
Informing Change in the Indus Basin
The UK government’s Department for International Development (DFID) is partnering with the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) to deliver the South Asia Water Governance Programme’s (SAWGP) component, ‘Informing change in the Indus basin’. The partnership will inform decision-making over the Indus basin’s water resources as the countries face the reality of climate change and other important global challenges such as rapid population growth, urbanisation and increased competition for scarce resources including water. Poor management of the basin’s water resources curtails the livelihood of 300 million people living within it. Excluded from any growth and already vulnerable to climate change, the mostly poor population is also having to contend with conflict. Pakistan accounts for 80% of the population and 70% of the basin area. Its economy is heavily dependent on agriculture which uses 93% of water to employ 40% of the Pakistani labour force and generate 22% of its GDP. Any future economic growth within the basin will depend on how well water is managed and whether the politics of allocating water to sectors, provinces and countries can be addressed. Drawing on the combined experience the organisations bring of working on international rivers in South Asia and more globally, and after consultation with key partners in the basin such as the World Bank and ICIMOD, the Indus component is being used to complement existing work such as the basin-wide dialogue happening in the Indus Forum, and fill gaps such as creating a rigorous data-sharing portal. Thus, the programme will consolidate existing knowledge on the Indus basin, improve understanding of how decisions are made, and facilitate basin-wide dialogue between the countries and internally within Pakistan between the provinces.