
Climate change: Pakistan schools close, students stay home
Searing heat, toxic smog and unusual cold snaps have all caused closures intended to spare children the health risks of learning in classrooms that are overcrowded or lack basic cooling, heating or ventilation systems.
In May, a nationwide heatwave saw temperatures up to seven degrees Celsius above normal, hitting 45 degrees (113 degrees Fahrenheit) in Punjab and prompting several provinces to cut school hours or start summer holidays early.
'The class becomes so hot that it feels like we are sitting in a brick kiln,' said 17-year-old Hafiz Ehtesham outside a Lahore school. 'I don't even want to come to school.'
Climate change: extreme heat brings holidays early to Philippine schools
Pakistan is among the countries most vulnerable to climate change, with limited resources for adaptation. Extreme weather is exacerbating an existing education crisis, mainly caused by limited access and poverty.
'Soon, we will have major cognitive challenges because students are being impacted by extreme heat and extreme smog over long periods of time,' said Lahore-based education activist Baela Raza Jamil.
'The poorest are most vulnerable. But climate change is indeed a great leveller, and the urban middle class is also affected.'
A girl drinks water after her classes on a hot summer day in Lahore as the state government announced early summer holidays for schools owing to rising temperatures. Photo: AFP
Strange, bad weather
Pakistan's summers historically began in June, when temperatures hit the high 40s. But in the last five years, May has been similarly hot, according to the Meteorological Department.
'During a power outage, I was sweating so much that the drops were falling off my forehead onto my desk,' 15-year-old Jannat, a student in Lahore, told Agence France-Presse. 'A girl in my class had a nosebleed from the heat.'
Around a third of Pakistani school-age children – over 26 million – are out of school, according to government figures, one of the highest numbers in the world. At least 65 per cent of children are unable to read age-appropriate material by age 10.
School closures affect almost every part of Pakistan, including the country's most populous province Punjab, which has the highest rates of school attendance.
Classes were closed for two weeks in November due to air pollution and another week in May because of the heat. In the previous academic year, three weeks were lost in January to a cold snap and two weeks in May due to heat.
In Balochistan, Pakistan's poorest province, May heatwaves have prompted early summer holidays for three years running, while in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, school hours are regularly slashed.
242 million children's schooling disrupted by climate shocks in 2024, says Unicef
Finding a solution
For authorities, the choice is often between sending children to school in potentially dangerous conditions or watching them fall behind.
In southern Sindh province, authorities have resisted heat-related closures despite growing demands from parents.
'It's hard for parents to send their children to school in this kind of weather,' private school principal Sadiq Hussain told Agence France-Presse in Karachi, adding that attendance drops by 25 per cent in May.
'Their physical and mental health is being affected,' added Dost Mohammad Danish, general secretary of the All Sindh Private Schools and Colleges Association. 'Don't expect better scientists from Pakistan in the coming years.'
Pakistan's children are losing weeks of education each year to school closures caused by climate change-linked extreme weather. Photo: AFP
Schools in Pakistan are overseen by provincial authorities, whose closure notices apply to all schools in a region, even when they are hundreds of kilometres (miles) apart and may be experiencing different conditions or have other resources to cope.
Teachers, parents and education experts want a rethink of school hours, exam timetables and holidays. One solution is for schools to offer Saturday morning classes or split the school day to avoid the midday heat.
Izza Farrakh, a senior education specialist at the World Bank, said climate change-related consequences are affecting attendance and learning outcomes.
'Schools need to have flexibility in determining their academic calendar. It shouldn't be centralised,' she said, adding that end-of-year exams usually taken in May could be replaced by regular assessments throughout the year.
Your Voice: why we need climate change lessons (long letters)
Meeting each child's needs
Adapting school buildings is also crucial.
International development agencies have already equipped thousands of schools with solar panels, but many more of the country's 250,000 schools need help.
Hundreds of climate-resilient schools funded by World Bank loans are being built in Sindh. They are elevated to withstand monsoon flooding and fitted with solar panels for power and rooftop insulation to combat heat and cold.
But in Pakistan's most impoverished villages, where education is a route out of generational poverty, parents still face tough choices.
In rural Sukkur, the local school was among 27,000 that were damaged or destroyed by the unprecedented floods of 2022. Children learn outside their half-collapsed school building, unprotected from the elements.
'Our children are worried, and we are deeply concerned,' said parent Ali Gohar Gandhu, a daily wage labourer. 'Everyone is suffering.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
11 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Has climate change turned the Himalayas into a disaster zone?
Back-to-back natural disasters triggered by heavy rain and flooding in the Indian Himalayan region highlight the growing dangers posed by climate change to one of the world's most ecologically sensitive regions, experts have warned. Flash floods triggered by torrential rains have killed at least 176 people and left scores of others missing in India and Pakistan over the past 24 hours, officials said last week – the second such incident in the mountainous range in a little over a week. Another incident resulted in a severe flood and mudslide that destroyed an entire village in Uttarakhand. Thursday's flood washed away a community kitchen and a security post along a pilgrimage route, officials said. Indian rescue teams work after the cloudburst in Dharali village in Uttarkashi district, Uttarakhand on Monday. Photo: EPA According to scientists, changes in snowfall and rainfall patterns due to climate change have made the Himalayan mountains vulnerable. Glacier retreat and permafrost thaw – ground that remains frozen for at least two consecutive years – have decreased the stability of mountain slopes. Warming seas have also intensified the seasonal monsoon, resulting in shorter but more intense rainfall. The June to September monsoon brings more than 70 per cent of the annual rainfall to the Indian subcontinent. According to Mahesh Palawat, vice-president of meteorology and climate change at Skymet Weather, a western disturbance over the region is currently amplifying the monsoon's effect. 'However, we now need to focus on the infrastructure in the region. These inclement weather events will persist, in fact, increase due to global warming,' he said, adding that deforestation in the region has made mountain slopes more susceptible to landslides and mudslides. He added that even a heavy downpour of 50mm to 60mm can trigger an extreme event, such as the one seen in Kashmir, where a cloudburst has not yet been ruled out. A cloudburst is a sudden, localised and intense rainfall event where a large amount of rain falls in a short period, often under an hour. Hari Chand mourns his wife, who died during flash floods in Chositi village, in Kishtwar district, Indian-administered Kashmir. Photo: AP Experts note that climate change is increasing the frequency of these occurrences due to rising ocean temperatures. 'A huge influx of moisture from the abnormal warming of oceans increases the capacity of the air to hold more water vapour. The Himalayas act as barriers, which give rise to vertically developed convective clouds, known as Cumulonimbus clouds,' Palawat said. 'These clouds are like a column of water, which, when restricted due to topography like the mountains, can lead to the release of water over a smaller area in a shorter duration,' he said. According to Sachchida Nand Tripathi, Dean of the Kotak School of Sustainability, the Himalayas' diverse hill ranges have a profound effect on weather patterns. A key factor is orographic rainfall, where moist air is forced to rise over the mountains, cooling and condensing into heavy precipitation. 'To predict such rainfall accurately in this complex terrain, we need systems capable of capturing the 'mountain effect' with precision,' he said. Current forecasting methods cover an area of up to 6km (3.7 miles), but more advanced and sophisticated tools are needed, Tripathi said, adding that his institute was working on developing such equipment. Indian authorities confirmed that more than 1,200 people had been rescued in several areas of the Himalayas. Photo: EPA Scientists say the dangers of extreme weather are rising in the Himalayas due to both unstable glacial lakes prone to sudden failures and the increasing frequency of torrential monsoon rainfall. According to a recent study, land heating in West Asia – a region warming nearly twice as fast as other inhabited parts of the world – is contributing to about half of the intensified spring rainfall over Northwest India and Pakistan. Scientists said the Arabian Sea is the main moisture source for summer rainfall along the west coast of the Indian subcontinent. 'This regional warming has been pulling the southwestern winds northwards over the Arabian Sea. There is excess moisture being pumped into the Himalayan foothills,' said Raghu Murtugudde, climate scientist, emeritus professor at the University of Maryland. 'We have to equip ourselves in a better way, so that we can really manage the increasing extremes. We should have early warning systems and better adaptation designs,' said Subimal Ghosh, convenor of the Interdisciplinary Programme in Climate Studies at IIT Mumbai. Floodplain zoning is crucial to identify flood-prone areas, he said. 'If there is an early warning of extreme precipitation, immediately carry out evacuation from the region.' A local train rides through flooded railway tracks during heavy rain showers in Mumbai on August 18. Photo: AFP According to a Yale survey released on Thursday, a majority of Indians (53 per cent) now say they know at least something about global warming – the first time such an acknowledgement has been made. After being given a short definition of global warming and its effects on weather, 96 per cent of people said they believe it is happening, according to the survey. 'India is already experiencing climate impacts, from record heatwaves to severe floods to stronger storms,' said Anthony Leiserowitz, founding Director of the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication. 'While many in India still do not know much about global warming, they overwhelmingly think the climate is changing and are worried about it.' Additional reporting by Associated Press


South China Morning Post
a day ago
- South China Morning Post
Flash floods devastate Pakistan after rare cloudburst kills hundreds
Read more: The death toll from heavy rains and flooding in Pakistan has topped 300, local officials said on August 16, 2025. In recent weeks, Pakistan has been lashed by heavy rain, washing away roads and buildings.


South China Morning Post
2 days ago
- South China Morning Post
At least 360 dead, 150 missing in Pakistan-India floods
Flash floods triggered by heavy rains have killed more than 360 people in Pakistan and India and led to severe devastation across the South Asian region. Advertisement At least 307 people have died and 23 have been injured in Pakistan, according to the latest details from the nation's National Disaster Management Authority. Meanwhile, around 60 people were killed and more than 60 were missing in India's northernmost region of Jammu and Kashmir, Chief Minister Omar Abdullah told reporters Saturday. Local police and other agencies were conducting search and rescue operations in the region of Kishtwar in India, about 200km from Srinagar, the capital of Jammu and Kashmir. Onlookers gather near a destroyed bridge after flash floods on the outskirts of Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir. Photo: TNS Authorities were continuing to search for scores of people still buried under the debris. Advertisement Pakistan authorities have warned that landslides are likely to increase further in the country's northern regions in the event of more rain.