Indus paradox
Why this matters: local context for readers following news across Pakistan and the region.
INDIA’S suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty has reignited debate over one of South Asia’s most important river systems. Much of the discussion has centred on water allocation, infrastructure projects and legal obligations. Yet the deeper question is whether the crisis facing the Indus Basin is really about water scarcity at all. At its core, the crisis is epistemological—a problem of knowledge, understanding and the conceptual framework through which rivers are perceived. The ecological distress across the Indus Basin is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore. Natural river flows are being disrupted, wetlands are shrinking, floodplains are losing their ecological function, groundwater reserves are declining and the Indus Delta continues to retreat under the pressure of seawater intrusion. Rising temperatures, accelerating glacier melt, erratic weather patterns and increasingly destructive monsoon floods all point to a system under growing stress. These are not isolated challenges but interconnected symptoms of a broader ecological breakdown. For centuries, the basin functioned as a self-regulating system in which glacier-fed rivers, seasonal floods, wetlands, lakes, floodplains and the delta formed a continuous ecological cycle that sustained fertility, biodiversity and long-term environmental balance. The disruption began when rivers came to be viewed primarily as instruments of production. Both India and Pakistan have increasingly confined the basin within an agricultural framework. Vast quantities of water are diverted into canal networks to support water-intensive crops such as rice, sugarcane and wheat, often in naturally arid or semi-arid regions, shifting rivers from ecological systems toward maximised agricultural output. Today, success is still measured in terms of irrigated acreage, crop yields and water extraction. Far less attention is paid to the health of wetlands, floodplains, groundwater reserves or deltas. In both countries, the river is valued