
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s climate crisis has intensified, making the country one of the most vulnerable in the world despite contributing less than one per cent to global emissions. Super floods, rising heatwaves, accelerated glacial melt, and coastal salinity intrusion are no longer isolated events but recurring threats reshaping Pakistan’s geography, economy, and social landscape.
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In response, the National Disaster Risk Management Fund (NDRMF) has emerged as a key institution driving proactive climate resilience. By supporting projects across provinces, NDRMF has strengthened flood defences, rehabilitated embankments, improved water management systems, introduced nature-based solutions, and retrofitted public buildings.
Community-based preparedness programmes and early-warning mechanisms have also helped reduce losses during recent monsoon cycles. A major innovation has been the Project Preparation Facility, which ensures a rolling pipeline of climate and disaster projects that are investment-ready and compliant with international standards.
NDRMF has also introduced Disaster Risk Financing, emphasizing that fiscal preparedness is as critical as infrastructure, through insurance instruments, risk layering, and contingent financing mechanisms.
Perhaps the most transformative development is Pakistan’s first national natural catastrophe model (NatCat), developed with SUPARCO. NatCat aggregates climate hazard and exposure data, providing policymakers with evidence-based insights for informed decision-making.
At the community level, local response teams, risk maps, and improved early-warning dissemination have begun cultivating a culture of readiness, particularly in remote regions. Looking ahead, NDRMF’s ten-year strategic plan focuses on research, risk-informed investments, and institutional strengthening.
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By embedding climate resilience into development planning and prioritizing prevention over post-disaster relief, Pakistan aims to reduce economic losses and safeguard vulnerable communities.
Led by CEO Bilal Anwar, NDRMF continues to bridge policy, financing, and on-the-ground action, demonstrating that resilience is not aspirational—it is the only viable development pathway in an era of escalating climate emergencies.