Experts warn of food security crisis, export supplies disruption amid devastating floods.

ISLAMABAD -- The country would face serious impacts on its agricultural produce causing a food security crisis and disruption in it's agri exports as the devastating monsoon floods have a big toll on the agriculture sector in Pakistan, said the Climate Smart Agriculture Experts on Sunday.

"While the country is already undergoing a shortage of 2.6 billion tonnes of wheat, this would seriously affect food security. Moreover, as Pakistan is the fifth-largest cotton producer, accounting for 5 percent of global output, the damage could further shrink the world's cotton supply. It may even force Pakistan to increase cotton imports. Pakistan is the world's fourth largest rice exporter. The hot and dry conditions early in the season and the recent floods have ravaged large swathes of rice lands so will slash rice yield again impacting the rice economy and food security, Climate Smart Agriculture Experts Dr. Pashupati Chaudhary and Dr Ishfaq Ahmad told reporter while sharing their account of massive collateral, economic and human life losses during the unprecedented torrential rains that caused massive inundation in the north and south of the country.

Dr Pashupati Chaudhry said climate change and increasingly erratic extreme weather events were causing a surge in natural disasters such as, inter alia, heat waves and floods across the world. "Flood is amongst the most frequently occurring disasters affecting several million people and impacting several hundred billion of the economy across the world. Due to climate change, mainly warming, and extreme events and flood-led disasters have increased in frequencies and magnitudes in recent decades. Southeast Asia and South Asia are the hotspots for natural disasters, in particular floods, with immense impacts on people's livelihoods and economy at trans-boundary level since the region is home to several trans-boundary rivers", he told.

Dr Ashfaq Ahmad said Pakistan recently sustained one of the most devastating flood-led disasters in the history. "Record monsoon rains, glacier melting and severe heat waves have triggered floods since mid-June 2022 that have swept away houses, roads, railway tracks, bridges, livestock and crops, and killed more than 1,400 people." "Growing crops such as cotton, rice, sugarcane, sesame, moong, fodder, orchards and vegetables like onions and tomatoes are damaged, inundated, or washed away. Floods have also caused land degradation, sand deposition, siltation, and prolonged...

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