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The waters of the Indus Basin rivers had been used for irrigation purposes even before the development of the present canal system by British engineers in the early 19th century. There were numerous inundation canals in the Indus Valley, which diverted supplies directly from the rivers during the high flow periods, without any diversion works across the riverbed. The local community, tribes, or states managed these inundation canals.
From the middle of the 19th century onwards, irrigation was gradually extended through the introduction of improved methods and the construction of diversion works across the rivers. A number of agreements for the sharing of river waters took place. The most significant of these have been the Indus Basin Treaty (1960) between India and Pakistan and the Water Apportionment Accord (1991) between the four provinces of Pakistan.
In August 1947, when South Asia was divided into two independent countries, there existed in the area, one of the most highly developed irrigation systems in the world. The system catered to approximately 37 million acres of land, supplying it with the waters of the Indus rivers. All available water supplies were allocated to various princely States and provinces, in conformity with the principle of equitable apportionment of waters.
The Indus System of Rivers in the Indus Basin comprises of the Indus and its five main tributaries i.e. Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, Beas and Sutlej. They all combine into one river near Mithan Kot in Pakistan and flow into the Arabian Sea, south of Karachi. The total area of the Indus Basin is roughly 365,000 miles2. Most of it lies in Pakistan and the remaining is part of occupied Jammu and Kashmir, India, China and Afghanistan.
At the time of Independence, 31 out 37 million acres in Pakistan were irrigated. The boundary line between the two countries being partitioned was drawn without any regard to the existing irrigation works. It was, however, affirmed by the Boundary Commission. Representatives of the affected zones expressly agreed before the Arbitral Tribunal that the authorized zones in the common water supply would continue to be respected.

By Qasim Mahmood

After the formalization of the World Conservation Strategy in 1980, the Government of Pakistan requested IUCN to help develop a National Conservation Strategy(NCS). After a rather extensive process, NCS was eventually completed and approved by Government of Pakistan in 1992. In 1982, an explanatory mission from the IUCN Headquarters laid the foundation for the IUCN Programme in Pakistan. In 1985, a one person IUCN Country office was established in Karachi to initiate the implementation of the NCS. Since then IUCN Pakistan has grown into the largest country programme with five programmed offices and a number of officers in the field.

IUCN’s mission is to influence, encourage and assist societies throughout the world to conserve the integrity and diversity of nature and to ensure that any use of natural resources is equitable and ecologically sustainable.

To ensure sustainable development of Pakistan’s natural and local resources, IUCN Pakistan aims at:

Integration of environment and development;

support to institutional and human resource development for environment;

facilitation for the creation of a supportive policy and legal framework;

increasing popular support for the environment

IUCN works closely with the government at the national and provincial levels as well as with civil society at large. Following a two pronged approach, IUCN: advocates and technically assists the development of the conservation strategies; and supports strategy  implementation by providing assistance in policy and legislative reforms, capacity development , environmental assessment , awareness and education, and selected field projects.

By Qasim Mahmood

Established in 1970, WWF-Pakistan is the largest conservation Non-Government Organization (NGO) in the country. Its staff of over 71 people is based in the Lahore headquarters, a network of 6 regional offices in Gilgit, Islamabad, Karachi, Muzaffarabad, Peshawar and Quetta and in 12 project offices in Ayubia, Chitral, Jhangar, Sonmiani, and Zhob.

WWF-Pakistan is one of the fastest growing offices of the world wide WWF network, which includes 31 National Organisations and Associates, 22 Programme officers, and a coordinating international Secretariat located in Gland Switzerland. It is supported by over 5.3 million individual members all over the world.

Mission of WWF:

WWF-Pakistan contributes towards conserving Pakistan’s unique natural diversity in a way that takes into account the future needs of its people. Along with the rest of the WWF global network , WWF-P is working to achieve the conservation of nature and ecological processes by:

1) Preserving genetic, species and ecosystem diversity.

2)Ensuring that the use of renewable natural resources is sustainable both now and in the future.

3) Promoting actions to reduce pollution, and wasteful exploitation and consumption of resources and energy.

By

Qasim Mahmood

LEAD International was established in 1991 by the Rockefeller Foundation. The goal of this independent NGO was to foster global network of future decision makers that would facilitate environmentally sustainable and socially equitable use of earth’s resources. To quote Ms Marie Angelique Savane, the organization’s president in 1999, LEAD was ” seen as a way to ensure that sustainable development would become a global culture”. LEAD was established as Rockefeller Foundation Project and continues to benefit from the Foundation’s generous support.

LEAD Pakistan, one of the 14 country/regional programs of LEAD International, was established in1995 to bring leadership development program to Pakistan. The nonprofit and nonpartisan organization is currently engaged in training its tenth cohort of Associates (trainee workers), while also committing it self to a range of other activities

We three friends, Qasim Mahmood, Ghani Haider, and Salik N. Chaturbhai attended the Young Leaders Conference 2008 in Karachi and as our post YLC project we decided to plant mangrove trees on the coastal area of Karachi with the help of World Wildlife Federation (WWF). Qasim got in touch with the manager of conservation Mr. Babar Hussain from WWF with our proposal. After their approval we got in touch with International Education and Resource Network Pakistan (I earn Pakistan for providing a Rs 15000 sponsorship for the project.) This was mainly due to the efforts of Qasim. After much running around for getting money and appointments from the concerned people we succeeded in getting a date fixed for the project.

Our main aim was to inform the people of the villages along the coastal areas about the importance of Mangrove trees. Our objective was to tell them about the benefit of these trees to them, to their businesses and to the generations to come. We included the people from the surrounding areas so that the task of planting trees could be carried out by them in the near future even if WWF stops it. We were  successful in taking their short sighted thinking of cutting trees for fuel to making them think how successful mangroves can be for them and the society and we were helped in this greatly by Mr.Babar Hussain.

On Saturday 30th August 2008 we reached WWF wetland centre at Sandspit at 10.30 a.m. At 11 O’ Clock the project commenced with a brief awareness lecture by Ghani Haider which was based on what we had learned at YLC 2008. It was greatly appreciated by the locals as well as the representatives of WWF and “I earn Pakistan”. The people at WWF then made a convincing presentation about mangroves to the locals for about 30 minutes. We then proceeded towards the site of plantation which was about 1.5 km away. The WWF arranged 70 Mangrove plants and about 5000 seeds for plantation. We along with WWF and people of Kaka Pir managed to plant these 5000 seeds and 70 plants in about 75 minutes. The locals, especially the women showed great enthusiasm in performing the task. One surprising thing to note is that more women than men participated in this activity. We then went back to the wetland centre where every one was served a delicious meal of biryani and cold drinks. By half past 2, the thank yous and good byes were said with a feeling that we all had done a noble deed for our country even though it was on a small scale.

As mentioned above we were sponsored Rs 15000/- only by I earn Pakistan. Our project was greatly supported by WWF and the combined efforts of everyone gave us the strength and determination to perform this task successfully.

By Salik Nazim and Qasim Mahmood

 

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One of many micro windmills set up by CWPPP in rural areas of Sindh

While its neighbour India has a installed wind generation capacity of 8696 MW, giving it the 4th Largest Wind Capacity in the world and the highest in developing world, Pakistan’s development in this sector is still infantile. Three different organisations in Pakistan are currently conducting feasibility studies on wind-powered electricity generation. These are: the Pakistan Council of Renewable Energy Technologies (Pacret), the country’s meteorological office, and the UN-led Commercialisation of Wind Power Potential in Pakistan (CWPPP). While all three have different approaches to the issue, the underlying problem they are all trying to tackle is the same: to ensure that Wind Energy is a viable source of energy for hundreds of thousands of people living along the 1120 km long coastline, too remote for the main power grid to light up their lives.

Pacret has currently set up 14 micro windmills donated bu China accross rural areas of Sindh.  These windmills range in their power generating capacity from 2.5 Kw to 300 W. Cables now supply electricity to light up bulbs and fans in people’s home who had to depend on kerosene lamp previously.

“Our lives have changed,” said Muhammad Idris, the administrator of an agricultural farm in the southern Sindh Province. “This light is useful for walking at night-time, also for guarding the place,” said Idris in the village of Deh-e Pir Jahri, 100 km from the port city of Karachi. According to the Director of Pacret, Ghulam Umar Sarhandi stated that about half of 10million people living along the Karachi Coast will never be connected to national Grid due to very high infrastructure costs, thus making Wind Power the only viable option.

However the development of Wind Power requires Wind Patterns of an Area for last 10 Years which are not present for many of the areas with High Wind Potential. In its initiative, the meteorology office is carrying out wind mapping, or trying to collect wind data. “We have installed 45 wind-measuring stations along the coast of Sindh and Balochistan,” the office’s chairman, Qamaruz Zaman Chaudhry, told IRIN in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad.

According to Qamar u Zaman Chaudary, if the data shows potential for Generating Cheap electricity through wind power, it will lure private sector to set up wind mills. Although the data collected so far supports this notion, private sector has not made a substantial investment in this sector.
The CWPPP was launched in 2000 by the United Nations Office for Project Services in collaboration with the government’s energy conservation programme. Wind data collection commenced in December 2001. “Our objective is to find out the potential and afterwards to exploit that potential,” Asif Qayum Qureshi, the national coordinator of the project, told IRIN in Islamabad.

The aim of the project is to examine whether a 10MW- to 15-MW-powered windmill farm can be set up in the harbour town of Pasni in Balochistan Province. The current installed electricity generation capacity at Pasni of about 15 MW is based on diesel-power generation and demand is expected to grow by 11 percent annually. The town’s population is estimated at 50,000.

GHARO WIND POWER PLANT

Gharo Wind Power Plant is planned to be built in the persistently wind-swept corridor of Gharo, Sindh, Pakistan. This will be one of the first wind power project in Pakistan.

The turbine manufacturer Fuhrländer of Germany and Access Energy Inc of United States have signed an agreement with Alternative Energy Development Board (AEDB) of Pakistan, to manufacture wind turbines in Pakistan to help establish wind power projects. US-based Access Energy would finance the project to set up a 50 MW wind power plant along the general wind corridor in Gharo, while the German Company, Fuhrländer, would transfer the technology to Pakistan for manufacturing of wind turbines along with its accessories to set up a minimum of 1000 MW power plants.[1][2]Halcrow Pakistan has compiled the Enivoronmental Impact Assessment for this project.[3]

PROBLEMS

Although there is a huge potential for Wind Power as a Cheap Renewable and clean source of energy in Pakistan, there are a number of issues at hand which need to be addressed. First, many of the areas with Wind Potential face logistic problems. There are no roads and many areas are unaccessible. To address this problem the government should provide road accessto these areas linking them with the coastal highway and other major roads in Pakistan to expedite the development process.

The other major issue which has discouraged many investors is the security situation in Balochistan. Given the alarmingly high number of attacks on railway lines and pipelines in the area, it is difficult to say that wind power plants can run without under constant threat of attack by armed men in the area. This situation can only be tackled politically for peace in the area will contribute to economic development of the region as a cheap source of wind power.

Lastly lack of credit and high interest rates have prevented many companies from setting up wind farms. In USA the Wind Power Rush in California was mainly driven through liberal tax cuts and easy credit availability to the wind sector.

Clearly all 3 issues are equally important to address if Pakistan wants to expedite the development of wind power and reduce the over reliance on import of fosssil fuels which are eroding the country’s foreign exchange reserves. In the current political scenario, it is imperative for the government to pay serious attention in this regard.

By Qasim Mahmood

Pollution is a major environmental problem in the most developing as well as developed countries. Most of these countries such as U.S have been quite successful in solving these problems by passing out certain environmental laws and producing alternatives to such sources which cause a lot of pollution such as coal and oil power stations. There are also laws which make sure that the waste from the industries is being disposed off correctly and is not in any way harmful to the environment. However in Pakistan the pollution problems have been rising since it got its independence. Very few people have concern about the negative effects of pollution on themselves as well as their environment. Hence this problem is increasing day by day which may lead in the destruction of our natural environment as well as our own. In Pakistan there are three major sources of pollution

1. Air Pollution: in Pakistan the most common source of air pollution is mainly vehicles whose exhaust fumes pollute the air. Unlike other developed countries where there are catalyc converters and efficient vehicles which may cause less pollution, the situation in Pakistan is totally opposite. As most of the people are poor they don’t have enough money to repair or spend money on their vehicles so that they can become environment friendly. Even the car manufacturers don’t make their cars much environment friendly and the people are forced to buy these cars. More fuel is burned as most roads of Pakistan are broken and there are a lot of traffic jams which increases the journey time. Many industries in big cities such as Karachi and Lahore give out harmful pollutants such as sulphur dioxide and carbon monoxide. The government and the authorities take little concern about these industries. As a result of this the sky of Lahore and Karachi are covered with thick smog .This may lead to many respiratory diseases and may also be harmful to the animals living in such places. Even in Islamabad, the cleanest city in Pakistan I could see thick smog over the city from the Margalla hills and while traveling to Murree there was so much of exhaust fumes from vehicles that we had to keep our car windows closed.

2. Water Pollution: this is a major problem in Pakistan. There are many sources of water pollution in Pakistan. Most of them are found in Karachi as it is an area of industries. Although it is a government policy to filter the industrial water and then release it into the sea many industries here are dumping contaminated water in seas thereby increasing the threat of

extinction of marine life as well as polluting the water. Almost the whole of city’s sewerage is dumped into rivers and the sea. As a result of this Karachi is facing many problems in the access of clean water and most parts of the city are still without water. Even in my home we get 2 small tankers weekly as there is no water in the supply. The oil spill incident has increased the amount of pollution in the sea as well as has caused most of the beaches to be polluted. It is said that the oil spill disaster from Tasman Spirit has killed hundreds and thousands of fishes as well as destroyed much of the marine life. It has also caused eye infections and respiratory problems to those living near the sea. Further leakages in pipelines have polluted the clean water which we have so little of.

3. Land Pollution: As Pakistan is not a rich country, it doesn’t have enough money to spend on waste disposal systems. As a result most of the home waste and other kinds of wastage is usually thrown away on empty plots next to the houses and is then burned which may be harmful to the people living in the area. Only less than 5% of the waste is recycled and most of it is disposed directly on the ground. There are only a few garbage cans along the roads so people living far away have to dispose off their waste somewhere else. This attracts flies which then spread diseases. Apart from this, the rubbish thrown would disintegrate in a 1000 years from now. Hence an increase in land pollution may in turn slowly destroy our natural environment which is already at risk.

SOLUTIONS TO THE POLLUTION PROBLEMS

Here are a few solutions to the pollution problems faced by Pakistan:

Air Pollution:

Instead of using private cars we must use public transport more often and walk for short distances.

There should be a greenbelt constructed in big cities such as Karachi. The trees in the green belt would reduce the amount of fumes in the air and give out clean oxygen.

We should use unleaded petrol in our vehicles. It is already available at most petrol stations. Unleaded petrol is more efficient for the car and is less harmful to the environment.

Most of the leading car manufacturers should install catalyc converters in their

2. Water pollution:

a)The factory waste should be first filtered and then disposed properly into sea or river. If this is not done, then the government should take legal action against them.

b)Instead of using clean water, we can use the filtered industrial water for flushing toilets, watering the plants and washing the cars.

c)The government should ask the local citizens for proper beach cleaning once in a year. Besides it should also fine those people who throw their waste into the sea or river.

d)There must be a regular cleaning of all the canals and channels by the government workers.

e) The government should pass strict environmental laws concerning oil spill

f)We must all cooperate with one another to save our marine life as much as possible.

3.Land Pollution:

a)Instead of throwing all our rubbish away we can give some of it for recycling such as old newspapers etc. we must also reuse polythene bags for other purposes such as for carrying things.

b) There must be a landfill area where all the rubbish can be disposed off. There must also be incinerators where the remaining garbage can be burned.

c)The government should place garbage cans and bins in many places so that people can throw their rubbish there.

d)We can play a part by throwing plastic wrappers and other kinds of waste into the garbage cans and not on the roads.

e) We can also help by keeping our environment around us clean as well as educating others to do so.

f) All the shop keepers must use paper bags instead of polythene ones. These are more environments friendly and can be recycled.

By Qasim Mahmood


The Right Bank Outfall Drain Project being dug next to Haleji Lake in Sindh is a serious threat to the wetland, which is a famous bird watching site. The wetland is already under severe threat from inadequate water. Both the right and left outfall drains are a serious threat to many of the Sindh’s fast drying wetlands. The RBOD project was started without adequate environmental assessment of the project or the formal approval of Sindh Wildlife Department.The construction of the unlined drain is a major violation of the wildlife sanctuary status awarded to the lake, also classified as a Ramsar site, the highest nature conservation honour that a wetland may receive. Talking to Dawn, Sindh wildlife conservator Hussain Bakhsh Bhaagat admitted the construction of the RBOD within the limits of the lake was a serious violation of rules.

“Both drains are the federal government’s projects being executed by the Water and Power Development Authority (Wapda).

“The Sindh Wildlife Department had been raising concerns and informing Wapda about the likely damage the drains might cause, asking it to at least line the drain. But, no heed was paid to our requests,” he said.

Both drains, he pointed out, had destroyed a number of wetlands of Sindh. “Most lakes in Badin have dried up while many in other districts, for instance, Larkana and Sanghar, are being wiped off. The adverse impact of the LBOD is known to everybody,” he said, adding that the damage was being caused by the seepage as the drains were 20 to 30 feet below the level of the wetland areas.

“The drains were meant to be non-perennial, but were made perennial. The RBOD is hardly 50 to 100 feet from the lake,” he further said.

Sad state

Haleji Lake’s present status is saddening for any nature lover. The charred trunks of a large number of surrounding trees, the large portions of the lake choked with aquatic grass and weeds, the ongoing digging for a sewerage drain, the daytime boat fishing along with open cattle grazing in the dry sections of the lake make one wonder what is actually ‘protected’ at the so-called wildlife sanctuary.

Situated about 80 kilometres from Karachi, off the National Highway, the wildlife sanctuary is open to all sorts of abuse though it is manned by three organisations: the irrigation department, the SWD and the Karachi Water and Sewerage Board. Nobody, however, owns it in reality.

The freshwater lake, with an area of 6.59 square miles, still attracts about 200 to 300 visitors every week, especially in the summer. However, there is hardly any facility for visitors. The old huts are in poor shape and the new ones set up by the SWD could not be made functional for want of electricity. Besides, there is no sweeper or dustbins at the site.

“It’s wrong to blame visitors for the wrongdoings since we are not helping them in any way. There are no toilets and we have no choice but to let visitors use the restrooms in the SWD information centre. Visitors also complain that there is no canteen here,” says an SWD employee posted at the lake.

In the absence of any service for visitors, what people have been doing at the sanctuary is deplorable. One can see a large number of trees with hollow trunks that were burnt while being used as a fireplace. “This was a past practice. Now we have set up a few concrete fireplaces around the lake and this practice is being checked,” said an SWD staffer when questioned about the destruction of trees.

This reporter could not get any written material about the lake in the information centre. Even the stuffed species in the museum were not named. There were no trained guides and one had to depend on the half-baked knowledge of SWD staff that seemed powerless to check any violations of the sanctuary. Pointing out the reasons for poor management, SWD staff accused the irrigation department of not releasing enough water into the lake, which resulted in the acute decline of the number of migratory birds. About the weaknesses on their part, a staffer said: “There is an acute shortage of staff and those who work are ill-equipped to perform efficiently. How can you protect the whole sanctuary without any logistic support?”

It was surprising to see that certain species of ducks and a crocodile were kept in enclosures at the sanctuary, supposed to be an open breeding place. Of the eight baby crocodiles placed in the enclosures, only one remains. Others have escaped through a narrow opening inside the enclosure, a staffer revealed. There was also concern about the huge population of an exotic snail accidentally introduced into the lake. Nobody knows what impact it had caused on the lake’s biodiversity.

Environmentalists, who have been warning about the deteriorating conditions of the lake, now believe that time is up for the lake. “The lake is fast dying. The ongoing digging for the LBOD has accelerated the process of degradation caused by reduced supplies of fresh water and high rate of evaporation,” said Jehangir Durrani, an expert of the World Wide Fund for Nature working at the Keenjhar Lake.

According to an SWD official, the water level is hardly nine feet now and what little water is being supplied is often pilfered by landlords.

The SWD version

When contacted, Saeed Baloch, deputy conservator of wildlife, Hyderabad division, said the SWD staff worked hard to ensure the sanctity of the place and people were fined for violations, but 100 per cent output should not be expected with the limited resources the department has.

“The lake area is big, surrounded by 20 to 25 villages having a total population of around 8,000. There is also pressure from visitors. To cater to that, only eight people are posted at the lake. There is no doubt that we need more support and facilities to protect the wildlife sanctuary,” he said, adding that angling was allowed, but boat fishing was banned in the lake.

He insisted that information brochures existed at the SWD centre.

Irrigation dept’s stand

When asked about the reduced water supplies, chief engineer of the Kotri barrage, Manzoor Sheikh, said: “Our first priority is to supply water to the Keenjhar Lake, as it is a source of drinking water for Karachi, and then it meets our agricultural needs. We are already facing water shortage and the lake is supplied water only when it is in surplus.”

It is important to mention here that a great opportunity of reviving Haleji Lake’s past glory was lost when the government started a project to raise the embankments of the Keenjhar Lake in order to increase its capacity for supplies to Karachi. The project is under process these days.

Environmentalists believe that a better option would have been restoring the previous status of the Haleji Lake that once served as a sweet water source to Karachi as the project of raising Keenjhar Lake’s embankments would have adverse ecological impact on the surrounding villages.

Asked why this option was not considered, the Kotri barrage chief engineer said: “the Keenjhar Lake project is my brainchild. I was asked to make a project to increase the lake’s capacity, which I did. Haleji Lake was not in my terms of reference. The KWSB should have thought about it. We are in the process of launching another project to save the villages around Keenjhar Lake from the effects of seepage.”

Hi
I have started this site as an introduction to the environment of Pakistan and the dangers it is facing. I would love to welcome any comments from all of you. If you have any information that you would like to post on this site, kindly email it to me at q_mahmood90@yahoo.com
With best of wishes
Qasim Mahmood