Pakistan sees 60% more rains than usual this monsoon season — Met Office

A man rides his motorbike through flood waters after heavy monsoon rains in Multan on August 30, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 30 August 2024
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Pakistan sees 60% more rains than usual this monsoon season — Met Office

  • This year, Pakistan recorded its ‘wettest April since 1961’ with 59.3 millimeters of rainfall
  • Heavy monsoon rains have triggered flash floods and killed nearly 250 Pakistanis since July 1

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has recorded 60 percent more rains than usual this monsoon season, the Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) said on Friday, as heavy shower lashed several parts of the country.

The statement comes months after the South Asian country recorded its “wettest April since 1961,” receiving more than twice as much rain as the normal average of 22.5 millimeters for the month.

The monsoon season typically begins in Pakistan in late June and continues until mid-September. The country has seen erratic changes in its weather patterns in recent years that scientists have blamed on climate change.

“Overall in country, Pakistan has seen 60 percent more rains [this monsoon season],” PMD Director-General Mehr Sahibzad Khan said at a press conference on Friday.

“In August, 137 percent more rains were received, including 10 percent more in Azad Kashmir, 239 percent in Balochistan, 25 percent in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and the most rains were recorded in Sindh at 318 percent.”

Heavy monsoon showers have triggered flash floods across Pakistan and killed nearly 250 people in rain-related incidents since July 1, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA). The country’s National Emergency Operations Center (NEOC) on Thursday warned of heavy rains and thunderstorms in parts of the Sindh, Punjab and Balochistan provinces in the next 72 hours.

Pakistan is recognized as one of the world’s most vulnerable countries to climate change effects. While the South Asian country recorded its “wettest April since 1961” with 59.3 millimeters of rainfall, some areas of the country faced a deadly heat wave in May and June.

In 2022, unusually heavy rains triggered flash floods in many parts of the country, killing over 1,700 people, inflicting economic losses of around $30 billion, and affecting at least 30 million people.


Bangladesh approves new rice imports from Pakistan amid price pressures

Updated 23 December 2025
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Bangladesh approves new rice imports from Pakistan amid price pressures

  • The deal follows Bangladesh’s resumption of direct rice trade with Pakistan earlier this year ⁠for the first time since independence in 1971
  • Diplomatic ties between the two nations have improved since the ouster of prime minister Sheikh Hasina after mass protests last year

DHAKA: Bangladesh has approved the import of 50,000 metric tons of white rice from Pakistan under a government-to-government deal as ​part of efforts to stabilize domestic prices, officials said on Tuesday.

The Cabinet Committee on Government Purchase cleared the deal at $395 per ton, reinforcing Dhaka’s renewed trade engagement with Islamabad.

Rice prices in Bangladesh have jumped by between 15 percent and 20 percent over ‌the past ‌year, with medium-quality ‌rice ⁠selling ​at about ‌80 taka ($0.66) per kilogram. Despite increased imports and the removal of duties to ease supply constraints, prices for the staple grain remain stubbornly high.

The deal follows Bangladesh’s resumption of direct rice trade with Pakistan earlier this year ⁠for the first time since independence in 1971. In ‌February, it imported 50,000 ‍tons of rice from ‍Pakistan at $499 per ton under a ‍similar agreement.

Diplomatic ties between the two South Asian nations have improved since an interim government led by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus took office after ​mass protests forced then prime minister Sheikh Hasina to flee to neighboring ⁠India last year.

Formerly East Pakistan, Bangladesh gained independence after a nine-month war in 1971, and relations with Pakistan have remained fraught in the decades since the conflict.

Separately, the government approved another 50,000 tons of parboiled rice through an international tender, part of a series of recent purchases aimed at cooling local prices. India’s Pattabhi Agro Foods secured ‌the contract with the lowest bid of $355.77 per ton.