Pakistan braces for heavier monsoon rains in 2026
The National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) of Pakistan has issued a warning that the 2026 monsoon season could bring rainfall levels 22 to 26 percent above normal, posing a heightened flood risk nationwide.
The country’s Prime Minister has green-lit a short-term climate-resilience plan aimed at minimizing losses from forthcoming extreme weather and strengthening federal-provincial coordination.
NDMA officials noted that this year’s weather disasters have become more severe and frequent. According to data, approximately 3.1 million people have already been relocated from high-risk zones due to climate-related emergencies.
In one of the critical projections, the NDMA chairman explained that although rainfall intensity may ease somewhat in June or July, major shifts in seasonal weather behaviour are underway. Pakistan’s roughly 7,500 glaciers are contributing to new risks such as glacial-lake outbursts and flash floods.
The short-term action plan covers immediate infrastructure repairs (dams, embankments, flood-gates), the establishment of an integrated early-warning system, and coordination across ministries, but the government emphasises that long-term resilience will require sustained investment.
