Drought, dams and diplomacy: Afghanistan's water crisis goes regional
But as Taliban authorities swept to power and tightened their grip on the country, they have pushed for Afghanistan's water sovereignty, launching infrastructure projects to harness precious resources in the arid territory.
Dams and canals have sparked tensions with neighbouring states, testing the Taliban authorities' efforts to build strong regional ties, as they remain largely isolated on the global stage since their 2021 takeover.
At the same time, the region is facing the shared impacts of climate change intensifying water scarcity, as temperatures rise and precipitation patterns shift, threatening glaciers and snowpack that feed the country's rivers.
Here are key points about Afghanistan's transboundary water challenges:
- Central Asian states to the north -
Afghanistan is emerging as a new player in often fraught negotiations on the use of the Amu Darya, one of two key rivers crucial for crops in water-stressed Central Asia, where water sharing relies on fragile accords since Soviet times.
Central Asian states have expressed concern over the Qosh Tepa mega canal project that could divert up to 21 percent of the Amu Darya's total flow to irrigate 560,000 hectares of land across Afghanistan's arid north, and further deplete the Aral Sea.
Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan are likely to face the biggest impact, both joined by Kazakhstan in voicing alarm, even as they deepen diplomatic ties with the Taliban authorities -- officially recognised so far by only Russia.
"No matter how friendly the tone is now," water governance expert Mohd Faizee warned, "at some point there will be consequences for Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan when the canal starts operating".
Taliban officials have denied that the project will have a major impact on the Amu Darya's water levels and pledged it will improve food security in a country heavily dependent on climate-vulnerable agriculture and facing one of the world's worst humanitarian crises.
"There is an abundance of water, especially when the Amu Darya floods and glacial meltwater flows into it" in the warmer months, said project manager Sayed Zabihullah Miri, during a visit to the canal works in Faryab province, where diggers carved into a drought-ridden plain dotted with camels and locusts.
- Iran to the west -
Iran is the only country with which Afghanistan has a formal water sharing treaty, agreed in 1973 over the Helmand river, which traverses Taliban heartland territory, but the accord was never fully implemented.
Longstanding tensions over the river's resources have spiked over dams in southern Afghanistan, particularly in periods of drought, which are likely to increase as climate shocks hit the region's water cycle.
Iran, facing pressure in its parched southeastern region, has repeatedly demanded that Afghanistan respect its rights, charging that upstream dams restrict the Helmand's flow into a border lake.
The Taliban authorities insist there is not enough water to release more to Iran, blaming the impact of climate pressures on the whole region.
They also argue long-term poor water management has meant Afghanistan has not gotten its full share, according to an Afghanistan Analysts Network report by water resources management expert Assem Mayar.
Iran and Afghanistan have no formal agreement over their other shared river basin, the Harirud, which also flows into Turkmenistan and is often combined into a single basin with the Morghab river.
While infrastructure exists on the Afghan portions of the basin, some has not been fully utilised, Faizee said.
But that could change, he added, as the end of conflict in Afghanistan means infrastructure works don't incur vast security costs on top of construction budgets, lifting a barrier to development of projects such as the Pashdan dam inaugurated in August on the Harirud.
- Pakistan to the east -
Water resources have not topped the agenda in consistently fraught relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Afghanistan's Kabul river basin, which encompasses tributaries to the greater Indus basin and feeds the capital and largest city, is shared with Pakistan.
The countries, however, have no formal cooperation mechanism.
With the Afghan capital wracked by a severe water crisis, the Taliban authorities have sought to revitalise old projects and start new ones to tackle the problem, risking fresh tensions with Pakistan.
But the lack of funds and technical capacity means the Taliban authorities' large water infrastructure projects across the country could take many years to come to fruition -- time that could be good for diplomacy, but bad for ordinary Afghans.
sw/ecl/rsc/cwl
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
25 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Ontario increasing funding for housing-enabling infrastructure
Ontario Premier Doug Ford says the province is putting $1.6 billion more toward funds for municipalities to help them get housing built. Ford told the Association of Municipalities of Ontario conference Monday in Ottawa that the government has already put $2.3 billion toward its Municipal Housing Infrastructure Program, which goes toward housing-enabling infrastructure. Municipalities apply through four streams, including one for building roads and bridges, and another for building water and wastewater systems. Ontario is well off the pace of home building that's needed to achieve Ford's goal of getting 1.5 million homes built by 2031. The government recently updated its housing tracker for the first time in eight months, and it shows that construction was started on 94,753 housing units in 2024 — well below its interim goal for that year of 125,000 homes — even after adding construction such as long-term care homes and university dorms to the count. Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. figures released Monday say the country's annual pace of housing starts in July rose four per cent year-over-year, but in Ontario there was a decline of 28 per cent. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 18, 2025. Allison Jones, The Canadian Press Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


American Military News
5 hours ago
- American Military News
World Food Program Warns Of ‘Unprecedented' Hunger Crisis In Afghanistan
This article was originally published by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and is reprinted with permission. Kabul residents have told RFE/RL that they are begging for rice and 'ready to accept death,' as the World Food Program (WFP) said it was 'turning hundreds of thousands of people away' from nutrition centers. WFP Country Director John Aylieff said drought, dramatic aid cuts, and the forced return of 1.5 million Afghans from Iran and Pakistan had combined to create 'rising acute malnutrition' in the poverty-stricken country. 'We need to do everything we can to avoid famine,' he told RFE/RL. 'It could be unprecedented because during the winter, there could be 10 to 15 million people needing food assistance. And at the moment, we have no funding and there will be no response.' For the coming six months, the WFP in Afghanistan said it requires nearly $539 million for all programs to reach the most vulnerable families across the country. But multiple donors have slashed contributions. For 2025, the WFP in Afghanistan said it received some $155 million. This compares with nearly $560 million the year before, and nearly $1.6 billion in 2022. 'The US has been a phenomenally generous donor in Afghanistan for decades, providing the lion's share of humanitarian assistance, along with other generous donors from around the world,' Aylieff said. 'Now is not the moment for anyone to reduce or walk away.' RFE/RL has asked the White House for comment. In his first few months in office, President Donald Trump cut more than 7,400 foreign aid programs globally worth $80 billion, according to a report published last month by Senate Democrats. A State Department spokesman told RFE/RL on August 4 that 'over the last approximately four years, foreign assistance intended for the people of Afghanistan was systematically diverted and expropriated by the Taliban — a Specially Designated Global Terrorist group.' Nearly four years since their takeover of Afghanistan, 'it is due time that the Taliban provide for the welfare of the Afghan people,' the spokesman added. 'Ready To Accept Death' The situation has devastating results for people like 42-year-old Kabul resident Gul Dasta. She used to work as a cleaner at the Labor and Social Affairs Ministry. When the Taliban seized power in August 2021, they announced a ban on women working in government offices, and she was fired. Dasta's husband has severe diabetes and cannot work. The couple have a 9-year-old son and two daughters, aged 14 and 16. They have not received an international food aid package for five months. 'There have been days that we had nothing to eat. I have boiled some rice that I begged from the neighbors and fed my children with. Every day in life is so difficult. There have been days that I cried all day,' she told RFE/RL in a phone interview. Another Kabul resident we spoke to broke down in tears during the call. Abeda, 54, is a widow who lives with her 15-year-old son, 26-year-old widowed daughter, and two grandchildren. She was a cleaner at a girls' high school until the Taliban closed it as part of a campaign against education for females. 'Last Thursday I had nothing at home. Not even potatoes or tomatoes. I hated my life. Life is full of pain and trouble. Last Thursday I was even ready to accept death,' she said, during an interview on August 11. Turning People Away Aylieff said the situation was even worse in rural areas, where some 400 clinics providing nutrition had closed down due to lack of funds. 'The result of that is that we're turning hundreds of thousands of people away,' he said. 'Sometimes they would have to walk for five hours to a clinic, the nearest one. Imagine the anguish of showing up and finding the clinic is closed.' Aylieff added that the WFP was currently able to provide food to around 1 million people, compared to 5 million a year ago. But it will soon run out of money, he said, meaning food assistance will stop 'almost completely' by October. Taliban officials have largely avoided public comment on the hunger crisis, instead making vague remarks blaming foreign actors for the country's general economic hardships. For example, a statement by the Economy Ministry back in February said, 'In addition to the financial and economic sanctions imposed by the United States, the freezing of assets has affected Afghanistan's national economy.' RFE/RL has been unable to operate freely in Afghanistan since the Taliban seized power.


E&E News
7 hours ago
- E&E News
Florida DOGE targets local climate programs
Florida's DOGE is targeting city and county climate programs as Republicans seek to constrain local government spending. The state's Department of Government Efficiency is asking local governments to detail their 'green new deal' spending, including funding for electric vehicles, charging stations, solar power, sustainable building certification, staff training and other climate-related programs. The demand is among many that the office — led by Florida Chief Financial Officer Blaise Ingoglia — has made during what it calls on-site auditing. Last week, Florida DOGE conducted a two-day audit of the St. Petersburg city government, following similar examinations of Gainesville, Jacksonville, Broward County and Pinellas County. The state is also seeking to audit Miami-Dade County. Advertisement Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis created Florida DOGE via executive order in February, and its early targets were universities. In June, lawmakers passed legislation compelling local governments to cooperate with Florida DOGE or face $1,000 daily fines. In July, state officials sent letters to local governments demanding specific documents, along with general access to their finances and records.