Water management and sustainable development in Pakistan: environmental and health impacts of water quality on achieving the UNSDGs by 2030

Waseem Ishaque, Khalid Sultan, Zia ur Rehman
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Abstract

Water security is an emerging national security challenge for Pakistan. Combined with water scarcity, the quality of drinking water is rapidly deteriorating; the available drinking water is contaminated for many reasons, impacting the ecological chain in a pronounced way. Despite the government's strong commitment to the provision of clean drinking water to the citizens, and the use of smart technology for irrigation, which consumes 60%−70% of the water, to conserve the available water resources, the implementation of the policy is a daunting challenge. This study argues that surface and subsurface drinking water in Pakistan is being contaminated very quickly, creating several health risks and potential human security issues. The study examines the quality of drinking water through laboratory tests by collecting samples from selected urban and rural areas as a case study and examining them against the minimum safe ranges given in the international and national parameters for clean drinking water. As a result of laboratory testing, it has been revealed that the quality of drinking water in Pakistan is deteriorating sharply and the developing situation, if not addressed in time, has the potential to become the biggest health risk in the coming years. As water quality continues to worsen and water availability is gradually decreasing, the achievement of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UNSDGs) on water by 2030 is becoming a remote possibility. As a timely input to relevant institutions and government ministries, this study comprehensively highlights the challenges of water scarcity and water quality in Pakistan and provides recommendations for addressing the multidimensional water security issues in a sustainable manner and achieving UNSDG number 6 on access to clean water and sanitation for all by 2030.
巴基斯坦的水资源管理与可持续发展:水质对到 2030 年实现联合国可持续发展目标的环境和健康影响
水安全是巴基斯坦面临的一个新的国家安全挑战。由于缺水,饮用水的质量正在迅速恶化;由于多种原因,现有的饮用水受到了污染,对生态链造成了明显的影响。尽管政府坚定地承诺为公民提供清洁的饮用水,并在耗水量占 60%-70% 的灌溉领域采用智能技术,以节约可用水资源,但政策的实施仍是一项艰巨的挑战。本研究认为,巴基斯坦的地表水和地下饮用水正在迅速受到污染,造成了若干健康风险和潜在的人类安全问题。本研究通过实验室检测,从选定的城市和农村地区采集样本,并根据国际和国内清洁饮用水参数中规定的最低安全范围进行检测,以此作为案例研究。实验室检测结果表明,巴基斯坦的饮用水质量正在急剧恶化,如果不及时解决,这种发展中的状况有可能在未来几年内成为最大的健康风险。随着水质的持续恶化和可用水量的逐渐减少,到 2030 年实现联合国可持续发展目标(UNSDGs)中有关水的目标已变得遥不可及。作为对相关机构和政府部门的及时投入,本研究全面强调了巴基斯坦缺水和水质方面的挑战,并为以可持续的方式解决多层面的水安全问题以及到 2030 年实现联合国可持续发展目标中关于人人享有清洁水和卫生设施的第 6 项目标提出了建议。
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