CKNP is the largest national park in Pakistan. There are 20 valleys and 160 villages surrounding the national park. There are 32,450 households in the buffer zone of the CKNP. Communities living in the buffer zone of CKNP are depended largely on agriculture. Living and working at an elevation of 2800 meters above sea level. The total population in this area is 295,162; of which women are 149, 256 and men are 145,906. In other words, women constitute 51 percent of the total population. More than 95 percent of women are engaged in agricultural activities in this region (CKNP Management Plan, 2013). The challenges and hardships associated with this region are high.
There is less land available for agriculture and such land is difficult to cultivate because of the inaccessibility. Water is available in abundance only in spring, and lifting water to terraced pieces of land is very difficult. Fragile mountains, extreme seasons, and difficult landscapes are the biggest problems in managing and preparing the land for crop production. The Karakoram Highway (KKH) is the only way to access the adjoining areas for food and other necessities of life. If food production could be more vibrant in this area, it would minimize the need to travel outside of the region in search of those necessities.
In the CKNP areas, the crucial role of women in agriculture and food security (e.g., food availability, food accessibility, food utilization and food sustainability) is clear: Food availability means variety of crops grown and produced in a particular area. Women play a significant role in growing the staple crops, maintaining the kitchen gardens, as well as growing cash crops in the Buffer zones of CKNP. Women also take part in making food accessible by drying and storing fruits and vegetables for the winter seasons. Additionally, women utilize and manage the available food for their family members throughout the year, especially in the winter seasons. Due to this strenuous work load, women are constantly under pressure by the inherent roles dictated by society that they are only taking care of their family members and not giving enough time for themselves.
Given the challenges of farming in this area, women’s involvement makes their lives more susceptible to insecurity as they are frequently engaged in agro-pastoral activities in one of the highest mountainous regions in the world. Women distribute their available time to perform different tasks on daily basis. Women’s work participation in crops and vegetables growing, as well as storing for winter is a time-consuming and laborious work. Women’s visible role in agro-pastoral activities is a big challenge under CKNP’s unique geography.
Women have had to endure plenty of physical challenges owing to their overwhelming domestic and agrarian activities. Furthermore, rural women are deprived of enhancing their positions because of a lack of access to educational facilities, conservative cultural codes, male dominance, and early marriages.
Women have limited access to resources and opportunities due to which their productivity remains low compared to men. Lack of access to participate in local decision-making organizations concerned with various kinds of natural resources hinder women from achieving their full potential. Due to women’s ostracism from these decision-making groups, these organizations cannot identify the distinct needs of women in their constituencies and therefore are unable to promote women’s empowerment.
Undoubtedly, while women are producers of food, the physical and social issues they face are concealed. In the whole region of CKNP, there has not been any extensive research carried out so far about women’s lives. Joint families and related social dynamics occurring inside the homes stretch women’s responsibilities. Within the socially defined roles of women, a girl child from her birth is tied with these stereotyped socially mandated duties. A girl imitating her mother continues with the same rigorous work in her life. Women play the role of agents in ensuring food security by producing sufficient food for their households and livestock. Most women are busy day and night harvesting, collecting, preserving, and drying food and fodder, for harsh and prolonged winters, for family, and for livestock. It is only women who are responsible for meeting food and nutritional needs for the whole household in the winter season, while men usually migrate outside of the area in search of seasonal work. But despite being the food producers, women provide the food to other family members first. In other words, the major food producer herself eats whatever others have left over, often being deprived of meat and other proteins. Moreover, the lack of adequate proteins may affect the health of a fetus that usually has not had sufficient nutrients to flourish in utero and the birth of a newborn may be more difficult than normal.
The rural women of the CKNP area have been relatively less exposed to change than women in the urban areas of G-B. They are deprived of opportunities such as education and basic health in part because of lack of availability but also in part because of lack of social access and permission.
Women of CKNP have minimal input into decision-making processes. Male dominance at the household level, as well as at the institutional level, keeps the voice of women away from any decision and policy making at home and at the community level. In comparison with the work and productivity of men, women definitely do not lag behind. In monetary terms, their productive contribution is almost the same as that of men or, in some cases, even more. But the deprivation from taking part in the decision-making is a major problem that women are facing. Participation of women in decision-making in these specific contexts is another significant area. Women’s visible roles, in terms of time consumed in agro-pastoral activities and challenges under CKNP’s unique geography, is significant.
My recommendations to uncover the roles of women in agriculture and food security processes and how women’s participation in family farming relates to women’s empowerment in decision-making regarding family affairs (e.g., the marriage of children, education, selling of agricultural products, major purchases), in CKNP buffer zones, are that policymakers need comprehensive and in-depth data on women’s participation and empowerment. This is indeed a very significant area of study to explore one of the most neglected areas pertaining to rural women of CKNP.
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Pictures for magazine
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Razia Bano.
The writer is a lecturer in the Department of Business Management at Karakoram International University, Gilgit-Baltistan.
The Karakoram Magazine seeks high-quality, unpublished,nonfiction, first person articles relevant to Gilgit-Baltistan and topics as varied as Geo Strategic & Economic Significance of GB, Arts & Literature, Tourism & Hospitality, Culture and heritage, Education and technology, Health & Wellbeing, Climate Change and Wildlife, Economic & Trade, Sports & Recreations, Youth & Women empowerment and Achievements of Illustrious People of GB in different fields etc.
We are draining rivers to power algorithms. Water remains a fundamental human right, yet 2.2 billion people across the globe still lack access to safe drinking water. In Pakistan, the crisis escalates daily: over
50 million individuals—twice the population of Australia—live without access to clean water. Alarmingly, 90% of the population depends on compromised sources, according to the Pakistan Council of Research in Water Resources. The Indus River, once the lifeblood of civilization, now teeters on the brink of collapse. Glaciers in the north are retreating at nearly three times the historical rate (ICIMOD 2023), while the fertile plains in the south buckle under the relentless grip of scorching heatwaves. This is no longer just climate change; it’s a hydrological emergency—one that remains obscured by the relentless hum of modernity.
In Gilgit-Baltistan, often dubbed Pakistan’s “water tower,” escalating temperatures have precipitated 32 Glacial Lake Outburst Floods (GLOFs) since 2021. These cataclysmic events have obliterated hamlets, dismantled over 40 bridges, and rendered 120,000 people homeless in 2023 alone. The glacial decay is not a localized concern; it imperils the entire Indus Basin, which sustains nearly 300 million lives across South Asia. While mountain communities fight the fury of floods, an insidious form of water depletion continues—hidden in our digital behaviors.
The world is slowly awakening to a crisis that has been gestating in silence for decades. It doesn’t scream from headlines daily, but its toll is unrelenting. Industrial expansion, unchecked urbanization, rising global temperatures, and consumer excess are slowly siphoning away Earth’s most precious resource. From the skeletal beds of rivers and evaporating lakes to the sight of young children traversing kilometers to collect a single pail of water—the evidence is irrefutable. We reside on a planet cloaked in blue, yet for billions, that blue remains a cruel illusion. Water is vanishing from the places that need it the most.
In an era hailed for innovation, technology is often worshipped as the panacea for all global woes. Artificial Intelligence, automation, and cloud infrastructure are transforming human capabilities at a breathtaking pace. However, buried beneath these advancements lies a sobering reality: technological progress is not inherently clean. The algorithms that drive AI systems—whether powering chatbots, virtual assistants, or massive language models—demand colossal computational power. These computations occur inside sprawling data centers, which devour vast quantities of electricity and, more surprisingly, water.
Here’s how: every AI interaction triggers intensive mathematical processes within data centers packed with heat-generating hardware. To prevent overheating, many of these centers rely on sophisticated water-cooling systems. Studies reveal that responding to just one AI-generated query can indirectly consume between 100 and 500 milliliters of water—just to cool the servers that process it. While that seems minuscule, multiply it by the over 10 billion daily queries and the result is staggering: 2.5 billion liters of water per day—the equivalent of 1,000 Olympic-sized swimming pools.
This presents a chilling paradox. AI is simultaneously being deployed to combat water scarcity—via drought forecasting, irrigation optimization, and leak detection—while it contributes to the same crisis through its concealed water footprint. The disconnect lies in perception. Digital activity feels intangible,
but its consequences are physically felt. Each search, click, or command carries hidden ecological costs—in electricity, carbon emissions, and now, water.
In water-scarce regions—rural Sindh, parts of Balochistan, or sub-Saharan Africa—where families ration every drop, nearby data centers are guzzling the same finite resource to maintain operational coolness. This is not an indictment of AI, but rather a call for reckoning—a need to interrogate how we develop and deploy such technologies. Even our most benevolent innovations must be held accountable when their operations place stress on already fragile ecosystems.
Consider this: in 2023, Google consumed 27 billion liters of water for cooling, while Microsoft used over 11 billion. These figures are not just statistics; they represent invisible withdrawals from an aquifer that’s nearing exhaustion. What’s more troubling is that some of these facilities are located in water-stressed regions like Arizona, Spain, and rural Pakistan—placing local communities in direct competition with machines.
While women in Punjab trek for kilometers to fill a pot of water, servers just a few miles away drain the same resource to provide real-time sports scores or play music. The juxtaposition is disturbing. The responsibility must be shared. Tech giants must urgently innovate greener infrastructure—utilizing recycled or greywater, adopting air-based cooling systems, or building centers in naturally cooler climates. Microsoft’s zero-water-consumption facility in Arizona is a prime example that sustainable solutions are possible with intent and investment.
Governments, too, must play a decisive role. Pakistan’s National Water Policy 2023 must extend its reach beyond agriculture and domestic consumption to include digital water use. It’s time for environmental legislation to evolve with technology. Furthermore, individual users must recognize their digital water footprint. If a single person curtails just five unnecessary searches per day, they could conserve nearly 2,000 liters of water annually—enough to sustain another life for a full year.
What we need now is a new paradigm of consciousness—one that links the screen to the stream, the algorithm to the aquifer. While AI can replicate human thought, it lacks human empathy. And in the water wars ahead, empathy—not efficiency—will be our greatest asset.
Water is neither infinite nor optional. It is fragile, communal, and sacred. As we surge into a more digital future, we must ensure that our ambition doesn’t come at the expense of the Earth’s veins. The water crisis is not only about the scarcity of what we sip—it’s about what we search, click, and code. The next time we marvel at a smart response, we must also ask: At what cost?
Itrat Shahmiri is a writer and educator from Gilgit-Baltistan with a deep interest in the intersection of environmental sustainability, technology, and human responsibility.
Hunza Valley, located in the Gilgit-Baltistan region of Pakistan, is a paradise for travelers seeking breathtaking landscapes, rich culture, and warm hospitality. Surrounded by snow-capped peaks, turquoise lakes, and centuries-old forts, Hunza has become one of the most sought-after destinations in the world. Whether you’re an adventurer, photographer, or peace-seeker, the valley offers something magical for everyone.
1. Karimabad – Heart of Hunza
Karimabad is the cultural and historical hub of Hunza. Lined with cobblestone streets and traditional stone houses, this town offers panoramic views of Rakaposhi, Ultar Sar, and Ladyfinger Peak.
History & Culture: Once the seat of Hunza’s royal family, Karimabad houses the iconic Baltit and Altit forts.
Best Time to Visit: April to October, when the weather is pleasant and fruit orchards are in full bloom.
2. Baltit Fort – A Glimpse into Hunza’s Past
Perched on a hill above Karimabad, Baltit Fort is over 700 years old. Its Tibetan-inspired architecture tells the story of Hunza’s trade and cultural connections.
Architectural Beauty: Restored in the 1990s by the Aga Khan Trust, it now serves as a museum.
Tours: Guided tours offer deep insight into Hunza’s royal history.
3. Altit Fort – The 900-Year-Old Marvel
Older than Baltit Fort, Altit Fort stands as a testament to Hunza’s resilience.
Preservation: The fort has been carefully restored, preserving its original charm.
Altit Gardens: A beautiful spot for photography and enjoying traditional Hunza tea.
4. Attabad Lake – The Turquoise Gem
Formed in 2010 after a landslide, Attabad Lake has become a major tourist attraction.
Activities: Boating, jet skiing, and fishing are popular.
Scenery: The turquoise water contrasts beautifully with surrounding rugged mountains.
5. Passu Cones – Nature’s Sharp Art
The Passu Cathedral Peaks, also called Passu Cones, are a striking natural wonder.
Trekking: Trails around Passu lead to glaciers and suspension bridges.
Photography: Best captured during golden hour for dramatic lighting.
6. Hussaini Suspension Bridge – World’s Most Dangerous Bridge
Often labeled the most dangerous bridge in the world, Hussaini Bridge is a thrill-seeker’s dream.
Adventure: Crossing requires balancing on wooden planks tied with cables.
Safety: Wear sturdy shoes and avoid crossing in high winds.
7. Khunjerab Pass – Gateway to China
Located at 4,693 meters, Khunjerab Pass is the highest paved international border crossing in the world.
Scenic Drive: Travel along the Karakoram Highway for breathtaking views.
Wildlife: Spot Marco Polo sheep in Khunjerab National Park.
8. Hoper Valley – The Land of Glaciers
Hoper Valley is famous for its stunning glaciers and hospitable locals.
Hoper Glacier: Offers jaw-dropping views of icy landscapes.
Culture: Locals often invite travelers for traditional Hunza meals.
9. Eagle’s Nest – Best Sunrise and Sunset Point
From Eagle’s Nest, enjoy a panoramic view of Hunza Valley surrounded by towering peaks.
Views: Perfect for both sunrise and sunset.
Accommodation: Several hotels and restaurants make it a great overnight stop.
10. Borith Lake – A Tranquil Escape
Located near Gulmit, Borith Lake is a peaceful spot for relaxation.
Birdwatching: Home to migratory birds such as ducks and geese.
Trekking: Trails connect Borith Lake to Passu Glacier.
Travel Tips for Visiting Hunza
Connectivity: Limited mobile service in remote areas.
Best Season: April to October for pleasant weather.
Packing List: Warm clothes, trekking shoes, and a good camera are essentials.
In line with its vision for a waste-free future, Nestlé Pakistan has expanded the Clean Gilgit-Baltistan Project (CGBP) to Askole – Zero Point, a remote hamlet located almost 10,000 feet above sea level and the final settlement before the K2 base camp. The initiative will support the collection and recycling of approximately 40,000 kilograms of annual plastic waste from the region.
As part of the expansion, Nestlé Pakistan has donated a compressing and baling machine to the Central Karakoram National Park (CKNP). The machine will enable efficient compression of various types of plastics and paper waste collected in the area, which will then be transported downstream for recycling in collaboration with the Gilgit Baltistan Waste Management Company (GBWMC).
Acknowledging the effort, Raja Nasir, Minister for Planning, Government of Gilgit-Baltistan said,
“We are delighted at Nestlé’s efforts for a waste-free future, in this fragile site Askole, that is close to important glaciers of Baltoro and Biafo, considered to be the gateway to some of world’s highest peaks and the launchpad for mountaineering expeditions.”
Speaking on the occasion, Jason Avanceña, CEO Nestlé Pakistan, said,
“We are accelerating our actions to reduce the environmental impact of various kinds of packaging waste. Our vision is that none of our packaging, including plastics, ends up in landfill nor in oceans, lakes and rivers.” “Tackling packaging waste requires a collective action of leveraging public private partnerships to find improved solutions to reduce, reuse and recycle,” he added.
Sharing key project milestones, Sheikh Waqar Ahmad, Head of Corporate Affairs & Sustainability, Nestlé Pakistan, said,
“Earlier, as part of the CGBP, Nestlé installed three compressing and baling machines, one each in Gilgit, Hunza and Skardu, along with a sorting machine in collaboration with EPA-GB and GBWMC. In the last five years, these efforts culminated into waste management facilitation of over 6800 tons of plastic packaging in the region, making a positive environmental impact.”
Nestlé Pakistan has previously contributed to regional sustainability by installing 225 benches and over 100 waste bins made from recycled plastic across 16 tourist hotspots in Gilgit, Hunza, Skardu, Shigar, and Kharmang. The company also donated 15,000 reusable bags for distribution among local communities.
Commissioner Baltistan, Kamal Khan, appreciated the expansion of the project to Askole – Zero Point and emphasized the importance of preserving the natural landscape of the region.
“We are thankful that Nestlé is playing a role in promoting a waste-free Gilgit-Baltistan.”
Also present at the occasion were Wali Ullah Fallahi, Deputy Commissioner Shigar, and senior representatives of CKNP and local administration.
This initiative contributes to UN Sustainable Development Goals 12 (Responsible Consumption & Production) and 17 (Partnerships for the Goals), by improving waste management systems and supporting local environmental resilience in one of Pakistan’s most ecologically sensitive regions.
The Karakoram Magazine seeks high-quality, unpublished,nonfiction, first person articles relevant to Gilgit-Baltistan and topics as varied as Geo Strategic & Economic Significance of GB, Arts & Literature, Tourism & Hospitality, Culture and heritage, Education and technology, Health & Wellbeing, Climate Change and Wildlife, Economic & Trade, Sports & Recreations, Youth & Women empowerment and Achievements of Illustrious People of GB in different fields etc.