Larkana

Of Dams and New Provinces

Pakistan must focus on clearing natural waterways and strengthening its drainage systems, instead of reviving controversial dams.

By Sajad Jatoi | October 2025


Each time a natural or man-made disaster strikes Pakistan, a familiar segment of society emerges. Drawn mainly from urban Sindh and Punjab’s middle and upper-middle classes, they loudly decry governance failures and put forward ready-made solutions. As expected, they have resurfaced after the devastating 2025 monsoon rains and floods. Their prescriptions remain predictable: build more dams—notably the Kalabagh Dam—and divide the country into new provinces. Let us examine these claims one by one.

The advocates of dams, particularly Kalabagh, mainly from Punjab, argue that if the dam had been built, Punjab would have been spared the recent floods. They believe Kalabagh would have served dual purposes: protecting Punjab from floods and storing excess water otherwise “wasted into the sea.

The controversial Kalabagh Dam lies on the Indus at Mianwali, whereas this year’s destructive floods came from the Chenab, Ravi, and Sutlej. Mianwali is on the western side, hundreds of kilometres away from these rivers. Even if Kalabagh had existed, how could it possibly have stopped floods in rivers it does not control? To present Kalabagh as a solution in this context is not just misleading, but absurd—an act of political point-scoring.

Sensing the controversy around Kalabagh, some self-styled water experts are now pushing for smaller dams. But are dams, big or small, really the solution? Dr. Hassan Abbas, a renowned water expert, believes dams are unsustainable. He thus recommends letting rivers flow naturally while tapping into the vast 500 million acre-feet of underground aquifers for domestic, agricultural, and industrial needs. Pakistan’s water crisis, he insists, requires smarter management, not more concrete.

This raises a question: why persist with Kalabagh when the Indus is not even in flood? The current flooding is in rivers over which Pakistan has no rights under the Indus Waters Treaty of 1960. Under that agreement, Pakistan ceded rights over the Beas, Ravi, and Sutlej to India. Moreover, geography rules out dam construction: dams are built in hilly terrain, whereas Pakistan’s stretch of the Ravi and Sutlej is flat plain. In short, Pakistan cannot build dams on these rivers, either legally or technically.

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