ISLAMABAD: Months after unprecedented floods, Pakistan is set to face about 37 per cent water shortage during the ongoing Kharif cropping season, the water regulator has confirmed.

This could be potentia­lly damaging for key cash crops like cotton, whose output has already slum­ped to multi-decade lows.

As a result, a meeting of the advisory committee of the Indus River System Authority (Irsa) on Thursday decided with a consensus to continue with a three-tier formula for distributing water shares among the provinces, as currently in practice.

The meeting — presided over by Asjad Imtiaz Ali, Irsa’s chairman and federal member — concluded that Punjab and Sindh would face a 27pc water shortage in the early Kharif and 10pc in the late Kharif season.

The water regulator, however, could not bridge differences between the two large provinces over the conveyance losses. As a result, the meeting set up a committee led by Irsa’s member for Khyber Pakhtunkhwa “to determine actual system conveyance losses to resolve the issue”, the regulator said in a statement.

“Whatever the recommendations on actual system losses determination to be devised by the said committee, based on actual discharge measurements, would be applicable to the system losses,” it said.

The meeting was attended by representatives of the four provinces, and members of Irsa and the Water and Power Development Authority (Wapda).

Sources said the water availability criteria were finalised based on Wapda’s revised Tarbela 5 operational constraints, as the authority agreed to provide water releases below 1,432 feet conservation level and operate some of its power plants under Tunnel 3.

As a result, it was agreed with a consensus that the irrigation water shortage in the Indus zone would be 37pc in early Kharif and 15pc in late Kharif. The shortage in the Jhelum-Chenab would be 10pc in early Kharif and negligible in late Kharif.

In Pakistan, the cropping season usually lasts from April to September. Rice, sugar cane, cotton, maize and mash are some of the key crops.

The meeting noted total river flows at rim stations at about 95.32 million acre-feet (MAF) and total system losses at 13.96m acre-feet.

Total water availability would thus stand at 70m acre-feet for the entire season, including 14.58m acre-feet in early Kharif and 55.42m acre-feet in late Kharif.

However, after allowing 7.26m acre-feet of mandatory discharges for downstream Kotri for environmental commitments, the total water availability at canal heads for distribution among the provinces would be just 62.74m acre-feet.

Balochistan and KP remain exempt from a cut in their water share because of their infrastructure constraints.

Two major stakeholders — Sindh and Punjab — have stuck to their guns on water conveyance losses — the quantum of available water that remains unaccounted for and lost to theft, leakage, evaporation or absorbed by soil or canals and could not reach farmlands.

Punjab estimated conveyance losses at 7-8pc against Sindh’s estimates of 35pc and 40pc between the Chashma and Kotri barrages.

The sources said Sindh recorded its position for removing the exemption of water cuts from Balochistan and KP and water distribution under Para 2 of the 1991 water apportionment accord.

However, it agreed with other provincial members and the chairman that Irsa could not change distribution practices currently in place.

Published in Dawn, April 7th, 2023

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