Dripping away
The water problem in some form or another has been evident in the Indus river system for at least 150 years, and challenges of water management have dogged governments since 1857. Those with long memories will recall the problems associated with waterlogged land in the late 1940s, the rising of the water table and the increases in salinity coupled with a drop in agricultural production. Today the problems we face are even more complex. Global warming is eating away at the Himalayan glaciers that feed much of the Indus system and both Pakistan and India are set to become seriously water-poor nations. Water has become political. At an international level there is a rising level of tension between us and India as this diminishing resource is predicted by some as a likely trigger for a future conflict.
At a provincial level water is now a flashpoint, and its control closely linked to political patronage. Winter rains across the country mostly failed to materialise this year and our stocks of water are low. Dams went to dead level a fortnight before expected. Lower snowfall in the Himalayas and the Karakorums has meant there is less meltwater runoff and at the end of this long 150-year-old chain there are this year's crops – which need watering. Our provinces rarely see eye-to-eye on the water issue. There is a historical trust deficit that has contributed to the failure to build water infrastructures and in times of near-drought – which this is – jealousy, suspicion and rivalry trump any charitable thoughts. On Thursday the Indus River system Authority (IRSA) reopened the Chashma-Jhelum Link Canal (CJLC) on the request of Punjab – contrary to a decision taken a day before and allegedly after the intervention of 'the man at the top' because he knew that his party's vote-bank in southern Punjab would be threatened by a lack of water. Now, political equilibrium is restored, the farmers of southernPunjab get their crops watered and a scarce resource is once again managed by expediency rather than via a process of strategic planning. Political water is a finite resource and one that is perceptibly diminishing across the sub-continent. Effective management of the water problem has, arguably, never been achieved in over 150 years. Both time and water are now of the essence and we have little of either.
At a provincial level water is now a flashpoint, and its control closely linked to political patronage. Winter rains across the country mostly failed to materialise this year and our stocks of water are low. Dams went to dead level a fortnight before expected. Lower snowfall in the Himalayas and the Karakorums has meant there is less meltwater runoff and at the end of this long 150-year-old chain there are this year's crops – which need watering. Our provinces rarely see eye-to-eye on the water issue. There is a historical trust deficit that has contributed to the failure to build water infrastructures and in times of near-drought – which this is – jealousy, suspicion and rivalry trump any charitable thoughts. On Thursday the Indus River system Authority (IRSA) reopened the Chashma-Jhelum Link Canal (CJLC) on the request of Punjab – contrary to a decision taken a day before and allegedly after the intervention of 'the man at the top' because he knew that his party's vote-bank in southern Punjab would be threatened by a lack of water. Now, political equilibrium is restored, the farmers of southern
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