The government has expressed concern about environmental threats to economic growth and social development and since the early 1990s has addressed environmental concerns with new legislation and institutions such as the Pakistan Environment Protection Council. However, foreign lenders provide most environmental protection funds, and only 0.04 percent of the government's development budget goes to environmental protection. Thus, the government's ability to enforce environmental regulations is limited, and private industries often lack the funds to meet environmental standards established by international trade organizations. Government of Pakistan start new campaign with Clean and Green Pakistan to overcome environmental issues.
Living Indus Initiative The
Living Indus Initiative is an environmental program launched by the Ministry of Climate Change in Pakistan, in collaboration with the United Nations, intended to protect, conserve, and restore the natural ecosystems within the Indus Basin.
Clean Green Champion Program An initiative named Clean Green Pakistan was launched in 2019 by the Government of Pakistan. The idea of the initiative was to hold a competition between cities of Pakistan in cleanliness and greenery. A web portal was launched where citizens can get registered and report their activities to earn points. Citizens would also be awarded medals when they reach a certain threshold of points.
Billion Tree Tsunami The
Billion Tree Tsunami was launched in 2014 by the government of
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK) as a response against the challenge of
global warming. Pakistan's Billion Tree Tsunami restores 350,000 hectares of forests and degraded land to surpass its
Bonn Challenge commitment. The project aimed at improving the ecosystems of classified forests, as well as privately owned waste and farm lands, and therefore entails working in close collaboration with concerned communities and stakeholders to ensure their meaningful participation through effectuating project promotion and extension services. In just a year it has added three-quarters of a billion new trees, as part of a “tree tsunami” aimed at reversing worsening
forest loss. The project was completed in August 2017, ahead of schedule. The initiative was acknowledged by international media, namely
The Washington Post,
VoA News,
The Hindu,
Reuters,
Al Jazeera, and
Stop are a part of Clean Green Pakistan Effort.
National Conservation Strategy The Conservation Strategy Report has three explicit objectives: conservation of natural resources, promotion of sustainable development, and improvement of efficiency in the use and management of resources. It sees itself as a "call for action" addressed to central and provincial governments, businesses, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), local communities, and individuals. The primary agricultural nonpoint source pollutants are nutrients (particularly nitrogen and phosphorus), sediment, animal wastes, pesticides, and salts. Agricultural nonpoint sources enter surface water through direct
surface runoff or through seepage to ground water that discharges to a surface water outlet. Various farming activities result in the erosion of soil particles. The sediment produced by erosion can damage fish habitat and wetlands, and often transports excess
agricultural chemicals resulting in contaminated runoff. This runoff, in turn, affects changes to aquatic habitat such as temperature increases and decreased oxygen. The most common sources of excess nutrients in surface water from nonpoint sources are chemical fertilizers and manure from animal facilities. Such nutrients cause eutrophication in surface water. Pesticides used for pest control in agricultural operations can also contaminate surface as well as ground-water resources. Return flows, runoff, and leach ate from irrigated lands may transport sediment, nutrients, salts, and other materials. Finally, improper grazing practices in riparian areas, as well as upland areas, can also cause water quality degradation. The development of Pakistan is viewed as a multigenerational enterprise. In seeking to transform attitudes and practices, the National Conservation Strategy recognizes that two key changes in values are needed: the restoration of the conservation ethic derived from
Islamic moral values, called Qantas, and the revival of community spirit and responsibility, Haqooq ul Ibad. The National Conservation Strategy Report recommends fourteen program areas for priority implementation: maintaining soils in
croplands, increasing efficiency of
irrigation, protecting watersheds, supporting forestry and plantations, restoring rangelands and improving livestock, protecting water bodies and sustaining fisheries, conserving biodiversity, increasing energy efficiency, developing and deploying renewable resources, preventing or decreasing pollution, managing urban wastes, supporting institutions to manage common resources, integrating population and environmental programs, and preserving the cultural heritage. It identifies sixty-eight specific programs in these areas, each with a long-term goal and expected outputs and physical investments required within ten years. Special attention has been paid to the potential roles of environmental NGOs, women's organizations, and international NGOs in working with the government in its conservation efforts. Recommendations from the National Conservation Strategy Report are incorporated in the Eighth Five-Year Plan (1993–98). In a recent study conducted by the Global CLEAN campaign, it was found that the average temperature in Pakistan had risen by 0.2 degrees in only two years. This is a dramatic change and puts emphasis on climate change campaigns.
Land use • Arable land - 27% • Permanent crops - 1% • Permanent pastures - 6% • Forests and woodland - 5% • Other - 61% (1993 est.) • Irrigated land - 171,100 km2 (1993 est.)
Protected areas Pakistan has 14
national parks, 72
wildlife sanctuaries, 66
game reserves, 9 marine and littoral protected areas, 19 protected
wetlands and a number of other protected
grasslands,
shrublands,
woodlands and
natural monuments.
International agreements Pakistan is a party to several international agreements related to environment and climate. The most prominent among them are: ==See also==