WWF warns Arabian Sea biodiversity at risk from uncontrolled fleets, bycatch, post-harvest waste

Fishermen sort out a catch of fish on the deck of a boat at Ibrahim Hyderi in Karachi, Pakistan September 26, 2025. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 20 November 2025
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WWF warns Arabian Sea biodiversity at risk from uncontrolled fleets, bycatch, post-harvest waste

  • Pakistan’s coastal and offshore stocks increasingly overexploited amid stagnating landings, harmful fishing practices
  • WWF says inadequate handling, weak monitoring, rapid fleet expansion threaten livelihoods of over 1 million coastal workers

KARACHI: Uncontrolled fishing fleets, high bycatch and large-scale post-harvest losses are putting Pakistan’s Arabian Sea biodiversity at growing risk, WWF-Pakistan warned on Thursday ahead of World Fisheries Day, calling for urgent reforms to protect coastal ecosystems and the livelihoods that depend on them.

World Fisheries Day, observed globally on Nov. 21, highlights the mounting pressures facing marine environments, including declining stocks, habitat damage, pollution and climate-driven changes. Pakistan’s 1,001-kilometer coastline along the Arabian Sea sustains more than a million people, but conservationists say many coastal and offshore fish stocks are now overexploited, reflected in stagnating or declining landings.

WWF-Pakistan said high bycatch of endangered species such as cetaceans, turtles and other megafauna, combined with an unregulated expansion of the fishing fleet, is placing unprecedented pressure on marine biodiversity. It added that Pakistan’s fisheries sector is hampered by major post-harvest losses due to inadequate on-board handling and storage practices.

“World Fisheries Day reminds us of the urgent need to protect our natural habitats and the diverse fauna and flora that are under serious threat due to unsustainable practices and the uncontrolled increase in the fishing fleet,” said Muhammad Moazzam Khan, Technical Adviser at WWF-Pakistan.

“While several policies and strategies are being developed to improve Pakistan’s fisheries sector, WWF-Pakistan believes that a five-pronged strategy must be implemented immediately.”

This strategy includes reducing the fishing fleet, improving on-board post-harvest handling in multiday fisheries, establishing shrimp farming clusters along the Sindh and Balochistan coasts, initiating exploratory fishing to sustainably utilize unexploited resources, and diversifying seafood products.

“Together, these measures can increase production, boost exports, and significantly improve the socio-economic conditions of coastal fishing communities,” WWF said.

The organization said such reforms could help reverse ecosystem degradation by easing pressure on depleted stocks, reducing waste and opening new avenues for sustainable seafood production. Pakistan’s location in the northern Arabian Sea, one of the region’s most biologically productive marine zones, makes protection of fragile coastal and offshore habitats essential, it added.

WWF-Pakistan noted that harmful fishing practices, weak monitoring and limited cold-chain infrastructure continue to undermine yields and degrade key habitats, including mangrove forests and offshore spawning grounds. Conservationists warn that without significant changes, biodiversity losses will accelerate and long-term economic prospects for coastal communities will deteriorate.

WWF-Pakistan, one of the country’s largest environmental organizations, has worked for decades to reduce bycatch, engage coastal communities and promote sustainable fishing practices across Sindh and Balochistan.
 


Pakistan’s northwest issues weather alert as rain, snowfall forecast from Jan. 31

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Pakistan’s northwest issues weather alert as rain, snowfall forecast from Jan. 31

  • Warning follows deadly avalanche that killed nine people in KP’s Chitral district earlier this month
  • Authorities have already warned of possible landslides, avalanches in the country’s upper districts

PESHAWAR: The Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) in Pakistan’s northwest on Friday directed Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) authorities to take precautionary measures ahead of a fresh spell of rain and snowfall expected from Jan. 31 to Feb. 3.

The alert follows a warning issued by the Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) on Jan. 25 of possible landslides and avalanches in hilly areas, urging residents, travelers and tourists to exercise caution.

The PMD issued the warning after at least nine people were killed and a child was injured in an avalanche that struck a house in KP’s Chitral district earlier this month on Jan. 23.

“According to the Meteorological Department, a new spell of westerly weather is likely from Jan. 31 to Feb. 3,” KP’s PDMA said in a statement.

“Snowfall is expected at a few locations in upper areas, with a possible drop in temperatures.”

The statement added that rain and snowfall were expected in mountainous areas of upper districts including Abbottabad, Haripur, Mansehra, Upper and Lower Chitral, Upper and Lower Dir, Swat, Buner, Malakand, Battagram, Shangla, Upper and Lower Kohistan and Kolai Palas.

The PDMA said intermittent rain was also likely in Peshawar, Mardan, Swabi, Nowshera, Charsadda, Bajaur, Mohmand, Khyber, Orakzai, Kurram, Kohat, Hangu, Karak, Bannu, North and South Waziristan, Lakki Marwat, Tank and Dera Ismail Khan.

It warned that rain and snowfall could cause road closures and slippery conditions in upper tourist areas, including Naran, Kaghan, Kalam, and Chitral.

Tourists were advised to avoid unnecessary travel and exercise caution, it added.

Tens of thousands of tourists flock to Pakistan’s scenic northern and northwestern regions every winter to witness snowfall, often neglecting warnings from disaster management authorities.

In Jan. 2022, at least 21 people, including children, died after getting stuck in freezing temperatures during a snowstorm in the Pakistani hill station of Murree.