Every year since 2010, which saw the worst floods in the country's history, Pakistan has experienced catastrophic inundations that kill hundreds and wipe out millions of acres of prime farmland, harming the heavily agrarian economy.
Starting when the country was still a part of British-ruled India, engineers embarked upon ambitious projects to harness the water that flows from Kashmir through the length of the country to the Arabian Sea.
Today Pakistan is home to the biggest earth-filled dam in the world at Tarbela, just north of Islamabad, and more than 150 others classed as "large".
With more than 30 percent of its power coming from hydro-electric sources, such structures are also crucial to help alleviate a chronic energy crisis which has put a brake on industrial productivity.
But a campaign for non-structural measures to contain flooding is gradually gaining ground - with proponents arguing that man-made interventions can, counter-intuitively, exacerbate the floods.
There are two major arguments - the build up of sediment in a dam shortens its useful lifespan, while the slowing of rivers due to structures mean that silt accumulates, decreasing their capacity.
Kaisar Bengali, a career technocrat who advises the chief minister of Balochistan, said: "Dams create floods, dams don't prevent floods.
"When the floods occur, if you have a storage area you can store the water in that area. Dams have a reservoir so they create a lake. Barrages divert the water into canals. They don't have a reservoir.
"But they don't just block water, they block silt as well and as a result the river bed rises. So in 2010 the water that passed through the Indus was less that in 1976 yet it created more flooding because the river had risen 6-7 feet."
A 2000 research paper commission by conservation group WWF that looked at various countries warned of similar consequences and further noted the drainage of wetlands as well as deforestation associated with dams led to a loss of natural sponges.
Decisions on whether to release water are also subject to opposing concerns - dam managers may seek to keep reservoirs full for energy generation, whereas an early release could lessen flood impacts.
Mushtaq Gaadi, a water activist and academic at Islamabad's Quaid-e-Azam university, noted that some of this year's worst flooding occurred in the Chenab river, where a key structure has lost significant discharge capacity due to the build-up of sediment.
"The most important and critical infrastructure at Chenab is Trimmu (barrage) which was constructed during the British era.
"Its discharge capacity has been drastically reduced. It was not capable of discharging more than 600,000 cusecs. Mainly due to the rising of the river bed level," due to silting.
Dams and barrages are difficult and expensive to de-silt and maintain, forcing Pakistan to turn to help from multilateral lending agencies such as the World Bank and Asian Development Bank.
With the World Bank's aid, Pakistan completed its renovation of the Taunsa barrage in central Punjab province in early 2010 at a cost of $144 million - only to see an embankment upstream of the structure catastrophically fail when the floods came in August.
This year, Pakistan was again forced to blow up protective dykes to divert flood waters away from cities to less-densely populated areas - which Gaadi said was another sign of a failing strategy.
Beyond their disposition to fail, dams are also responsible for luring people into harm's way by creating a false sense of security in areas that are naturally fertile flood zones. Many of 2014's almost 300 deaths could have been prevented had villagers not been living in such areas, said Gaadi.
Despite the noted shortcomings, the government believes that more, not fewer dams are the solution, and has vowed to press ahead with new projects - such as the Diamer-Bhasha Dam in northern Gilgit Baltistan, projected to cost some $14 billion.
Shafiqur Rehman, an environmental sciences professor at the University of Peshawar, said it showed a lack of long-term planning.
"First we build dykes and spend millions of rupees on them and then we blow them up and drown people to save cities or other areas," he said.
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Dams provide tremendous direct benefits in form of irrigation, hydropower, flood control, and many others. They have been the main reason for the rise in agriculture economies of the world since the beginning of 20th century which in turn laid the foundation of industrial revolution. It has become fashionable to criticise dams based on insufficient information, pseudo scientific theories, faulty analyses and outright intellectual dishonesty. Without Tarbela shaving of peak of 2010 floods by 200,000 cusecs and it could have done more, the devastation downstream would have been much more. Similarly, Mangla absorbed flood from River Jhelum while River Chenab caused devastation as Pakistan didnot have a dam on it as there is no suitable site. Mohenjodaro and Harappa were buried under huge floods when there were no dams and similar fate can befall our cities if we dont sufficiently dam Indus. There is no doubt that dams have some negative environmental impacts for which proper mitigation measures need to be taken. But the benefits far outweigh the negatives and countries like Pakisatn can ill afford to indulge too deeply in environmental luxury.
All the rivers flowlng from India to Pakistan are perinial river originating from glaciers . Deforestation in the down streem areas is the main cause of siltation where as in the upstreem zone which is devoid of vegetation mainly constitute the encatchment zone of these rivers are situated in India can be regarded as best location of holding the water during mansoon period . The only risk involved is that these areas are located in sismic zone and hence a structure which can bear 9 rictor shock should only be allowed to come up otherwise there will be always a great risk for both India and Pakistan .
Wow. There is so much misinformation here. Pakistani rivers are glacial and carry enormous amounts of sediment. Remember the snaking pattern of rivers in Pakistan, its because of sediment deposition over thousands of years. The sediment accumulates in the existing river bed, which raises it, causing the river to bend and carve a new path for itself. Over millennia, this resulted in the snaking pattern that you see in our rivers today. Dams, on the other hand, block this sediment from reaching downstream slowing this natural process. Also, Dams don't magically slow the flow of the river downstream.
TL;DR: Sediment deposition downstream is a natural process and is only diminished by new dams. Technocrats, are not geologists, and are no authority on such processes.