Why Akram Wah Canal Re-Lining matters now
The timetable, however, is still shifting. In the World Bank’s February 2026 implementation update, Akram Wah rehabilitation was listed at bid-evaluation stage. APP reported in mid-February that work was expected to begin in March, but a late-March Dawn report said the latest consultant review had locked in relining as the final option, raised the revised Akram Wah package to Rs21 billion, and pushed physical lining until after the kharif, or summer crop, season while procurement moved ahead.
That latest redesign also made the technical case clearer. The current proposal is more selective than a blanket rebuild, focusing on the stretches where seepage losses are understood to be highest. Officials told Dawn that about 193 of the canal’s 382 reduced-distance stretches would be lined, mainly from RD-0 to RD-193, and that the intervention could save around 270 cusecs of freshwater while helping the canal move closer to its designed discharge.
For growers, the promise is straightforward: more dependable water reaching the tail end instead of being lost before it gets there. For Hyderabad, the upside is equally important. A canal that carries water more efficiently is also a canal better able to support the city’s raw-water needs at a time when population growth and demand are pressing harder on existing supply systems.
A project years in the making
This is not a sudden policy turn. In 2020, Dawn reported that encroachments and damaged lining were already complicating rehabilitation; in January 2024 it described the shift from a legacy lined channel toward a modernization plan; and in April 2024 consultants were publicly urging a fundamental redesign centered on relining. That continuity matters because it shows the current proposal grew out of years of engineering reassessment and water-delivery concerns, not a one-off announcement.
The remaining question is execution. If procurement stays on track and work begins after the crop season, Akram Wah could become one of Sindh’s clearest attempts to turn water-loss control into visible relief for both farmers and urban users. If the project slips again, the province will still be left managing the same old mix of seepage, weak tail-end delivery and anxiety over Hyderabad’s supply buffer.
