Pakistan wants $42bn investment

Published April 27, 2005

ISLAMABAD, April 26: Pakistan on Tuesday sought more than $42 billion investment from multilateral and bilateral lenders for infrastructure development, capacity build-up and devolution programme to reduce poverty over the next five years.

On the concluding day of the Pakistan Development Forum 2005, the highest demand of $33bn was made by the government for water sector requirement till 2025.

Secretary Water and Power Ashfaq Mehmood told a gathering of about 200 diplomats and representatives of multilateral lenders that Pakistan required at least $12bn (Rs709bn) initially for the next five years.

He said the government would soon take up two large reservoirs that would require Rs378bn in the next five years. Another Rs278bn would be required for irrigation improvement, followed by Rs47bn for drainage and reclamation and Rs6bn for flood control.

He said the government had finalized a national water policy that would put in place a high-powered national water council.

He listed a host of infrastructure issues in the water sector. These included inadequate storages, inefficient and deteriorated water conveyance infrastructure, lack of drainage and land reclamation, flood control, inequity in water management, institutional incapability and inadequate investment in development and maintenance of water sector.

He said funds would be required for at least two additional dams, augmentation of existing storages and development of small and medium dams, modernization and repair of barrages, system improvement through remodelling, rehabilitation and lining of canals and water courses.

The Sindh government sought about Rs340bn funding for its infrastructure development, primarily in housing, water and sanitation and road network. The Balochistan government demanded about $1bn for improvement of its water facilities.

Opinion

Editorial

Water win
19 May, 2026

Water win

Besides being a technical and legal win, the ruling validates Pakistan’s argument about the existential stakes involved for it.
Free ride
19 May, 2026

Free ride

THE federal and provincial governments have extended what appear to be major concessions to the retail sector ahead...
Ceasefire in name
19 May, 2026

Ceasefire in name

THE ink on the latest ceasefire extension between Israel and Lebanon was barely dry when Israeli warplanes were back...
The Afghan problem
Updated 18 May, 2026

The Afghan problem

It is to its own peril that the Afghan side seems to be mistaking Islamabad’s restraint for lack of resolve.
Unwillingness to tax
18 May, 2026

Unwillingness to tax

THE latest IMF staff report reveals the scale of Pakistan’s fiscal dilemma. The approval of fresh disbursements...
Unkind cyberspace
18 May, 2026

Unkind cyberspace

WHEN abuse occurs face to face, the boundaries are clear. Yet, the same behaviour online is treated less seriously....