Pakistan drought dents winter harvest
Sindh, Pakistan’s most urbanised province located in south, witnesses rainfall 52% below normal levels
LAHORE: A winter drought is ravaging crops in the country’s breadbasket, farmers said on Thursday, with the region parched by a 40% drop in rainfall.
Pakistan — home to more than 240 million people — ranks among the countries most vulnerable to the effects of climate change, which scientists say is making extreme weather events more common and more severe.
The Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) says the farming heartland of eastern Punjab province saw 42% less rainfall than normal between the start of September and mid-January.
“The lack of rains has had a major financial impact on farmers, whether they have a big holding or a small one,” Fruit and Vegetable Exporters Association Punjab chairman Malik Asghar told AFP.
“Potato is a staple in my area. The average is very low this year. Usually we could easily get 100 to 120 sacks per acre. This winter we have only gotten about 60 sacks per acre,” he added.
The agriculture sector contributes nearly a quarter of Pakistan’s GDP and employs 37% of the national labour force, according to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation.
But Asghar said many small farmers “were already giving up” and looking for employment elsewhere. “This spell of dry weather will have a very adverse reaction on them,” he said.
Sindh, Pakistan’s most urbanised province located in the south, witnessed rainfall 52 percent below normal levels according to the PMD, while Balochistan in the west saw a 45 percent drop. “Mild drought” prevailed in most of Punjab, all of Sindh and around half of Balochistan in January according to the PMD, which predicts rapidly on-setting “flash droughts” in the warmer months to come.
Wheat farmer Ishfaq Ahmad Jatt said his harvest in the Multan area of central Punjab has been “badly affected” by the dearth of rain.
“Even five years ago we used to get winter rains for a week at a time. They were light rains but they were enough for us,” the 45-year-old said. “If it doesn’t rain soon, you can expect production to drop by as much as 50 percent,” he added.
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