NEECA warns farm inefficiency deepens food risks as floods rise

Pakistan’s agricultural backbone is at risk as recurrent flooding collides with outdated, energy-intensive farming practices, driving up costs for farmers and threatening national food security, experts warned. The country’s heavy reliance on diesel-powered irrigation, inefficient tube wells, and obsolete machinery is leaving both livelihoods and food supplies vulnerable to climate shocks. The National Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority (NEECA) Managing Director Dr. Sardar Mohazzam said the recent floods had exposed structural flaws that Pakistan could no longer afford to ignore. “Reproducing existing inefficiencies in our agricultural systems is untenable,” he said, calling for rapid investment in efficient tube wells, solar pumps, and low-energy cold storage facilities as both a path to productivity and a shield against climate disruption. NEECA, operating under the Ministry of Energy’s Power Division, is the federal body responsible for driving and coordinating energy conservation efforts across all sectors of the economy. Officials from the Ministry of National Food Security and provincial departments joined representatives from FAO, IWMI, GIZ, and agri-technology firms in urging data-driven interventions that build on existing infrastructure rather than duplicating failed programs. Financing was highlighted as a critical enabler, with proposals ranging from on-bill repayment models and vendor credit to blended public–private partnerships aimed at making modern technology affordable for smallholders. Cold storage also emerged as a pressing concern, particularly in flood-prone regions where post-harvest losses surge during power disruptions. Participants agreed that energy efficiency must become a cornerstone of Pakistan’s agricultural strategy, balancing the farmer’s need for affordable production with the consumer’s demand for accessible prices, while positioning the sector for climate resilience and sustainable growth.

Pakistan’s agricultural backbone is at risk as recurrent flooding collides with outdated, energy-intensive farming practices, driving up costs for farmers and threatening national food security, experts warned. The country’s heavy reliance on diesel-powered irrigation, inefficient tube wells, and obsolete machinery is leaving both livelihoods and food supplies vulnerable to climate shocks.

The National Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority (NEECA) Managing Director Dr. Sardar Mohazzam said the recent floods had exposed structural flaws that Pakistan could no longer afford to ignore. “Reproducing existing inefficiencies in our agricultural systems is untenable,” he said, calling for rapid investment in efficient tube wells, solar pumps, and low-energy cold storage facilities as both a path to productivity and a shield against climate disruption.

NEECA, operating under the Ministry of Energy’s Power Division, is the federal body responsible for driving and coordinating energy conservation efforts across all sectors of the economy.

Officials from the Ministry of National Food Security and provincial departments joined representatives from FAO, IWMI, GIZ, and agri-technology firms in urging data-driven interventions that build on existing infrastructure rather than duplicating failed programs. Financing was highlighted as a critical enabler, with proposals ranging from on-bill repayment models and vendor credit to blended public–private partnerships aimed at making modern technology affordable for smallholders.

Cold storage also emerged as a pressing concern, particularly in flood-prone regions where post-harvest losses surge during power disruptions. Participants agreed that energy efficiency must become a cornerstone of Pakistan’s agricultural strategy, balancing the farmer’s need for affordable production with the consumer’s demand for accessible prices, while positioning the sector for climate resilience and sustainable growth.