Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Drought in Pakistan LEAD Pakistan LDP, Karachi 3 June 2015 Brig. (R) Kamran Shariff.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Drought in Pakistan LEAD Pakistan LDP, Karachi 3 June 2015 Brig. (R) Kamran Shariff."— Presentation transcript:

1 Drought in Pakistan LEAD Pakistan LDP, Karachi 3 June 2015 Brig. (R) Kamran Shariff

2 Outline: Setting the stage; Drought prone regions and historical perspective; Hazard risk rating; Climate change and the meteorological perspective; Drought situation 2014 onwards: water, food and agriculture, health and livestock; Drought governance in Pakistan; Drought monitoring; and Mitigation strategies

3 Definitions: Drought is a slow onset disaster whose onset occurs as a consequence of rainfall shortage but its impact varies in various regions consistent with the local environment, weather, soil conditions and host of other factors. Its impact, unlike other natural disasters, extends over considerable space; Variants: Meteorological, hydrological, agricultural & socio- economic Drought Mitigation: structural / physical measures (appropriate crops, dams or engineering projects) or non-structural measures (policies, awareness, knowledge development, public commitment, and operating practices) undertaken to limit the adverse impacts of drought;

4 Definitions: Drought Response: efforts such as provision of assistance or intervention during or immediately after a drought disaster to meet life preservation and basic subsistence needs of the affected population. It can be of immediate, short term or protracted duration; Source: ISDR Sustainable Development: meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. (World Bank)

5

6

7

8

9

10

11 Question: Is drought a disaster situation warranting emergency response; or a developmental issue with a drought situation reflecting developmental deficit ?

12 Components of a drought policy Sustainable development; Water security; Food security; Livelihood diversity; Environmental security; Rangelands management; Livestock management; Mitigation strategies; Emergency response management; Awareness raising and capacity building

13 Drought Actors: Federal Government: Planning Commission, WAPDA, Ministry of Climate Change, NHPREN, Ministry of Food Research, NDMA, PARC, PMD, SUPARCO; Provincial Government: Departments: P&D, Food, Health, Livestock, Forest, Agriculture, Irrigation, PDMA, Provincial Nutrition Cell; Districts: Relevant departments of the District Government led by the DC; UN Agencies: WFP, UNICEF, FAO, WHO, UNDP, relevant NGOss

14 Deserts / Rangelands:

15

16

17 Cholistan:

18 Drought prone regions of Pakistan: The Thar Desert: spread over 320,000 square kms with 85% in India. Pakistan’s Thar desert is spread over approx 50,000 square kms across Tharparkar, parts of Umarkot, Sanghar, Khairpur and Ghotki; Kirthar Range in Sindh: Spread over 25,000 sq kms, it extends into Jamshoro, Dadu and part of Thatta district; Rangelands of Balochistan: comprise 79% of the landmass. Include Central Balochistan Quetta and Kalat; Western Balochistan desert: Chagai, Kharan, Gwador, Lasbela and Kharan. Eastern Balochistan Zhob and Loralai regions; Cholistan Desert: 26,3000 square kms along Bahawalnagar, Bahawalpur & Rahim Yar Khan and the Indian border; Thal Desert: Bhakkar, Khushab, Mianwali and Leyyah between Jhelum and Indus; Issues: Overgrazing, water management, desertification, barani agriculture, poor services, weak environmental management

19 Droughts in historical perspective: Major droughts recur in 12-16 years cycle and lesser versions every 4-6 years in the vulnerable regions; 1999-2001 Drought: Affected the entire country but Balochistan was worst affected followed by Sindh; 3 million pop affected and 2.5 million livestock lost; 58 districts seriously affected, or which 23 were from Balochistan; Agricultural growth registered negative 2.5%. Losses estimated at $1.2 billion; economic growth retarded by 2.6%;

20 Drought in historical perspective: IFIs assisted $ 360 million Drought Emergency Releif Assistance programme focused on emergency response, communication and water infrastructure mainly; Chronic water shortages negatively impacted on traditional coping mechanism; Livestock distress sale and increased morbidity and mortality; High incidence of water borne disease and chronic and acute mal nutrition; Socioeconomic poverty

21

22 Hazard and risk assessment factors: Baseline Factors: Food and nutritional security; Access to improved drinking water; Fully immunised children 12-23 months; Total 12 marks Drought Vulnerability Aspects: Drought occurrence; Exposure: % of population in drought vulnerable areas; Drought impact. Total 18 marks. Grand total: 30 marks

23

24

25

26 Present Drought Situation; Climate change aspect: There is evidence to suggest that global warming has negatively impacted upon the Pakistan's environment, like causing loss of bio-diversity, shifts in the weather patterns and reduced fresh water supply. Climate change trends are synonymous with climate variability in terms of flash floods and drought incidence; Prevalence of El Nino conditions;

27 2013 Summer Monsoons 2014 Summer Monsoons October 2014 November 2014 December 2014 February 2015 PakistanPlus 10%Minus 23%Plus 59%Minus 3%Minus 99%Minus 16% SindhMinus 21%Minus 78%Minus 94%Minus 48%Minus 100%Minus 74% BalochistanPlus 11%Minus 33%Minus 42%Plus 10%Minus 100%Minus 42% PunjabPlus 9%Minus 1%Plus 63%Plus 14%Minus 100%Minus 11% KPPlus 13%Minus 32%Plus 173%Minus 19%Minus 98%Plus 15% GBPlus 12%Plus 118% Plus 12%Plus 21%Minus 100%Minus 36% AJ&KPlus 6% NormalPlus 1% Minus 100%No departure

28

29

30

31 Drought 2014 onwards: Water security in Tharparkar, Kohistan (Sindh), Cholistan and Balochistan; Food security and agriculture; Health: Livestock situation; The Balochistan drought situation Priority of needs identified by the communities: water, livestock, health, food

32 Water security

33 Health: Nutrition status 2014, < 5 deaths 2012, 2014 ; DistrictsUmarkotSangharKambar STharparkarThattaShikarpurJacobabadKashmoreBadinDadu GAM 2014 25.3%24.1%22.3%22.2%19.2%18.2%13.%13.3%9.7%4.2% DistrictsUmarkotSangharMirpurksTharparkrThattaKhairpurSukkurGhotkiBadinDadu 201219844123431859436125788186554 2014259592314587203356170789189668

34 Health: < 5 deaths 2012, 2014; < 1 deaths 2012, 2014 DistrictsUmarkotSangharMirpurksTharparkrThattaKhairpurSukkurGhotkiBadinDadu 201217440833732459914016084843572124 2014166299162366131872321175230408 DistrictsUmarkotSangharMirpurksTharprkrThattaKhairpurSukkurGhotkiBadinDadu 201216037713511356613653324122161710 201416150127144568484312517895

35

36 Drought Monitoring: Issues Meteorological and hydrological networks are often inadequate in terms of monitoring parameters; Forecasts often lack reliability on seasonal timescale and specificity, thus restricting their use; Drought monitoring systems lack integration, including those of climate change, water and soil parameters and socio-economic to map the drought magnitude, spatial extent and potential impact; Drought early warning dissemination methods are lacking in reach to the end users, and thus do not support decision making at multiple response levels; Data sharing is inadequate between government agencies and research institutions; Drought impact assessment, monitoring methods are not standard..

37 Drought Monitoring: Global facilities & regional networks; In Pakistan, PMD Drought Early Warnng Centre uses Standard Precipitation Index. Fortnightly and three monthly updates; SUPARCO issues monthly crops situation updates. Uses Keetch Byram Index; WFP disseminates monthly market prices bulletin and quarterly food security update; Need for Integration; Proposed integrated drought monitoring and response mechanisms for Tharparkar, Kohistan (Sindh) and Cholistan

38 Drought Mitigation Strategies: Addresses (1) water, (2) food and agriculture, (3) health, (4) livestock and range management; (5) cbdrm; and (6) climate change adaptation; Align mitigation with development, and emergency responses with mitigation; Strategy development: Sustainable development; Sustainable consumption; Institution building + governance aspects; Reinforce structural capacity; Promote integration and coordination; Institutionalise research and capacity building; Promote climate smart management.

39 Drought Mitigation Strategies: Water: Policy issues; Supply side management; Water demand management; Ecological solutions; Water governance; Desalination Emergency response management

40 Drought Mitigation Strategies: Food and Agriculture: Policy inputs; Research and capacity building Promotion of less water demanding crops; Soil conservation; Watershed management; Water conservation; Emergency response management.

41 Drought Mitigation Strategies: Health and Nutrition: Reinforce needs based nutrition interventions; Reproductive health; Human resource; Access and outreach; Disease surveillance and responses; Preventive and curative

42 Drought Mitigation Strategies: Rangeland Management: Mapping of inventory building; Measures for checking desertification; Rangeland usage control; Reinforce goverance aspects; Promote communities inclusive management; Livestock: Veterinary support, planning for emergency support, emergency fodder solutions, community awareness raising and capacity building

43 Tharparkar Drought Response 2015


Download ppt "Drought in Pakistan LEAD Pakistan LDP, Karachi 3 June 2015 Brig. (R) Kamran Shariff."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google