Pakistan declares climate and agricultural emergency as monsoon floods intensify

Update Pakistan declares climate and agricultural emergency as monsoon floods intensify
Shafiullah, carries his children as he wades through a flooded street to catch a rescue boat during evacuations from the flooded area, following monsoon rains and rising water levels of the Chenab River, in Daryapur village on the outskirts of Jalalpur Pirwala, Punjab province, Pakistan, on September 9, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Updated 10 September 2025
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Pakistan declares climate and agricultural emergency as monsoon floods intensify

Pakistan declares climate and agricultural emergency as monsoon floods intensify
  • Prime minister says cabinet has declared twin emergencies as floods leave 928 dead nationwide and thousands injured
  • Karachi rescues continue after heavy rains, four deaths reported in Malir, Indus River flows top 500,000 cusecs at Guddu Barrage

KARACHI/ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Wednesday declared a climate emergency and an agricultural emergency as weeks of monsoon flooding swept through multiple provinces and swelled southern river systems, threatening major crops and forcing mass rescues in Karachi, the country’s largest city and financial hub.

Nationwide, the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) said on Tuesday 929 people have died in floods, rains and related incidents since June 26, when the monsoon season began. Thousands more have been injured and millions displaced.

Punjab province, Pakistan’s most populous and its main farming belt, has borne the brunt of the latest monsoon spell which started late August, with the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) reporting 66 deaths, 21 million people displaced or evacuated, and around 1.95 million acres of farmland inundated after weeks of record rains that have swelled the Chenab, Ravi and Sutlej rivers.

“The floods have caused a lot of destruction,” Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif told a cabinet meeting in Islamabad on Wednesday. “Today, after the consultation, the cabinet is announcing a climate emergency and an agricultural emergency.”

Sharif said the government would form a high-level committee led by Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal, bringing together federal ministers, senior bureaucrats and the chief secretaries of all four provinces to coordinate relief and recovery. He added that an apex-level meeting with provincial chief ministers would also be convened to shape policy.

While the federal government would “do its part,” he stressed, the provinces must contribute as well:

“Only together can we reduce this damage.”

The prime minister’s announcement came as the Pakistan Business Forum (PBF) had already urged authorities to declare an agricultural emergency, warning that the floods had destroyed up to 60 percent of the rice crop and badly damaged sugarcane and cotton. The group said national output targets for rice, maize, sugarcane and cotton were now “in jeopardy,” with the country possibly forced to import as much as 5 million tons of wheat to stabilize prices.

A preliminary PBF assessment put crop losses at 60 percent of rice, 30 percent of sugarcane and 35 percent of cotton, with farmland damage spread across Punjab’s key divisions including Faisalabad, Bahawalpur and Sahiwal. Ahmad Jawad, the group’s chief organizer, said the disaster could shave 0.8 percent off GDP this year.

Brokerage firm Arif Habib revised down its growth forecast to 3.2 percent, estimating agriculture losses of Rs302 billion ($1.0 billion), nearly three-fourths of the total Rs409 billion ($1.4 billion) flood damages.

The brokerage also warned of import pressures of nearly $1.93 billion in fiscal 2026, including more than 700,000 tons of cotton imports costing over $1 billion, and said inflation could rise to 7.2 percent from earlier estimates of 5.5 percent as shortages push up food prices.

SINDH RISKS

Floodwaters from Punjab’s swollen rivers are now coursing south into Sindh province through the Indus, raising the risk of further inundation in riverine communities and major towns. The water levels

Authorities at the Guddu Barrage in upper Sindh reported more than 500,000 cusecs of water flowing through on Wednesday, underscoring the threat to downstream districts.

In Karachi, the provincial capital of Sindh province, more than 300 people have been rescued after hours-long downpours inundated low-lying areas this week, according to Sindh’s disaster authority on Wednesday.

“So far, 325 people have been rescued,” Sindh PDMA Director General Salman Shah said.

Pakistan Navy said in a statement it is actively engaged in relief operations across flood-hit areas of Punjab, Sindh and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. The navy said it has promptly deployed hovercrafts in the flood affected districts of Kashmore, Ghotki, Sukkur and Shikarpur in Sindh to evacuate affected people.

“These hovercrafts are capable of operating across land, water and swampy areas,” the navy said. “In these districts of Sindh, 4,335 people and over 125 livestock have been successfully evacuated.”

A local charity reported four deaths after a van was swept into a stream, and Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah told reporters that four people were killed in Malir during the night. He said people were rescued from a truck near the Malir River in the morning.

Meanwhile, the charity also reported that two people had died after falling into a gutter near the Port Qasim terminal in the city. The deceased persons were aged between 30 to 35 years, it said.

Fresh rainfall readings on Wednesday showed 31.5 millimeters in the upscale Defense Housing Authority neighborhood, 18 millimeters at an air force base in the city’s west, 15 millimeters in the port district of Keamari, and over 13 millimeters in northern suburbs

Rescue 1122, a government emergency service, said evacuations were carried out in several flooded neighborhoods including Surjani, Abdul Rahim Goth and Saadi Town. Sindh’s chief minister toured affected areas with senior ministers, urging citizens to follow government safety instructions.

The National Disaster Management Authority warned of more rain over the next 24–48 hours in parts of Sindh, including Karachi, Hyderabad and Sukkur, and in neighboring Balochistan province, with risks of urban flooding, traffic disruptions and flash floods in mountain valleys.

Officials urged residents to avoid unnecessary travel, keep vehicles in safe areas and stay clear of submerged roads and underpasses.

In its latest report, PDMA Sindh said 2,656 people had been displaced in the last 12 hours, taking the cumulative figure of people displaced due to the floods since Aug. 28 to 149,683. A total 528 relief camps have been set up in the province and 169 medical camps. It said authorities treated 8,068 patients during the last 12 hours, taking the cumulative number of patients treated since Aug. 28 to 63,427.

The report further said 10,933 livestock were evacuated to safer locations in the last 12 hours while taking the total number of livestock rescued to 410,951.

RIVERS

In its latest report on river flows at 130pm on Wednesday, Punjab’s disaster authority reported heavy flows across the eastern tributaries of the Indus River. The Chenab was carrying 250,005 cusecs at Trimmu Headworks near Jhang, while on the Ravi the highest volumes were 100,622 cusecs at Sidhnai Headworks downstream of Multan.

On the Sutlej, flows peaked at 530,152 cusecs at Punjnad Headworks, where the river joins the Indus. Farther south, gauges on the Indus recorded 493,281 cusecs at Guddu Barrage in Sindh.

The Sindh chief minister said the province had prepared for flows of up to 900,000 cusecs, and that more than 500,000 cusecs had already reached Guddu Barrage on the Indus.

“We have established relief camps where people will come, and health camps where more than 5,000 people have been treated,” he said in a statement, adding that over one million livestock had been vaccinated.

With inputs from Ismail Dilawar in Karachi


Pakistan eyes European trade corridor via Romania to boost blue economy

Pakistan eyes European trade corridor via Romania to boost blue economy
Updated 41 sec ago
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Pakistan eyes European trade corridor via Romania to boost blue economy

Pakistan eyes European trade corridor via Romania to boost blue economy
  • Maritime minister, Romanian envoy discuss linking Karachi Port with Port of Constanța to expand access to European markets
  • Cooperation to focus on digital port systems, training and private-sector investment in maritime infrastructure

KARACHI: Pakistan and Romania are exploring the creation of new maritime linkages between Karachi Port and the Port of Constanța on the Black Sea as part of Islamabad’s push to expand its blue economy and open trade routes to European markets, the ministry of maritime affairs said on Tuesday.

Pakistan’s maritime sector, which underpins its emerging blue economy, contributes less than one percent to GDP but is central to long-term economic plans that envision the country as a regional industrial and trade hub. The government aims to expand the number of operational ports from three to six by 2047, with Karachi, Port Qasim and Gwadar serving as anchors for new regional shipping and logistics corridors linking the Middle East, Central Asia, Eastern Europe and Africa.

The Port of Constanța, one of the largest on the Black Sea, offers direct connectivity to Central and Eastern Europe through the Danube River corridor, providing a potential new route for Pakistani exports to EU markets.

Discussions on the issue took place between Federal Minister for Maritime Affairs Muhammad Junaid Anwar Chaudhry and Romanian Ambassador Dr. Dan Stoenescu in Karachi, with Rear Admiral Atiq-ur-Rehman, Acting Chairman of the Karachi Port Trust, also in attendance.

“Pakistan wants to play a bigger role in global maritime trade by building linkages that connect the Middle East, Central Asia, Eastern Europe, and Africa,” Chaudhry was quoted as saying in a statement by the maritime ministry, adding that stronger ties with Romania could help Pakistan diversify its trade and strengthen its role as a regional maritime hub.

Chaudhry said Pakistan’s existing ports are expected to reach full capacity before 2047, underscoring the need for new infrastructure and international partnerships.

“Strengthening maritime infrastructure and connectivity is key to turning Pakistan into a major industrial and trade hub,” he said.

The two sides discussed cooperation in training, digital port systems, environmental management, and capacity building. Chaudhry said developing a skilled workforce to manage next-generation port systems was central to Pakistan’s modernization plans.

Both sides reaffirmed their resolve to expand collaboration across economic, educational, and cultural sectors, reflecting what the ministry described as a growing partnership between Pakistan and Romania.

According to the maritime ministry statement, Romanian Ambassador Stoenescu praised the quality of Pakistani exports and said his country was interested in importing sports goods, surgical instruments, and agricultural products. 

He called maritime cooperation “a practical way to deepen regional integration and shared prosperity.”