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Thursday May 02, 2024

Lack of snow sparks worry for drought-hit Afghanistan

Exceptionally low level of rain in a country that relies heavily on agriculture has forced many farmers to delay planting

By AFP
January 17, 2024
An Afghan woman makes her way as snow falls in the city of Mazar-i-Sharif. — AFP/File
An Afghan woman makes her way as snow falls in the city of Mazar-i-Sharif. — AFP/File

KABUL: Afghanistan saw almost no snow as of mid-January, a new sign of the heavy toll of global warming on the Central Asian country which is usually accustomed to harsh winters, experts say.

The exceptionally low level of rain in a country that relies heavily on agriculture has forced many farmers to delay planting.

“In previous years by January we had a lot of rain and snow,” said Rohullah Amin, head of climate change for the National Environmental Protection Agency (NEPA).

But “now we don´t have enough of anything at all”, he told AFP this week.

“It is very worrying, as there could be serious droughts in the future, putting heavy pressure on livelihoods and the economic sector.”

Already in its third year of drought, Afghanistan is one of the countries most vulnerable to climate change, according to the UN.

The lack of snow, predicted by experts to arrive in December, threatens the vital snowpack that provides water in hotter months, Amin said.

Members of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) flew over the country in recent days, from the southern Helmand province to Kabul.

“On all the mountains, there is no snow at all,” FAO spokesman Robert Kluijver told AFP.

Farmers in the southwest of the country are hardest hit by drought, according to Amin, followed by those in southern provinces -- although dry conditions have touched every part of the country.

In the eastern Ghazni and Paktika provinces, only a few centimetres (an inch or less) of snow fell recently, and mountainous Badakhshan province just saw its first flakes only this week.

Even at 3,800 meters (12,400 feet) near the Salang Pass in the Hindu Kush mountains, only patches of snow dot the rocky ground, an anomaly in mid-January. The tunnel has been frequently cut off by heavy snow and avalanches in winters of the past.