Waters of Discord: The Indus Faultline

The Indus River, flowing through the Himalayas, sustains millions in India and Pakistan. This vital fluvial system, crucial for agriculture and energy, is now a flashpoint in a tense region. Climate change, population surges, and political brinkmanship are straining shared waters, turning a resource into a potential trigger for conflict. 

The World Economic Forum warns that water, like oil, is likely to spark global conflicts. On the subcontinent, where India controls upstream flows and Pakistan depends heavily on downstream access, the stakes are stark. India’s suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty in April 2025, following a deadly attack in Kashmir, marks a dangerous escalation. 

On 24 April 2025, Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif warned: “Any attempt to stop or divert Pakistan’s water share under the Indus Waters Treaty will be deemed an act of war.” This followed India’s announcement, on the same day, that they would suspend the treaty. This decision was prompted by a militant attack in Pahalgam, Kashmir, which killed 26 tourists. India blamed Pakistan for supporting the attackers and chose the Indus as a vehicle for retaliation.

Water, not just missiles, could now define the subcontinent’s future conflicts, demanding urgent cooperation to avert disaster.

Climate and Population Pressures

The Indus River system, spanning six rivers, sustains 300 million people across India and Pakistan. Climate change is disrupting this delicate balance. Glacial melt in the Himalayas, the source of the Indus, is accelerating. A 2021 study by the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) found that Himalayan glaciers could lose 36% of their volume by 2100 under current warming trends.

This threatens long-term water availability, as glaciers contribute to 40% of the Indus’s flow. Erratic monsoons bring Pakistan floods, like 2022’s, and persistent droughts. Population growth compounds the strain. Pakistan’s population, now 240 million, is projected to reach 300 million by 2040. India, with 1.4 billion people, faces similar pressures. Both nations rely on the Indus for over 80% of their irrigation needs, supporting crops that feed millions. 

Rising water demand outstrips the Indus’s shrinking supply. The Indus Waters Treaty, signed in 1960, allocates 70% of the river’s flow to Pakistan and 30% to India, but disputes over dam construction—such as India’s Kishanganga project—have eroded trust. India’s 2018 decision to modify the treaty, citing Pakistan’s objections to hydropower projects, heightened tensions. Pakistan’s refusal to join World Bank-mediated talks in 2019 further deepened mistrust. 

Pakistan fears that India’s dams, like Kishanganga, could manipulate flows, triggering floods or droughts. The recent treaty suspension has further intensified these concerns. Rising demand and shrinking supply are thus turning water into a zero-sum game.

Geopolitical Flashpoints

Water disputes are not new, but their intensity is growing. The Indus Waters Treaty, brokered by the World Bank in 1960, has survived three wars, yet its collapse deepens India-Pakistan rivalry, with water as a new battleground in an already strained context.

Kashmir, where the Indus originates, remains a contested region, and India’s control over its headwaters gives it strategic leverage over Pakistan. UN mediation could facilitate dialogue between the two countries, ensuring compliance with water-sharing agreements. By making use of its experience in transboundary water disputes, the UN could prevent escalation over the Indus. 

India controls 99 billion cubic metres of the western rivers’ annual flow allocated to Pakistan, giving it strategic leverage. Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper labelled India’s water cut-off an “act of war”. Pakistan’s agriculture, which accounts for 24% of its GDP, depends on the Indus, and any disruption threatens food security. India, upstream, holds a significant advantage, controlling 99 billion cubic metres of the western rivers’ annual flow allocated to Pakistan, per the treaty’s terms. Water stress, quantified by a 70% drop in South Asia’s per capita availability since 1950, fuels mistrust, as both nations vie for hydropower and irrigation.

Meanwhile, China’s growing influence, including its dams on the Brahmaputra, complicates this regional dynamic, as India may seek to counterbalance Beijing’s actions by tightening its grip on the Indus. Both nations’ nuclear capabilities raise the stakes, making water disputes a potential trigger for catastrophic escalation.

Solutions, such as joint monitoring, exist but hinge on mutual trust. Shared oversight of river flows, as proposed by the World Bank, could rebuild confidence. Water-sharing agreements, like the Mekong Committee’s model, show cooperation is possible even amid tensions. Both nations could invest in water-efficient agriculture—drip irrigation could cut usage by 30%, per the International Water Management Institute. International mediation, perhaps via the UN, could once again enforce compliance. Yet, without political will, cooperation will falter, potentially leading to dangerous escalations. Without action, water could indeed become the oil of the 21st century, but paradoxically so—that is, sparking conflicts that redraw the subcontinent’s future. The Indus, vital to millions, remains stirred by waves of unrest.

Statement

Water is the subcontinent’s new oil, a critical resource driving conflict between India and Pakistan. The Indus River, stressed by climate change and soaring populations, is a geopolitical flashpoint. Himalayan glaciers face a 36% volume loss by 2100, and South Asia’s per capita water availability has fallen 70% since 1950. India’s 2025 suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty, following a Kashmir attack, threatens Pakistan’s agriculture, reliant on 99 billion cubic metres of allocated flow. Solutions like joint monitoring, drip irrigation, and UN mediation could avert a crisis. Without political will, water scarcity will escalate tensions, proving rivers can ignite wars just as fiercely as borders.