Repercussion of meagre flow of the lower Indus River

Authors

  • Sher Khan Panhwar

Keywords:

seawater penetration, agriculture eradication, fisheries, lower Indus riparian

Abstract

This study was intended to gauge seawater penetration in the lower Indus region and an overview on economic, social and ecological snags including (i) agriculture which is occupation of over 60% population residing in the Badin, Sujawal and Thatta districts of Sindh (ii) The freshwater scarcity getting out of hands cultivable land resulted either displacement of populations or living below poverty level (iii) People switched from agriculture profession to fisheries (iv) absence of quality drinking water and unsuitable underground water created health risks (v) No-water in lower Indus region has damaged river and estuarine ecosystem that provide geo-ecological services (vi) Since long meagre dischargement of sediment reached toward delta permitted seawater to penetrate thousand acers of cultivable land into saline soil. The most affected dehs of Thatta district include three Talukas Mirpur Sakhro (14 Dehs), Ghorbari (7 Dehs) and Keti Bunder (31 Dehs). Three dehs Milko, Pirpathai and Pumbri of Mirpur Sakhro are completely under sea water and out of agriculture. Sea water inundation has badly affected Ghorabari Taluka over thirty-two-thousand-acre land of seven Dehs are now briny. Thirty-one Dehs of Taluka Keti Bunder are completely barren. Badin district is divided in two talukas (Badin and Shaheed Fazil Rahu) and ten Dehs namley, Babralo, Dharan, Warayo, Sando, Patiji, Thath, Siantri, Khudi, Palh, Ahmed Rajo, out of which three dehs Babralo, Siantri and Ahmed Rajoare completely barren in a limited period of (2008-2018). Overall outcomes of this study reveal that southernmost region of Sindh encounter rampant seawater penetration. Therefore, solid structures like construction of the coastal highway, intensive forests, coastal banks in affected area and persistent freshwater flow toward lower region is unavoidable.

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Published

2023-12-29

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Articles