Pakistan’s record smog triggers anguish and anxiety

Pakistan’s record smog triggers anguish and anxiety
A cyclist rides along a street engulfed in thick smog, in Lahore on November 10, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 11 November 2024
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Pakistan’s record smog triggers anguish and anxiety

Pakistan’s record smog triggers anguish and anxiety
  • Lahore, a city of 14 million people on the border with India, regularly ranks among world’s most polluted cities
  • Schools in main cities of Punjab province, of which Lahore is capital, have closed until Nov. 17 due to the smog

LAHORE: On the streets of Pakistan’s second biggest city, smog stings eyes and burns throats. Inside homes, few people can afford air purifiers to limit the damage of toxic particles that seep through doors and windows.
Lahore — a city of 14 million people stuffed with factories on the border with India — regularly ranks among the world’s most polluted cities, but it has hit record levels this month.
Schools have closed in the main cities of Punjab province, of which Lahore is the capital, until November 17 in a bid to lower children’s exposure to the pollution, especially during the morning commute when it is often at its highest.
“The children are constantly coughing, they have constant allergies. In schools we saw that most of the children were falling sick,” said Rafia Iqbal a 38-year-old primary school teacher in the city that borders India.
Her husband Muhammad Safdar, a 41-year-old advertising professional, said the level of pollution “is making daily living impossible.”
“We cannot move around, we cannot go outside, we can do nothing at all,” he told AFP.
According to the international Air Quality Index Scale, an index value of 300 or higher results is “hazardous” to health and Pakistan has regularly tipped over 1,000 on the scale.
In Multan, another city of several million people some 350 kilometers away, the AQI level passed 2,000 last week — a staggering height never seen before by incredulous residents.
Access to parks, zoos, playgrounds, historic monuments, museums and recreational areas will be banned until November 17 and tuk-tuks with polluting two-stroke engines, along with restaurants that operate barbecues without filters have been banned in Lahore “hot-spots.”
Air purifiers are luxury for most families, with the cheapest priced at around $90, with the added cost of replacing filters every few months in such extreme pollution.
Safdar and Iqbal do not have air purifiers and instead try to contain their children to one room.
“Preventive measures should have been taken. It’s a yearly occurrence,” Safdar said of the government.
“Obviously there is something missing in their solution.”
A mix of low-grade fuel emissions from factories and vehicles, exacerbated by agricultural stubble burning, blanket the city each winter, trapped by cooler temperatures and slow-moving winds.
The WHO says that air pollution can trigger strokes, heart disease, lung cancer and other respiratory diseases.
It is particularly punishing for children and babies, and the elderly.
Last year, the Punjab government tested artificial rain to try to overcome the smog, and this year, trucks with water cannons sprayed the streets — with no results.
Special smog counters to triage patients have been established at clinics across the province, with 900 people admitted to hospital in Lahore alone on Tuesday.
Doctor Qurat ul Ain, a hospital doctor for 15 years, witnesses the damage from an emergency rooms in Lahore.
“This year smog is much more than previous years and the number of patients suffering from its effects is greater too,” she told AFP.
Many arrive with labored breathing or coughing fits and reddened eyes, often the elderly, children and young men who have breathed in the toxic air while on the back of motorbikes.
“We tell people not to go out and otherwise to wear a mask. We tell them not to touch their eyes with their hands, especially children,” she adds.
For days the concentration of polluting micro-particles PM2.5 in Punjab has been dozens of times higher than that deemed tolerable by the World Health Organization (WHO).
Doctor Alia Haider, also a climate activist, is calling for awareness campaigns for patients who often do not know the dangers of smog.
Children from poor neighborhoods, she said, are the first victims because they live all year round with pollutants of different types.
“We are stuck in our own poison,” she said. It’s like a cloud of gas over the city.”


Pakistan PM meets Saudi investment minister to follow up on recently signed agreements

Pakistan PM meets Saudi investment minister to follow up on recently signed agreements
Updated 42 sec ago
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Pakistan PM meets Saudi investment minister to follow up on recently signed agreements

Pakistan PM meets Saudi investment minister to follow up on recently signed agreements
  • Pakistani, Saudi businesses last month signed 34 economic agreements worth $2.8 billion 
  • Shehbaz Sharif is in Riyadh to represent Pakistan at Arab-Islamic Summit on Middle East crisis

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif met Saudi Arabia’s Investment Minister Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al-Falih in Riyadh on Monday to discuss progress on the recently signed bilateral business deals between the two countries, the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) said. 

Pakistani and Saudi businesses signed 27 memorandums of agreement (MoUs) worth $2.2 billion on Oct. 10 during Al-Falih’s visit to Islamabad. Al-Falih announced on Oct. 30 on the occasion of Sharif’s visit to the Kingdom that both sides had agreed to enhance the number of business agreements from 27 to 34 and increase their value from $2.2 billion to $2.8 billion. 

Sharif is currently in Riyadh where he will address the Arab-Islamic Summit today, Monday, and present Pakistan’s perspective on Israel’s war in Gaza and Lebanon, and surging investments in the Middle East. The Pakistani premier met Al-Falih and Mohammed Al-Tuwaijri, the adviser to the Royal Court on the sidelines of the summit, the PMO said. 

“The meeting was held to follow up on the recent engagements for economic cooperation between the two countries,” Sharif’s office said. 

The PMO said Sharif appreciated the progress on major projects under discussion between the two countries, acknowledging the efforts of the Pakistani and Saudi technical teams.

The meeting between the two takes place as Islamabad seeks to strengthen trade and investment ties with friendly nations, particularly the Kingdom, which has promised a $5 billion investment package that cash-strapped Pakistan desperately needs to shore up its dwindling foreign reserves and fight a chronic balance of payment crisis.

As Pakistan reeled from a macroeconomic crisis last year that threatened to cause the country to default on its external obligations, Islamabad formed the Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC) in 2023. The SIFC is a hybrid civil and military body that fast-tracks decisions related to foreign investment in key economic sectors such as agriculture, mining, minerals, tourism and others.

Sharif has actively pursued economic diplomacy in the region in recent months, seeking more investments and enhancing trade and regional connectivity for Pakistan. The South Asian country has sought to leverage its position as a transit and trade hub connecting landlocked Central Asian countries with the rest of the world and also pushed for mutually beneficial economic partnerships with Gulf countries. 


Islamabad invites South Korea to join UAE, Saudi Arabia in investing in Pakistani ports

Islamabad invites South Korea to join UAE, Saudi Arabia in investing in Pakistani ports
Updated 11 November 2024
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Islamabad invites South Korea to join UAE, Saudi Arabia in investing in Pakistani ports

Islamabad invites South Korea to join UAE, Saudi Arabia in investing in Pakistani ports
  • Pakistan’s maritime affairs minister meets South Korean envoy to discuss modernizing ports, boosting economic ties
  • With access to Arabian Sea, Pakistani ports are vital for international trade and provide jobs to thousands of people

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Minister for Maritime Affairs Qaiser Ahmed Shaikh invited South Korea to join Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Denmark and Malaysia in investing in the country’s key port infrastructure, state-run media reported recently. 
Pakistan aims to bolster its maritime sector and enhance regional trade connectivity by modernizing its key port facilities, including the deep water Gwadar Port, and improving its infrastructure to increase cargo handling capacity and streamline trade routes.
Shaikh met South Korea’s Ambassador to Pakistan Park Ki Jun on Sunday to discuss Pakistan’s growing efforts to attract foreign investment in strategic sectors, with a focus on modernizing the country’s ports and boosting economic ties with leading Asian economies.
“Minister for Maritime Affairs Qaiser Ahmed Shaikh has invited the Korean government and investors to explore opportunities in Pakistan’s port and shipping industry,” the state broadcaster said. 
The minister highlighted that Saudi Arabia, UAE, Denmark and Malaysia had already made “significant investments” in Pakistani ports and hoped Korean investors would do the same. 
Shaikh said bilateral cooperation with South Korea could be strengthened in renewable energy, solar, wind, hydropower, urban planning and transportation sectors.
Lauding the educational exchange program between both countries, Shaikh reiterated Pakistan’s commitment to enhance its partnership with South Korea in key economic sectors, saying that Islamabad is aiming for a mutually beneficial relationship.
With access to the Arabian Sea, Pakistan’s seaports in the coastal city of Karachi are vital for international trade and provide jobs for thousands of people in the country. 
Pakistan has been working on restructuring and upgrading its ports. In August, Danish shipping firm Maersk expressed intent to invest $2 billion in Pakistan’s port and transport infrastructure over the next two years. 
This initiative is seen as a pivotal step toward boosting the country’s economic growth, strengthening trade links across Asia, and enhancing its geopolitical influence in the region.
Pakistani ministries of maritime, aviation and railways last week signed four agreements with the Abu Dhabi (AD) Ports Group to enhance collaboration in customs, rail, airport infrastructure and maritime shipping and logistics sectors. 
AD Ports Group, a leading maritime and logistics provider in the Middle East, signed an agreement in July this year to invest $250 million in Pakistan in 10 years as it plans to build an advanced port facility in the country’s seaside metropolis of Karachi.


Pakistan to press developed nations for unconditional climate funding as COP29 opens today

Pakistan to press developed nations for unconditional climate funding as COP29 opens today
Updated 11 November 2024
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Pakistan to press developed nations for unconditional climate funding as COP29 opens today

Pakistan to press developed nations for unconditional climate funding as COP29 opens today
  • Annual summit will see tough talks following year of disasters that have emboldened developing countries in demands for climate cash
  • Pakistan goes to COP29 as record air pollution has triggered hundreds of hospitalizations, school closures, stay-at-home orders

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will urge developed countries to fulfill past pledges and provide easy access to climate funding without attaching conditions as it attends the Conference of the Parties (COP29), which formally started in Baku today, Monday.
The annual UN climate summit will see tough talks on finance and trade, following a year of weather disasters that have emboldened developing countries in their demands for climate cash. Nearly 200 countries are gathering for the summit, where reaching a consensus for a deal among so many will be difficult.
“Pakistan is very clear on our stance on what we need from all the developed countries when it comes to the pledges, one, they need to complete their pledges, they need to fulfill their pledges, and two, easy access to the fundings,” Romina Khurshid Alam, PM Shehbaz Sharif’s coordinator on climate change, told Arab News in an interview this month.
Pakistan is ranked the 5th most vulnerable country to climate change, according to the Global Climate Risk Index. In 2022, devastating floods killed over 1,700 people and affected over 33 million, with economic losses exceeding $30 billion. 
International donors last January committed over $9 billion to help Pakistan recover from the ruinous floods but little of that cash has yet to trickle in, according to officials. 
Pakistan also regularly faces other climate change-induced affects such as droughts, cyclones, torrential rainstorms and heatwaves.
Currently, record-high air pollution levels have triggered hundreds of hospitalizations, school closures and stay-at-home orders in the eastern city of Lahore and other cities in the populous Punjab province, which has been enveloped in a thick, toxic smog since last month. 
A mix of low-grade fuel emissions from factories and vehicles, exacerbated by agricultural stubble burning, blanket Lahore and its surroundings each winter, trapped by cooler temperatures and slow-moving winds. The city of 14 million people stuffed with factories on the border with India regularly ranks among the world’s most polluted cities, but it has hit record levels this month, as has New Delhi. 
Pakistani authorities have said archrivals Pakistan and India need to coordinate actions to temper toxic smog, which winds carry across the border.
“We are open to dialogues and open to come up with the solution, we want to get the things done by dialogue,” Alam said, noting that the chief minister of Pakistan’s Punjab had also urged India to pursue diplomacy to resolve this issue. 
“This is not a game, the main thing is to think about the children and to think about the future.”
Last year, the Punjab government tested artificial rain to try to overcome the smog, and this year, trucks with water cannons have sprayed the streets, with no results.
The WHO says air pollution can trigger strokes, heart disease, lung cancer and other respiratory diseases. It is particularly punishing for children and babies, and the elderly.


Lucky Cement to set up hybrid wind-solar power plant under Pakistan’s special investment body 

Lucky Cement to set up hybrid wind-solar power plant under Pakistan’s special investment body 
Updated 11 November 2024
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Lucky Cement to set up hybrid wind-solar power plant under Pakistan’s special investment body 

Lucky Cement to set up hybrid wind-solar power plant under Pakistan’s special investment body 
  • In the past, Lucky Cement has commissioned 42.8 MW solar power plant in Karachi
  • Power consumption in Pakistan has declined 8-10% year on year in past 3 quarters 

ISLAMABAD: One of Pakistan’s largest domestic cement producers, Lucky Cement, will set up a hybrid wind and solar power project under the Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC), state media said on Monday.
Private investment is low and declining in Pakistan, which has very low rates of private investment relative to regional and comparable countries, around one-third of the South Asia average, according to World Bank data released in 2023. Private investment declined from an average of 13.7 percent of GDP in the 2000s to around 10 percent in FY21.
The government set up the SIFC last year to attract foreign investment and also create better conditions and remove bottlenecks for domestic companies who have historically faced unfair competition from state-owned entities undertaking commercial operations and received little support when seeking to access new overseas markets.
“Special Investment Facilitation Council is supporting private companies for development of energy sector,” Radio Pakistan reported. “As part of these efforts, Lucky Cement has planned a hybrid wind and solar power project which will generate environment friendly electricity.”
In the past, Lucky Cement has commissioned a 42.8 MW solar power plant in Karachi.
Power consumption in Pakistan has declined 8-10 percent year on year over the past three quarters, according to energy ministry data. Power consumption is a significant economic indicator in the developing economy and another expected decline this year underscores challenges facing the newly elected government in debt-laden Pakistan, amid growing discontent among the poor.
Poor and middle class households are still feeling the impact of the International Monetary Fund’s bailout of Pakistan last year, which contributed to rising retail prices including fuel and electricity charges.
Power cuts are also frequent in Pakistan, especially in far flung rural areas, due to grid issues, delays in importing fuel and hard currency shortages, though the frequency of such outages have reduced in the recent months.


Pakistan limits outdoor activities, market hours to curb air pollution-related illness

Pakistan limits outdoor activities, market hours to curb air pollution-related illness
Updated 11 November 2024
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Pakistan limits outdoor activities, market hours to curb air pollution-related illness

Pakistan limits outdoor activities, market hours to curb air pollution-related illness
  • Punjab government says “unavoidable religious rites” exempt from latest smog-related restrictions
  • Several parts of South Asia are engulfed by toxic haze each winter as cold air traps dust, emissions

LAHORE: Pakistan’s Punjab province banned most outdoor activities and ordered shops, markets and malls in some areas to close early from Monday to curb illnesses caused by intense air pollution.
The province has already closed educational institutions and public spaces like parks and zoos until Nov. 17 in places including Lahore, the world’s most polluted city in terms of air quality according to Swiss group IQAir’s live ratings.
The districts of Lahore, Multan, Faisalabad, and Gujranwala have seen an unprecedented rise in patients with respiratory diseases, eye and throat irritation, and pink eye disease, the Punjab government said in an order issued late on Sunday.
The new restrictions would also remain in force until Nov. 17, it said.
“The spread of conjunctivitis/ pink eye disease due to bacterial or viral infection, smoke, dust or chemical exposure is posing a serious and imminent threat to public health,” it said.
While outdoor activities including outdoor sports events, exhibitions and festivals, and outdoor dining at restaurants have been prohibited, “unavoidable religious rites” are exempt from this direction, the order said.
Some outlets like pharmacies, oil depots, dairy shops, and fruit and vegetable shops have similarly been exempted from the directions to close by 8 p.m. local time.
Lahore’s air quality remained hazardous on Monday, with an index score of more than 600, according to IQAir, but this was significantly lower than the 1,900 that it touched in some places earlier this month.
A score of 0-50 is considered ‘good’.
Several parts of South Asia are engulfed by a toxic haze each winter as cold air traps dust, emissions, and smoke from farm fires.
Punjab has blamed its particularly toxic air this year on pollution wafting in from India, where northern parts have also been battling hazardous air, and has said it will take the issue up with the neighboring country through its foreign ministry.
India’s Supreme Court on Monday directed the Delhi government to decide by Nov. 25 on imposing a ‘perpetual ban’ on firecrackers, legal news portal Bar and Bench reported.
Firecrackers set off by revellers on Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights that was celebrated on Oct. 31 this year despite a ban, has aggravated the region’s pollution problem.