Climate disasters to shave 0.5% points off growth this year, Pakistan tells Riyadh forum

Pakistan's Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb (2L) is addressing at the Global Development Finance Conference – Momentum 2025 in Riyadh on December 11, 2025. (Finance Ministry)
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Updated 11 December 2025
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Climate disasters to shave 0.5% points off growth this year, Pakistan tells Riyadh forum

  • Finance minister says Pakistan lacks resources to fund large-scale climate adaptation without external support
  • Calls global climate funds “slow and bureaucratic” as vulnerable states struggle to access financing

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s finance minister said on Thursday increasingly severe floods are now routinely reducing the country’s economic growth, warning that this year’s climate disasters alone are expected to shave around half a percentage point off GDP as Islamabad presses global lenders to accelerate climate financing.

Speaking at the Global Development Finance Conference – Momentum 2025 in Riyadh, Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb said Pakistan is facing a new economic normal in which climate shocks impose annual losses, strain fiscal resources and undermine its recovery from past balance-of-payments crises.

Pakistan is among the countries most exposed to climate-driven extremes, with the 2022 super-floods causing an estimated $30 billion in losses and renewed flooding this year again overwhelming provincial and federal budgets. Islamabad has created early-warning systems and emergency buffers, but Aurangzeb said adaptation costs far exceed domestic capacity and require faster external support.

“Our recent experience shows that climate change is an increasingly tangible and costly reality for Pakistan,” he told the Riyadh forum. “Pakistan expects to lose roughly half a percentage point of GDP growth this year, placing additional strain on an already challenged emerging economy.”

He said Pakistan’s commitment to macroeconomic stability, including building fiscal and external buffers, had allowed it to manage immediate rescue and relief operations from domestic resources. But long-term rehabilitation, he added, can only advance if global climate financing flows more quickly.

Aurangzeb criticized mechanisms such as the Green Climate Fund and Loss and Damage Fund for slow and bureaucratic disbursement processes that make it difficult for vulnerable countries to access urgently needed support. Pakistan, he said, has made more progress through multilaterals, including receiving the first $200 million tranche from the IMF’s Climate Resilience Fund.

The minister highlighted Pakistan’s new 10-year Country Partnership Framework with the World Bank announced this year, which allocates about $20 billion, with one-third earmarked for climate resilience and decarbonization. 

Unlocking those funds, he stressed, now depends on Pakistan rapidly preparing “high-quality, bankable projects.”

REKO DIQ

The Riyadh panel, which included ministers from Jordan and Tajikistan and the head of the West African Development Bank, underscored that emerging economies face converging pressures from climate risk, tight fiscal positions and sluggish global growth. Speakers said unlocking blended finance, streamlining multilateral processes and mobilizing private capital will be essential for adaptation in the coming decade.

Aurangzeb also linked climate adaptation to broader economic strategy, describing the near-finalization of financing for Pakistan’s flagship $7 billion Reko Diq copper and gold mining project, where the International Finance Corporation is leading a syndicate and the US Export-Import Bank has joined as a major participant.

He said the mine is expected to generate export revenues equivalent to 10 percent of Pakistan’s current export base in its first year of commercial production in 2028, helping diversify a stagnant economy.

Responding to questions on geopolitical balancing, Aurangzeb said Pakistan would continue an “and-and” approach, maintaining ties with both the United States and China. He noted that China remains Pakistan’s largest development partner through the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a flagship Belt and Road Initiative program that has financed power plants, highways and ports since 2013. He said CPEC Phase 2.0, launched this year, seeks to move beyond government-to-government infrastructure by attracting private investment and export-oriented industrial projects.

At the same time, he said Pakistan’s relationship with the United States had “significantly strengthened,” particularly in sectors such as critical minerals, advanced technologies and digital infrastructure. 

His remarks came a day after Washington said the US Export-Import Bank had approved $1.25 billion in financing to support mining at the Reko Diq copper-and-gold project, with the package expected to enable up to $2 billion in US equipment and service exports. 

Aurangzeb said Pakistan expected strong interest from US, Chinese, Gulf and other global investors as the project scales.


Pakistan, Iraq agree on tighter coordination over pilgrims under new regulated travel system

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Pakistan, Iraq agree on tighter coordination over pilgrims under new regulated travel system

  • New system requires all Iraq-Iran pilgrimages to be organized by licensed groups under state oversight
  • Long-running “Salar” model relied on informal caravan leaders, leading to overstays and missing pilgrims

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and Iraq this week agreed to closely coordinate on the management and security of Pakistani pilgrims, as Islamabad rolls out a new, tightly regulated travel system aimed at preventing overstays, undocumented migration and security breaches during religious visits to Iraq and Iran.

The understanding was reached during a meeting between Pakistan’s Interior and Narcotics Control Minister Mohsin Naqvi and Iraq’s Interior Minister General Abdul Amir Al-Shammari on Thursday evening, where both sides discussed measures to facilitate pilgrims while strengthening oversight, Pakistan’s interior ministry said.

The agreement comes as Pakistan dismantles its decades-old pilgrim travel model and replaces it with a centralized, licensed system after authorities confirmed that tens of thousands of Pakistani pilgrims had overstayed or gone missing abroad over the past decade, triggering concerns from host governments.

“You have, for the first time during your tenure, taken effective measures to organize pilgrim groups, which are commendable,” Al-Shammari told Naqvi, according to Pakistan’s interior ministry.

“All pilgrims included in the list provided by Pakistan’s Ministry of Interior will be allowed to enter Iraq,” he added, making clear that only travelers cleared under the new system would be permitted.

Naqvi said Pakistan would strictly enforce return timelines under the revised framework.

“Pilgrims traveling to Iraq will not be allowed to stay beyond the designated period,” he said, adding that relevant authorities in both countries would remain in close coordination.

Both interior ministers also agreed to strengthen information-sharing and joint mechanisms on security cooperation, counterterrorism and the prevention of human smuggling, officials said.

“The safety, dignity, and facilitation of Pakistani pilgrims is the top priority of the Government of Pakistan,” Naqvi said.

Al-Shammari said he would visit Pakistan soon to finalize a joint roadmap to further improve pilgrim facilitation, security coordination and broader bilateral cooperation, according to the interior ministry.

Pakistan’s government has overhauled its pilgrim travel regime this year, abolishing the long-running “Salar” system under which informal caravan leaders managed pilgrimages. The move followed official confirmation that around 40,000 Pakistani pilgrims had overstayed or disappeared in Iran, Iraq and Syria over the past ten years.

Under the new Ziyarat Management Policy, only licensed Ziyarat Group Organizers (ZGOs) are allowed to arrange pilgrimages, with companies held directly responsible for ensuring pilgrims return on time. Authorities have completed security clearance for 585 companies seeking registration, while scrutiny of applications remains ongoing.

Islamabad has also barred overland travel for major pilgrimages, including Arbaeen, citing security risks in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province, meaning all travel to Iraq and Iran is now restricted to regulated air routes.

Tens of thousands of Pakistani pilgrims travel each year to Iraq and Iran to visit some of the most revered shrines in Shia Islam, including the mausoleums of Imam Ali in Najaf and Imam Hussain in Karbala in Iraq, and major religious sites in Mashhad and Qom in Iran. Pilgrimages peak during religious occasions such as Arbaeen, when millions of worshippers converge on Karbala from across the region. The scale of travel, often involving long stays and cross-border movements, has long posed logistical, security and migration-management challenges for Pakistani authorities and host governments alike.