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How To Protect Pakistan From Floods (Part 1)

pakistan-floods-2025

This aerial view shows a flooded residential area in Dera Allah Yar town after heavy monsoon rains in Jaffarabad district, Balochistan province on August 30, 2022. - Aid efforts ramped up across flooded Pakistan on August 30 to help tens of millions of people affected by relentless monsoon rains that have submerged a third of the country and claimed more than 1,100 lives. (Photo by Fida HUSSAIN / AFP) (Photo by FIDA HUSSAIN/AFP via Getty Images)

Assessing 2025 — Why the floods happened and what people & government should do now.

*This is only an opinion/how-to article based on online research. I do not claim to be an expert on this topic.

Overview: the scale of the 2025 flooding crisis

Pakistan’s 2025 monsoon season has produced widespread, fast-moving floods across multiple provinces. Official situation reports and humanitarian updates put the toll in the hundreds of fatalities, many thousands injured, and millions affected or displaced. Large-scale evacuations and relief operations are underway, while agencies warn that active monsoon conditions could persist for weeks. ReliefWebOCHANational Disaster Management Authority


Why Pakistan is experiencing such devastating floods in 2025

Multiple interacting factors explain the scale and speed of this year’s floods:

1. Exceptional monsoon rains and flash floods

The monsoon period since late June 2025 has brought extreme, persistent rainfall in basins across the country. Large volumes of water falling in short periods have resulted in flash flooding and riverine overflows. Humanitarian flash updates and NDMA situation reports describe prolonged heavy rains affecting Punjab, Sindh, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and northern regions. OCHAAmazon Web Services, Inc.

2. Glacial and snowmelt contributions in the north

In addition to monsoon rains, accelerated glacial melt and late-season snowmelt in high catchments have increased river flows downstream, compounding flood peaks. Relief agencies have linked glacial contributions with sudden surges on main rivers. IFRCReliefWeb

3. Transboundary water management and sudden dam discharges

Authorities in downstream areas have reported sudden surges linked to upstream dam releases. Cross-border flows and reservoir management timing can create downstream shocks that exacerbate inundation in low-lying districts. Coverage by major news outlets and authorities highlights how dam discharges and upstream river behavior contributed to sudden rises. AP News

4. Legacy vulnerability: infrastructure, settlement patterns, and land use

Decades of settlement in floodplains, inadequate urban drainage, poor maintenance of embankments, and the loss of natural flood buffers (wetlands, forests) have increased vulnerability. Past floods (including the 2022 “super-flood”) showed how socioeconomic vulnerability multiplies climate shocks into humanitarian disasters. Amnesty UKCarbon Brief

5. Climate change as a multiplier

Warming temperatures increase atmospheric moisture and the intensity of extreme precipitation events. Experts and humanitarian organizations point to climate change as a key risk multiplier that makes extreme monsoon events more frequent and intense. IFRC


Immediate advice for people in flood-prone areas (what households can do now)

While systemic change is needed, there are immediate, practical steps households and communities can take to reduce harm this season.

Prepare a simple flood survival kit

Make an evacuation plan and identify safe routes

Secure the home and livestock where possible

Stay informed through authoritative channels

Health and sanitation precautions

Community-level actions


Short- to mid-term actions the government must prioritize now

The scale of this event requires a coordinated national response backed by transparent information, resources, and logistics. Based on NDMA sit-reps and humanitarian guidance, immediate government priorities should include:

1. Early warning and transparent river/dam information

2. Rapid evacuation, shelter, and cash assistance

3. Protect critical infrastructure and supply chains

4. Health and disease prevention

5. Longer term: transparent review of river management & land-use policy


What to expect in Part 2

In the second post I will present a step-by-step plan for both communities and government: practical, prioritized interventions that combine low-cost, high-impact community measures with medium- and long-term structural and policy reforms (early warning systems, river basin management, flood-resilient infrastructure, and climate adaptation financing). That plan will reference technical guidance and international best practice so Pakistan can reduce flood losses while improving recovery capacity.


Sources & further reading (selected)

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