Alibaba launches online logistics services for Pakistani exporters

A pedestrian waits to cross an intersection outside an Alibaba office building in Beijing, China on March 27, 2025. (REUTERS/File)
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Updated 25 May 2025
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Alibaba launches online logistics services for Pakistani exporters

  • Pakistani small and medium-sized enterprises have long struggled with optimizing their export processes to participate in global trade
  • Alibaba says it has partnered with leading delivery companies to supporting the export of Pakistani goods to over 200 countries and regions

KARACHI: Alibaba, a Chinese-owned platform for global business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce, has launched online logistics services that are tailored to assist Pakistani exporters in optimizing their international trade processes, it said this week.

The explosive growth of cross-border e-commerce has created new opportunities for Pakistani small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), which face significant challenges in optimizing their export processes to participate in global trade. Logistics has been identified as a major obstacle as businesses must find effective and reliable shipping solutions to ensure timely deliveries while minimizing costs and risks, according to the e-commerce giant.

Alibaba has partnered with leading international express delivery companies, such as CPEX, with the goal of supporting the export of Pakistani goods to over 200 countries and regions around the world. The service not only supports fast and reliable international shipping options but also integrates the entire logistics process from packaging and warehousing to delivery, thus helping businesses optimize costs and time.

Through its international express delivery partners, Alibaba will ensure that goods are transported safely and on schedule, while also providing detailed order tracking tools, and customs advisory services. These features will help businesses minimize risks and enhance their competitiveness in the international market.

“Online logistics services are essential for small and medium-sized enterprises in global trade. They not only streamline operations and reduce costs, but also empower businesses to reach global markets with ease,” said Summer Gao, head of global supply chain at Alibaba.

"By leveraging advanced technologies and comprehensive solutions, Alibaba.com helps support Pakistani SMEs in enhancing their competitiveness, ensuring timely deliveries, and responding swiftly to market demands, ultimately fueling their growth and success in the global arena."

Pakistan, which is currently treading a long path to economic recovery, has urged local businesses to increase exports as the government looks to boost trade and investment to revive the over $350 billion South Asian economy.

Launched in 1999, Alibaba serves buyers and suppliers from over 200 countries and regions around the world. It is engaged in services covering various aspects of commerce, including providing businesses with tools that help them reach a global audience for their products and helping buyers discover products, find suppliers and place orders online fast and efficiently.

The e-commerce giant said its logistics services for Pakistani sellers are cost-effective, have enhanced order tracking and control capabilities, and offer a fully digitalized order fulfillment process for packages dispatched to multiple countries and regions.

“The introduction of Alibaba.com's logistics services has greatly accelerated our transaction processes and bolstered customer trust,” said Zulqarnain Baryar, CEO of Clush Industries that specializes in garment production.

"With features such as detailed tracking and optimized shipping routes, these services ensure timely deliveries and improved risk management. These enhancements have not only streamlined our operations but have also facilitated new business opportunities internationally, allowing us to confidently expand our presence."

Berry Ma, head of Pakistan business at Alibaba, said their new logistics services aim to support Pakistani exporters by providing efficient solutions to overcome traditional barriers in international trade.

“We're committed to offering essential tools to help Pakistani businesses tap into significant growth opportunities in global markets,” Ma said.


World Wetlands Day: Pakistan renews concerns over India’s handling of Indus Waters Treaty

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World Wetlands Day: Pakistan renews concerns over India’s handling of Indus Waters Treaty

  • President says suspension of treaty mechanisms risks water security in climate-stressed region
  • Zardari links wetland protection to climate resilience, flood control and livelihoods

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Monday renewed concerns over India’s handling of the Indus Waters Treaty, marking World Wetlands Day with a warning that water must not be used as a tool of coercion.

World Wetlands Day marks the 1971 adoption of the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, to which Pakistan is a signatory. The convention promotes the conservation and sustainable use of wetlands, which experts increasingly view as cost-effective defense against climate shocks. Pakistan is among the countries least responsible for global emissions but among the most vulnerable to climate impacts.

In a statement issued on the occasion of the UN-designated day, President Asif Ali Zardari said wetlands were critical to Pakistan’s ability to withstand floods, droughts, heatwaves and sea-level rise, while cautioning that disruptions to river flows posed serious risks to millions of people in a country heavily dependent on the Indus Basin.

“Water security in our region depends on responsible and lawful transboundary cooperation,” Zardari said in the statement. 

“Pakistan remains concerned over unilateral actions by India affecting the Indus Waters Treaty of 1960, a legally binding agreement that has governed equitable water sharing in the Indus Basin for decades.”

The Indus Waters Treaty, brokered by the World Bank in 1960, governs the sharing of six rivers between neighbors India and Pakistan and is widely seen as one of the most durable agreements between the two nuclear-armed rivals. Under the treaty, Pakistan relies on the western rivers of the Indus Basin for the bulk of its agriculture, drinking water and hydropower, while India controls the eastern rivers.

In 2025, India announced it was suspending its participation in treaty mechanisms after accusing Pakistan of involvement in a deadly attack in Indian-administered Kashmir — an allegation Islamabad strongly denies. Pakistan has said the unilateral suspension undermines a legally binding international agreement and heightens water security risks in a region already facing climate-driven volatility.

“The suspension of [Indus Water] treaty mechanisms, including the sharing of hydrological data, undermines trust and predictability when climate pressures require greater cooperation,” Zardari reiterated, adding that “water must never be used as a tool of coercion.”

Islamabad has also long objected to India’s construction of hydropower projects on western rivers, arguing that inadequate consultation and reduced data sharing further weaken trust and predictability under the treaty. India rejects the accusations and maintains its actions comply with treaty provisions.

Zardari said Pakistan’s wetlands function as “frontline climate defenders,” noting that healthy wetlands reduce flood risks, protect coastlines, sustain livelihoods and help cut emissions, while their degradation multiplies climate-related losses.

Pakistan’s wetlands range from alpine and glacial lakes in the north to riverine floodplains, inland lakes and mangrove ecosystems along the Arabian Sea. The president said these systems were under mounting pressure from erratic monsoons, glacial melt variability, prolonged heatwaves, pollution and shrinking flood buffers.

Zardari singled out the southern Sindh province that his Pakistan Peoples Party rules as bearing a disproportionate burden due to historical water stress and sea-level rise, warning that the Indus Delta and mangrove forests, once among the world’s richest, now face salinity intrusion, coastal erosion and the loss of fish breeding grounds. Inland wetlands such as Keenjhar, Haleji and Manchar, he said, were experiencing reduced freshwater inflows and concentrated pollution, affecting fisheries, drinking water supplies and migratory bird routes.

For millions of Pakistanis, wetlands are central to daily life, providing fish, grazing land, reeds for shelter and fuel, and natural protection during extreme weather, the statement said. Their degradation, Zardari warned, leads to income loss, rising food costs, unsafe water and greater exposure to floods and droughts.

The president urged citizens, policymakers and local communities to integrate traditional and indigenous knowledge into wetland management, saying sustainable protection of these ecosystems was essential not only for biodiversity but for public welfare, economic stability and national resilience.