City
Epaper

Pakistan fears water crisis with dam levels dropping sharply

By IANS | Updated: May 1, 2025 20:32 IST

Islamabad, May 1 Pakistan is gearing up to face a major water crisis as a sharp decline has ...

Open in App

Islamabad, May 1 Pakistan is gearing up to face a major water crisis as a sharp decline has been witnessed in the levels at its three major dams over the past few days. Rawal, Simly and Khanpur dams, which supply water to capital Islamabad, have seen a sharp decline in water levels due to the lack of ample rainfall.

In Rawalpindi, the water levels have fallen to under 700 feet, triggering a widespread shortage of water across the city. The shortage has given a boost to the earnings of those operating private water tankers, who are distributing water in different localities of the city at much higher rates.

Pakistan's National Drought Monitoring and Early Warning Centre (NDMC-EWC) has revealed that the storage capacity of Rawal Dam is 1,752 feet with the dead level being 1,708 feet. The current water level of Rawal Dam is 1,741 feet, which is declining continuously. Moreover, Simly Dam, which exclusively supplies water to the country's capital and has a capacity of 2,315 feet with the dead level being 2,233 feet has the current water level at 2,263 feet.

Khanpur Dam in Abbottabad district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) has a capacity of 1,982 feet and dead level of 1,910 feet. Its current level stands at 1,937.58 feet.

"There is currently enough water in the dams to meet the needs of the twin cities for at least 40 to 45 days. If heavy rainfall does not occur within the next 10 to 15 days, water levels are expected to fall drastically, also due to evaporation and under intense heat," said an official of NDMC-EWC.

The Punjab provincial government's Water and Sanitation Agency (WASA) has said that a Water Control Plan has been implemented to manage the situation.

"Under the Water Control Plan, a crackdown has been launched against water theft and defaulters of water bills. It also bans using pipelines to water gardens, driveways, or washing cars. "Car wash stations have been told to install water recycling systems," said WASA spokesperson.

Experts and officials have urged that while hundreds of tube wells are being operated across the country, they are no longer a workable long-term solution.

"With changing climate patterns, tube wells are no longer a viable long-term solution and dam water is essential," said officials.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalBangladesh: Court grants bail to Hindu monk Chinmoy Das in one case

International"We had a very good conversation": Trump on conversation with PM Modi amid West Asia diplomacy

Other SportsIPL 2026: Need to go back and see where we are lacking, says Hardik after MI suffer another defeat

CricketIPL 2026: Shreyas Iyer, Xavier Bartlett Pull Off Stunning Relay Catch To Dismiss Hardik Pandya in MI vs PBKS Match; Leaves Rohit Sharma-SKY Stunned (VIDEO)

Other SportsIPL 2026: Prabhsimran has raised the bar; is maturing with each game, says Iyer after PBKS win

International Realted Stories

InternationalAround 10.10 lakh passengers have travelled to India since February 28 from region amid West Asia tensions, says Govt

InternationalTrump announces ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon

InternationalAustrian Chancellor calls on President Murmu; both leaders hail strengthening strategic, innovation ties

InternationalINS Sudarshini makes port call at Casablanca; visit to further strengthen diplomatic ties between India and Morocco

InternationalIndia, Japan discuss strengthening ties during meeting between Ambassador Mallick, LDP VP Aso