led to severe depletion, forcing farmers to dig deeper wells which often encounter saline water. This not only increases costs but also degrades soil fertility.

Major cities like Karachi, Hyderabad and Sukkur face acute water stress, with residents relying on expensive and unreliable tanker supplies. The situation is dire in rural areas, where women and children walk miles to fetch contaminated water.

Climate change has worsened the crisis, with erratic rainfall and prolonged droughts reducing surface water availability. Meanwhile, unchecked urbanisation and industrial waste further pollute remaining reserves. The lack of effective policies, poor enforcement of water regulations and political apathy have allowed the problem to fester.

To avert this catastrophe, the government must enforce laws to penalise illegal extractions; promote rainwater harvesting and aquifer recharge projects; invest in modern irrigation (drip/sprinkler systems); and launch public awareness campaigns on water conservation.

Sindh cannot afford delay. Policymakers, media and civil society must unite to implement sustainable solutions before our water runs dry.

Dr Pervez Ahmed Shar
Khairpur Mirs