Home / Environment / Kabul's Water Crisis: Snow Drought Fuels Desperation
Kabul's Water Crisis: Snow Drought Fuels Desperation
1 Feb
Summary
- Kabul's water supply threatened by historic low snowfall.
- Returnee influx strains already scarce water resources.
- Aid cuts exacerbate humanitarian crisis, impacting millions.

Afghanistan is grappling with a severe water crisis, epitomized by Kabul's critically low water levels due to unusually light snowfall this season, believed to be a 25-year low. This scarcity jeopardizes groundwater reserves, impacting wells and the Qargha Dam, vital for the capital's six million inhabitants.
The situation is further complicated by the return of over five million Afghans from Iran and Pakistan since 2023, a population surge straining the nation's water infrastructure. Approximately 70 percent of households in areas hosting returnees report worsened water access.
Globally, the UN has declared an "era of water bankruptcy," with four billion people experiencing severe water scarcity annually. Afghanistan's crisis is worsened by a 37 percent decrease in humanitarian aid flows in 2025 compared to 2024, forcing major NGOs like Save the Children and Mercy Corps to reduce services.



