Berliner Boersenzeitung - Trump aid cut imperils water scheme in Pakistan's hottest city

EUR -
AED 4.227602
AFN 81.734458
ALL 97.563542
AMD 442.56396
ANG 2.060199
AOA 1054.491885
ARS 1314.96596
AUD 1.76459
AWG 2.072145
AZN 1.955728
BAM 1.957648
BBD 2.323364
BDT 140.722848
BGN 1.955823
BHD 0.434142
BIF 3385.654999
BMD 1.151192
BND 1.478596
BOB 7.968453
BRL 6.329946
BSD 1.150721
BTN 99.445904
BWP 15.529132
BYN 3.76577
BYR 22563.358717
BZD 2.311452
CAD 1.572764
CDF 3311.978299
CHF 0.940265
CLF 0.028296
CLP 1085.838176
CNY 8.27638
CNH 8.279693
COP 4683.923031
CRC 580.848344
CUC 1.151192
CUP 30.506582
CVE 110.658269
CZK 24.822004
DJF 204.590083
DKK 7.45879
DOP 68.323553
DZD 150.203465
EGP 58.142554
ERN 17.267877
ETB 155.172083
FJD 2.579533
FKP 0.851919
GBP 0.855704
GEL 3.1312
GGP 0.851919
GHS 11.860391
GIP 0.851919
GMD 82.31204
GNF 9964.716258
GTQ 8.837266
GYD 240.655098
HKD 9.036797
HNL 30.103189
HRK 7.543071
HTG 150.912467
HUF 403.196874
IDR 18796.544122
ILS 4.002228
IMP 0.851919
INR 99.520702
IQD 1508.06122
IRR 48493.952935
ISK 143.449894
JEP 0.851919
JMD 182.962724
JOD 0.816186
JPY 166.351809
KES 149.092575
KGS 100.671869
KHR 4627.790638
KMF 493.861325
KPW 1036.0307
KRW 1581.691659
KWD 0.352598
KYD 0.959005
KZT 597.82437
LAK 24836.962168
LBP 103146.783006
LKR 345.709367
LRD 229.83533
LSL 20.744255
LTL 3.39917
LVL 0.696345
LYD 6.245167
MAD 10.504618
MDL 19.706203
MGA 5094.023311
MKD 61.601348
MMK 2416.752112
MNT 4124.021648
MOP 9.302182
MRU 45.725551
MUR 52.266703
MVR 17.734147
MWK 1998.469197
MXN 21.869639
MYR 4.89314
MZN 73.61846
NAD 20.743904
NGN 1778.19971
NIO 42.306366
NOK 11.445035
NPR 159.108205
NZD 1.903614
OMR 0.442656
PAB 1.150696
PEN 4.158682
PGK 4.744349
PHP 65.760105
PKR 326.103848
PLN 4.27586
PYG 9183.949239
QAR 4.190914
RON 5.032666
RSD 117.273079
RUB 90.357176
RWF 1640.448274
SAR 4.319649
SBD 9.617476
SCR 16.315363
SDG 691.288647
SEK 11.062067
SGD 1.47794
SHP 0.904656
SLE 25.873029
SLL 24139.920066
SOS 657.906471
SRD 44.724177
STD 23827.345419
SVC 10.068505
SYP 14967.382009
SZL 20.744797
THB 37.542686
TJS 11.564217
TMT 4.029171
TND 3.379856
TOP 2.696204
TRY 45.494143
TTD 7.801602
TWD 33.987765
TZS 3010.36671
UAH 47.976692
UGX 4143.875989
USD 1.151192
UYU 47.014792
UZS 14631.64692
VES 117.455293
VND 30047.832018
VUV 137.989089
WST 3.027206
XAF 656.576835
XAG 0.031149
XAU 0.000339
XCD 3.111154
XDR 0.816571
XOF 653.299149
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.397358
ZAR 20.65843
ZMK 10362.112713
ZMW 27.587883
ZWL 370.683281
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Trump aid cut imperils water scheme in Pakistan's hottest city
Trump aid cut imperils water scheme in Pakistan's hottest city / Photo: Fida HUSSAIN - AFP

Trump aid cut imperils water scheme in Pakistan's hottest city

In Pakistan's hottest city, fresh and filtered water can quench the searing onslaught of climate change -- but US President Donald Trump's foreign aid freeze threatens its vital supply, an NGO says.

Text size:

Sun-parched Jacobabad city in southern Sindh province sometimes surpasses 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit) in increasing heatwaves causing critical health problems like dehydration and heat-stroke.

In 2012, USAID committed a $66 million grant to uplift Sindh's municipal services, including the flagship renovation of a plant pumping and purifying water from a canal 22 kilometres (14 miles) away.

But Pakistani non-profit HANDS says Trump's aid embargo has blocked $1.5 million earmarked to make the scheme viable in the long-term, putting the project at risk "within a few months".

"This has transformed our lives," 25-year-old Tufail Ahmed told AFP in Jacobabad, where wintertime temperatures are already forecast to pass 30C next week.

"If the water supply is cut off it will be very difficult for us," he added. "Survival will be challenging, as water is the most essential thing for life."

Between September and mid-January Sindh saw rainfall 52 percent below average according to the Pakistan Meteorological Department, with "moderate drought" predicted in the coming months.

Heatwaves are becoming hotter, longer and more frequent due to climate change, scientists say.

- Services withdrawn -

The project pipes in 1.5 million gallons (5.7 million litres) daily and serves about 350,000 people in Jacobabad, HANDS says -- a city where grinding poverty is commonplace.

HANDS said it discovered Trump's 90-day freeze on foreign assistance through media reports with no prior warning.

"Since everything is just suspended we have to withdraw our staff and we have to withdraw all services for this water project," HANDS CEO Shaikh Tanveer Ahmed told AFP.

Forty-seven staff, including experts who manage the water purification and service the infrastructure, have been sent home.

The service will likely stop functioning "within the next few months", Ahmed predicted, and the project will be "a total failure" unless another funder steps in.

The scheme is currently in the hands of the local government who lack the technical or revenue collection expertise HANDS was developing to fund the supply from bill payments, rather than donations.

The international aid community has been in a tailspin over Trump's campaign to downsize or dismantle swathes of the US government -- led by his top donor and the world's richest man Elon Musk.

The most concentrated fire has been on Washington's aid agency USAID, whose $42.8 billion budget represents 42 percent of humanitarian aid disbursed worldwide.

But it accounts for only between 0.7 and 1.4 percent of total US government spending in the last quarter century, according to the Pew Research Center.

Trump has claimed USAID is "run by radical lunatics" while Musk has described it as a "criminal organisation" needing to be put "through the woodchipper".

In Jacobabad, 47-year-old local social activist Abdul Ghani pleaded for its work to continue.

"If the supply is cut off it will severely affect the public," he said. "Poverty is widespread here and we cannot afford alternatives."

- 'Supply cannot be stopped' -

Residents complain the Jacobabad supply is patchy but still describe it as an invaluable service in a city where the alternative is buying water from private donkey-drawn tankers.

Eighteen-year-old student Noor Ahmed said before "our women had to walk for hours" to collect water.

HANDS says the private tankers have a monthly cost of up to 10 times more than their rate of 500 rupees ($1.80) and often contain contaminants like arsenic.

"The dirty water we used to buy was harmful to our health and falling ill would cost us even more," said 55-year-old Sadruddin Lashari.

"This water is clean. The supply cannot be stopped," he added.

Pakistan -- home to more than 240 million people -- ranks as the nation most affected by climate change, according to non-profit Germanwatch's Climate Risk Index released this year and analysing data from 2022.

That year a third of the country was inundated by unprecedented monsoon floods killing more than 1,700 and causing an estimated $14.9 billion in damages after a punishing summer heatwave.

Jacobabad's water system also suffered heavy damage in the 2010 floods which killed almost 1,800 and affected 21 million.

Pakistan produces less than one percent of global greenhouse gas emissions which scientists say are driving human-made climate change.

Islamabad has consistently called for countries which emit more to contribute to aid for its population suffering on the front line of climate change.

"It's incredibly hot here year-round," said Lashari. "We need water constantly."

(F.Schuster--BBZ)