Govt must formulate plan against Indian IWT violations

By Asghar Ali Mubarak

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister’s Coordinator on Climate Change Romina Khurshid Alam on Wednesday said land degradation due to rising impacts of climate change was a serious risk to Pakistan’s food and water security amid Indian violations of Indus Water Treaty (IWT).
She was addressing the Commission on Science and Technology for Sustainable Development in the South (COMSATS)’s High-Level Panel Discussion on UN World Environment Day under the theme Land Restoration, Desertification and Drought Resilience.
Romina said the country was facing the worst impacts of climate change that emanated interconnected challenges of food security, water scarcity, and land degradation.
“Land degradation is damaging millions of hectares land annually and forcing millions of masses to displace around the world. Agriculture is the life one of Pakistan and land degradation would cast serious impacts coupled with forest degradation that would further aggravate the problem,” she said. The PM’s Coordinator mentioned that Indian construction of dams on rivers providing water to Pakistan was also a concern for the latter as a low riparian country.
She added that declining soil quantity and salinization directly caused reduced crop yields that was driving poverty, and rural to urban migration.
Romina noted that sustainable development was only possible through a holistic policy initiative to address land degradation whereas resource pooling for technology and capacity building of farmers on use of modern technology solutions was pertinent for improving crop resilience.
She urged partners to provide platform in tandem with Ministry of Climate Change to scientists for knowledge sharing. She highlighted the Ministry’s various projects intended to enhance climate resilience, mitigate land degradation and forest degradation addressing community and biodiversity resilience collectively.
She said the local communities and indigenous people have tremendous knowledge that could be used to devise strategies to address land degradation. She demanded all to pledge to empower local communities, foster greener collaborations for supporting each other to counter land degradation, deforestation and drought mitigation.
In his welcome remarks, Executive Director COMSATS, Ambassador Mohammad Nafees Zakaria said World Environment Day was an important event and the dialogue was a manifestation of sincere commitment of the government to the cause of environmental preservation.