Online businesses risk $700,000 in losses as Internet slowdown hits Pakistan

Online businesses risk $700,000 in losses as Internet slowdown hits Pakistan
A food delivery man uses his mobile phone near a restaurant in Islamabad, Pakistan, on August 17, 2024. (AFP/File)
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Updated 14 October 2025
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Online businesses risk $700,000 in losses as Internet slowdown hits Pakistan

Online businesses risk $700,000 in losses as Internet slowdown hits Pakistan
  • Internet service providers cite undersea cable maintenance for nationwide disruption
  • Digital rights expert says Internet outages hurt productivity, cause heavy business losses

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s online businesses risk losing nearly Rs200 million ($700,000) a day as Internet services slowed nationwide on Tuesday amid widespread disruption caused by “maintenance activity” on a major submarine cable, according to the Chain Store Association of Pakistan (CAP).

The slowdown followed announcements by major Internet providers, including Nayatel and the Pakistan Telecommunication Company Limited (PTCL), that emergency maintenance was being carried out on one of the country’s undersea cables.

Nayatel said in a post on X that the work, which began around 11 a.m., could last up to 18 hours and cause Internet slowness across Pakistan.

Mobile Internet services were also suspended in Islamabad and Lahore over the weekend following protests by the religio-political party Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP), whose activists clashed repeatedly with police.

“Our estimate is that when Internet services, both mobile and fixed broadband, are down nationwide for 24 hours, it causes approximately Rs200 million in daily losses,” Asfandyar Farrukh, the CAP chairman, told Arab News.

CAP represents more than 150 of Pakistan’s leading retail businesses and small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).

He added that the full financial impact of Tuesday’s slowdown could only be assessed after 24 hours of monitoring.

GIG ECONOMY

For gig-economy workers, however, the disruption means a complete loss of income.

Muhammad Riaz, an online cab driver, said slow or no Internet means he cannot feed his four children.

“It drives me crazy when the Internet is slow,” he said. “It takes half an hour just to get one ride. You know how Internet signals are in the streets. Even in normal places, it can get very difficult, extremely difficult.”

Riaz said he earned nothing when the Internet was down over the weekend, as he had to stay home.

“Ordinary people are the ones suffering the most,” he continued. “A daily-wage earner, if he doesn’t earn during the day, he can’t eat. How long can he feed his children like this?”

Adil Zahid, a food delivery rider, said outages make his work impossible.

“When we face signal issues here in Pakistan, our delivery work stops, which causes us major losses,” he said. “Our daily loss without Internet is around two to three thousand rupees [$7-$11].”

Zahid added that without Internet access, he cannot use navigation maps or receive orders.

Another delivery worker, Waseem Barkat, said the disruptions make it extremely difficult to contact customers or locate delivery points.

“When we go to different places, we can’t contact the customer because their number and location details don’t load properly,” he said. “Everything just shuts down in those areas.”

Digital rights experts say such disruptions ripple far beyond the gig economy, hampering productivity and eroding public confidence in the country’s digital infrastructure.

“Internet disruptions, whether planned or unplanned, inflict massive economic losses on online businesses, disrupt supply chains and erode customer trust,” said Haroon Baloch, a digital rights activist.

“In a digital economy where every second of downtime can translate to millions in losses for e-commerce platforms, freelancers and startups, these interruptions aren’t just inconveniences,” he continued. “They become barriers to growth and innovation.”


Punjab government says Lahore air quality improves as wind disperses smog

Punjab government says Lahore air quality improves as wind disperses smog
Updated 17 sec ago
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Punjab government says Lahore air quality improves as wind disperses smog

Punjab government says Lahore air quality improves as wind disperses smog
  • Lahore ranked sixth among the world’s most polluted major cities on Wednesday, with an AQI of 158
  • Officials credit stronger wind speeds and anti-smog measures for gradual improvement in air quality

ISLAMABAD: Air quality in Lahore improved on Wednesday morning as wind speeds helped disperse pollutants that had shrouded Pakistan’s second-largest city in thick smog for days, the Punjab government said.

The Swiss-based air monitoring agency IQAir recorded Lahore’s Air Quality Index (AQI) at 158 at 10:53 a.m. local time, placing it sixth on the list of the world’s most polluted major cities, behind Kolkata and Delhi in India, Beijing, Dubai and Cairo.

Punjab province, and its capital Lahore, face a recurring “smog season” from October to February, driven by crop-residue burning, vehicular and industrial emissions, and stagnant winter weather conditions. The hazy blanket has previously pushed the AQI into hazardous levels of above 300 in Lahore in November 2024, forcing school and office closures and reduced construction activity.

“The current wind speed of about 11 kilometers per hour is helping disperse pollution particles, leading to gradual improvement in Lahore’s air quality,” the Punjab administration’s official statement said.

Senior Punjab Minister Maryam Aurangzeb said there was “a marked improvement … being seen in the AQI,” and urged residents to avoid unnecessary travel and refrain from burning waste despite the recent relief.

Punjab has begun targeted “anti-smog gun” operations this season after trial runs, part of a wider push that includes new enforcement rules and traffic measures to cut emissions in the provincial capital.

The smog crisis in Lahore, similar to conditions in India’s capital Delhi, tends to worsen during cooler months as temperature inversion traps pollutants close to the ground.