Personal View site logo
Make sure to join PV on Telegram or Facebook! Perfect to keep up with community on your smartphone.
Please, support PV!
It allows to keep PV going, with more focus towards AI, but keeping be one of the few truly independent places.
Hunger: Issues in Pakistan due to heat
  • On Thursday, May 12, a heat wave in the southern Pakistani province of Sindh, where the country's largest agglomeration, Karachi, with 14 million inhabitants, is located, a warning was issued about a possible increase in temperature to plus 50 degrees. Now it reaches plus 48 degrees. The high temperature leads not only to numerous fires and huge loads on the electrical networks, which in Pakistan should be noted and without natural disasters do not work in the best way. The main trouble of what is happening is not even that hundreds, and maybe thousands of people die due to heat stroke. The main problem is that the main water artery - the Indus River is getting shallower, the volume of water in the river, according to some estimates, has fallen by 65%. What does this mean? In Pakistan, 90% of all land is irrigated, i.e. require well-established operation of irrigation canals fed by water from the Indus basin and its tributaries, the total length of this system is 60,000 km. In addition, about half of the contribution to agriculture is made by pastoralism, which means that drought destroys pastures and leads to the death of animals. Thus, farmers and livestock breeders are already suffering losses and will continue to bear them.

    Pakistan is a predominantly agricultural country, half of the total population is employed in agriculture and the contribution of this sector to the economy is equal to 20% of the country's GDP. The staple food crops of Pakistanis are rice and grains. Of the 220 million people living in Pakistan, 64% live in rural areas - 140 million people, of these 140 million people 4/5 are constantly food insecure, it's not that they are starving, but that the calorie content of their diet is at its lowest level, almost on the brink of survival. This means that 112 million people in Pakistan - half of the country's population - are constantly one or two steps away from hunger. And now a country dependent on irrigation for 90% has lost two-thirds of the water support of the Indus. Pakistan is a food exporter, but a drought can change everything, because lack of water will have a detrimental effect on future crops. While it is difficult to give specific estimates of grain losses, for example, in the Indian Punjab, due to the heat, the grain harvest is expected to be 25 percent less (50% according to some estimates), but for India this is not so critical because the heat wave did not affect the rice-growing south of Hindustan, and therefore India has reserves. But Pakistan does not have such a luxury, Punjab - currently scorched by the sun - is the breadbasket of the country, and the longer the heat lasts, the lower the water level in the channels that deliver water drops and the less the coming harvest of rice and wheat. A 25% reduction in the wheat harvest means that out of 25 million tons of grain, Pakistan will lose 7-8 million. And in poor countries, bread, especially in times of famine, for the poor is the backbone of nutrition, which is diluted with rice and corn on good days, here only these cultures will also suffer. For them, I cannot give an accurate estimate of the losses, but it can be expected that out of 10.8 million tons of rice, an extremely moisture-loving crop, and 6.3 million tons of corn, an ordinary crop, they will harvest much less, which means that the army of the hungry will increase.

    There is no doubt that in order to save the population, Pakistan will stop exporting food, but the government will not be able to do anything with the fall of the Indus. In Pakistan, a country where half of the population eats wholly or partly from the fields rather than being bought from a store, burned grain or livestock dying in the pastures would mean starvation. It is unlikely that people will just sit and watch what is happening. In Sindh, farmers and pastoralists have already taken to the streets to demand a solution to the water problem. The rainy season is still at least a month away, and these kinds of food riots are likely to become more numerous. Even if the rains come sooner, Pakistan may have to turn to help to compensate for losses in agriculture, as it is tight on its own money (recently concluded a loan agreement with Saudi Arabia for $ 8 billion). And the whole world will have to save Pakistan, because this is not Sri Lanka, which you can score on, but a nuclear power whose instability threatens the security of the entire region. The only question is whether the world community will succeed with the necessary support.