These barrages, along with all other outdated barrages north and south of Sulemanki and Trimmu, have been in need of serious attention for a number of decades, as have the majority of canals, bunds, embankments and spurs along the way. To single out the two aforementioned barrages without simultaneously upgrading all other related components is asking for major trouble, as is the rapid disposal of potentially astronomical amounts of valuable water which is so badly needed for human consumption, agricultural use and for increasing indigenous energy production instead of, in the case of the latter, resorting to costly imports on a long term basis. An increased incidence of extreme climate events as are now globally occurring, does not only mean the likelihood of heavy precipitation during unpredictable monsoons but also an expansion in periods of extreme drought. This, according to experts, could well transform Pakistan from an agricultural to an almost desert nation over the next ‘100 years’.
It would thus, even to the most incompetent of bodies, make more sense to figure out every possible way to capture and then store any ‘excess’ drop of water rather than too guarantee its swift dispersal downstream, where its speeded up flow could damage, if not totally wreck, water systems to the south, submerging already battered villages and farmlands in the process; to say nothing of the people and livestock that live there.
It has long been forecast that the next world war will be ignited by a paucity of water. Ever-reducing river flows from India, combined with shrinking glaciers in our north and clearly evident extended periods of annual drought in agricultural regions, highlight a dire need to conserve and, wherever possible, add to our currently inadequate water stocks. In that context, it was time (in fact the time has long gone but something has to be done) for all provincial governments as well as the federal government itself, to take seriously cognisable steps towards ensuring some workable form of water management and conservation. This is the only way that we will be able to cope with what may come in the future. On the surface, at least, the Punjab government is set on proving its track record of making dangerous mistakes.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 4th, 2011.
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The world war would not wait for the waters to dry up in the region. The next world war will be triggered form the Af-Pak region where there is the most combustible combination of "Armed to the teeth lawless tribesmen", "Rabble rousing extremists clerics" and of course "Generals hobnobbing with these elements while keeping one finger firmly on the nuclear button".