Sialkot

Climate Shocks to Climate Action

Pakistan must build a robust climate resilience framework informed by international best practices, tailored to its unique socio-economic and environmental context.

By Prof. S. Shafiq ur Rehman | October 2025


Academic discussions vis-á-vis natural disasters, which are armed with the potential to kill, traumatize, damage, and destroy, hence dreadful, normally exclude volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, and tsunamis, as they are unrelated to the atmosphere. All remaining disasters, such as unusual rainfall, cloudbursts, blizzards, snowstorms, windstorms, hurricanes or tornadoes, floods, glacial-outburst floods, wet or dry mass movements, and last but not least important droughts, are atmospheric and hydrological in nature.

A report of the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR) in October 2020 revealed that during the two decades from 1980 to 1999, a total of 4,212 disasters were globally reported, which caused 1.19 million deaths, affected 3.2 billion people, and accrued US$1.63 trillion in economic damage. In comparison, during the next two decades (2000-2019), the number of reported disasters sprang up to 7,348, causing 1.23 million deaths, 4.03 billion affected, and economic losses worth US$2.97 trillion. Apart from the factor of climate change, the higher number of fatalities and number of affected people may also be attributed to the ever-increasing population, whereas an increase in economic losses may also be due to global inflation rates.

In another study, concluded in April 2024, the number of all climate-related disasters from 2000 to 2023 comes to 8700, excluding earthquakes. Among the total 4088 were flood events, 2549 extreme weather events, and 465 wet mass movement instances. The message is unmistakable: not only is the number of disasters rising, but with enhanced intensity and frequency, it is more threatening. The only way to save our populations is to shift the focus to adaptation rather than mitigation by enhancing our resilience by embedding adaptation benchmarks in our national and sub-national development programs in the public and private sectors equally.

In this regard, the EU’s adoption of the European Adaptation Strategy (2021) is a significant way forward towards building greater climate resilience. The strategy stresses heavy investment by the member states and the private sector to reduce vulnerability to climate risk or disaster risk reduction (DRR), save lives, cut costs, and protect prosperity across the EU. Out of 36 risks, 8 were identified for urgent action to conserve ecosystems, protect people and infrastructure against heat and floods. The increasing implementation of local, nature-based solutions demonstrates their success. Successes include specific projects in Slovakia, Portugal, and Germany focusing on nature-based solutions and community engagement, alongside a rise in international climate adaptation finance from the EU and Member States.

The state of Kerala (India) experienced its worst-ever monsoon rains that triggered devastating floods and landslides affecting 5 million people in the Pamba River Basin in 2018. Subsequently, Kerala approached the World Bank with the request for a loan of US$250 million to enhance Kerala’s resilience against natural disasters, impacts of climate change, disease outbreaks, and pandemics. The program was approved in 2021, with the objectives of strengthening systems for disaster risk finance and social protection, improving fiscal and debt management, and supporting local capacity building. Its successes include developing river basin management plans, flood forecasting for the Pamba River Basin, and adopting a statewide resilient agro-ecological zone development plan.

Building climate/disaster resilience in Pakistan, drawing from the European Commission’s Report 2021, on climate resilience for EU countries, and the World Bank’s funding on resilient Kerala, we must involve a multi-faceted approach addressing policy, governance, ensuring effective early warning system, availability of required logistics, periodic trainings on rescue and relief staff, identification of appropriately equipped makeshift accommodation in case of relocating affected population, upfront investment in risk reduction, financially securing costly infrastructure, and community adaptation.

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