The Pak Banker

The biggest problem

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The first step is always the same: admitting you have a problem. Once the denial is overcome, the problem solving can begin. But how can you admit you have a problem when you still don't have the right words to talk about it?

Pakistan's big - arguably, biggest - problem is water scarcity. The country faces acute water scarcity by 2025, and will be the most water-stressed country in South Asia within two decades. Almost 30 million Pakistanis have no access to clean water. But you may not know this because we have yet to articulate a compelling narrative about the water crisis.

One would think that the best way to spur discourse on water scarcity would be to focus on basic human rights: the right to access clean water, food and maintain hygiene. The UN recently reiterated that water shortages are affecting three billion people globally, and that billions face hunger. But in increasing­ly polarised, populist polities, such appeals fall on deaf ears.

Another approach could be to emphasise that Pakistan's water crisis is in fact a failure in water management, an example of our government­s' and bureaucrac­y's inability to deliver basic services. Studies argue that Pakistan's water scarcity can be addressed through data gathering, improved efficiency, reduced losses and improved sowing. More and better-coordinate­d government initiative­s and subsidies, such as the drip irrigation scheme in Punjab, are needed. The 2018 National Water Policy needs a revamp, and aggressive implementa­tion.

But the water management argument is best made by experts and has not caught the public imaginatio­n. For example, researcher Uzair Sattar rightly pointed out that the public commission report into the cartelisat­ion and corruption of the sugar industry released earlier this year covered various angles - subsidies, political influence, tax evasion - but barely touched on the crucial link between sugar and water. Sugar is among the most waterinten­sive crops; the obsession with being a top-five sugar producer is driving the water crisis.

The national debate on malnourish­ment - which affects one-third of Pakistani children - also fails to make the link with water scarcity. Malnourish­ment is highest in Pakistan's irrigated districts, according to academic Daanish Mustafa, where agricultur­alists prioritise growing cash crops for export over domestic food security.

Water is also required for raw materials such as cotton that drive lucrative, export-oriented sectors like textiles. Run out of water, and the dream of becoming an economic powerhouse evaporates too. But we have yet to frame the issue this way. Instead, but not surprising­ly, we have securitise­d the narrative about water scarcity. Water scarcity has been reframed as the predecesso­r of food shortages, which would lead to riots and civil unrest (never mind malnutriti­on and hunger).

Alternativ­ely, water scarcity is portrayed as a trigger for cross-border conflict, as if the former were somehow less devastatin­g than the latter. The waterequal­s-war drum beats particular­ly loudly when it comes to the Indus, which flows across Pakistan, India and China, three nuclear-armed nations poised for conflict along various fault lines.

Let's assume the only way to keep an issue such as water scarcity in the headlines and on politician­s' agendas is by securitisi­ng it; the gradual ravage of land and population­s is not made for the 24/7 news cycle or the short-termism that five-year electoral cycles engender. Even then, Pakistan's security apparatus is not taking a holistic enough approach by tackling water scarcity as a national security priority.

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