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	<description>Environmental &#38; Wastewater Treatment Consultancy in Pakistan</description>
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		<title>Climate adaptation in Pakistan</title>
		<link>https://makespakistan.com/climate-adaptation-in-pakistan/</link>
					<comments>https://makespakistan.com/climate-adaptation-in-pakistan/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Muhammad Ameen Keryo]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 26 Jun 2026 12:14:27 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Water Resources Management]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://makespakistan.com/?p=182</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Climate Resilience Climate Adaptation in Pakistan: Why It Is Important for Our Future Climate change is not a far-away future problem anymore. Across Pakistan and the wider region, it is already reshaping the lives of farmers in Sindh and Punjab, families in Lahore housing societies, fishing communities along the Karachi coast, and mountain villages in...]]></description>
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<div class="cap-wrap">

  <div class="cap-hero">
    <span class="cap-eyebrow">Climate Resilience</span>
    <h2>Climate Adaptation in Pakistan: Why It Is Important for Our Future</h2>
    <p>Climate change is not a far-away future problem anymore. Across Pakistan and the wider region, it is already reshaping the lives of farmers in Sindh and Punjab, families in Lahore housing societies, fishing communities along the Karachi coast, and mountain villages in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.</p>
  </div>

  <p class="cap-lead">Every year brings harsher heatwaves, more violent floods, unpredictable monsoon rainfall, drought spells and serious damage to food production.</p>

  <p>This is why <strong>climate adaptation in Pakistan</strong> and climate resilience have moved to the centre of planning for our governments, local communities, businesses and ordinary households.</p>

  <p>Climate adaptation means making changes so that people and systems can live more safely with the effects of a warming world. It does not replace the work of cutting pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, which remains essential.</p>

  <p>But even if the world reduces emissions quickly, many climate impacts will continue for decades because the planet has already warmed. That is why adaptation must run side by side with climate mitigation.</p>

  <div class="cap-callout">
    <span class="tag">In simple words</span>
    <p>Climate <strong>mitigation</strong> reduces the cause of climate change, while climate <strong>adaptation</strong> reduces the damage from it. Both are necessary.</p>
  </div>

  <p>Without adaptation, low-income families, smallholder farmers, women, children and elderly people face the heaviest risks, especially in developing countries like ours where resources are already stretched thin.</p>

  <figure class="cap-fig"><img decoding="async" src="https://makespakistan.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/climate-adaptation-pakistan-flood-road.webp" alt="Climate adaptation in Pakistan — floodwater overwhelms a main road"><figcaption>Climate adaptation in Pakistan &mdash; floodwater overwhelms a main road</figcaption></figure>

  <h3 class="cap-h2">What Is Climate Change Adaptation?</h3>
  <p>Climate change adaptation is the process of preparing people, infrastructure, agriculture, water systems, health systems and ecosystems for climate-related risks.</p>
  <p>These risks include floods, storms, extreme heat, sea-level rise, drought, water shortage, food insecurity, crop failure, landslides and damage to homes and roads.</p>

  <div class="cap-grid">
    <div class="cap-card"><div class="ico">&#127968;</div><h4>Local-Level Adaptation</h4><p>At the local level, adaptation can mean planting drought-resistant crops, improving drainage in colonies, storing rainwater, making houses more flood-safe, using climate-smart farming methods and building community-based disaster plans.</p></div>
    <div class="cap-card"><div class="ico">&#127961;</div><h4>City-Level Adaptation</h4><p>At the city level, it can mean better urban planning, heatwave shelters, stronger flood protection, more trees, improved waste management and faster emergency response systems &mdash; the very gaps that turned recent monsoon rains into urban disasters.</p></div>
    <div class="cap-card"><div class="ico">&#127757;</div><h4>National-Level Adaptation</h4><p>At the national level, climate adaptation includes stronger policies, early warning systems, climate risk maps, disaster risk reduction plans, insurance for climate losses, protection of coastal infrastructure, and investment in resilient roads, bridges, schools and hospitals.</p></div>
  </div>

  <p>It also includes protecting wetlands, forests and mangroves, because nature itself works as a strong defence against climate shocks. Adaptation is not one single project &mdash; it is a complete way of planning development in a changing climate.</p>

  <hr class="cap-divider">

  <h3 class="cap-h2">Why Climate Adaptation in Pakistan Is Now Urgent</h3>
  <p>The world is becoming warmer, and this warming is changing weather patterns in almost every region. Many places face heatwaves more intense than ever before.</p>
  <p>Some areas receive too much rainfall in a short time, triggering floods, while others endure long dry seasons, water stress and crop losses. Coastal communities face rising seas and stronger storm surges.</p>

  <div class="cap-callout">
    <span class="tag">Local pain point</span>
    <p>A farmer in rural Punjab no longer knows when the monsoon will arrive, so he cannot decide when to sow. A family in a Lahore &ldquo;dream society&rdquo; wakes up to find the entrance to their home blocked by water. A fisherman near the coast watches his catch shrink year after year. These are the human faces of a changing climate.</p>
  </div>

  <p>Developing countries are especially vulnerable because they depend heavily on agriculture, fisheries, forests and natural resources, and their infrastructure is often too weak for extreme weather.</p>
  <p>Many communities also lack proper access to climate information, insurance, finance and modern technology. This creates a dangerous gap between climate risk and climate preparedness.</p>
  <p>Adaptation is therefore not only an environmental issue &mdash; it is tied to economic stability, public health, poverty reduction, food security, water management, gender equality and human safety.</p>

  <figure class="cap-fig"><img decoding="async" src="https://makespakistan.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/rain-water-in-colonies-pakistan.webp" alt="Rainwater trapped inside residential colonies after heavy monsoon"><figcaption>Rainwater trapped inside residential colonies after heavy monsoon</figcaption></figure>

  <h3 class="cap-h2">Local Adaptation Measures That Can Protect Communities</h3>
  <p>Most adaptation actions begin at the local level because climate impacts are felt directly by people in their own areas.</p>
  <p>A village facing drought needs different solutions than a coastal town facing sea-level rise, and a city facing urban heat needs different planning than a mountain area facing landslides.</p>

  <h4 class="cap-h3"><span class="dot"></span>Climate-Smart Agriculture for Farmers</h4>
  <p>For farming communities, climate-smart agriculture is one of the most important approaches: drought-tolerant seeds, improved soil health, regenerative farming, adjusted crop calendars, drip irrigation, water saving and crop diversification. These steps cut losses and strengthen food security.</p>

  <h4 class="cap-h3"><span class="dot"></span>Protecting Flood-Prone Areas</h4>
  <p>For flood-prone areas, better drainage, raised houses, flood barriers, wetland restoration and timely warning messages save lives and property. Communities can prepare evacuation plans and safe shelters so people know exactly what to do during emergencies.</p>

  <h4 class="cap-h3"><span class="dot"></span>Managing Heat and Water Stress</h4>
  <p>In areas facing heat stress, cities can plant more trees, create green spaces, use cool roofs, add public water points and protect outdoor workers through heat action plans.</p>
  <p>For water-scarce regions, rainwater harvesting, better groundwater management, water recycling, improved irrigation and community-level storage build genuine water security &mdash; the foundation of climate resilience.</p>

  <hr class="cap-divider">

  <h3 class="cap-h2">Role of Governments in Climate Resilience</h3>
  <p>Local action matters, but adaptation cannot succeed without strong government planning. Roads, hospitals, schools, housing projects, energy systems and agriculture policies must be designed for future climate conditions, not old weather patterns.</p>

  <h4 class="cap-h3"><span class="dot"></span>National Adaptation Plans (NAPs)</h4>
  <p>National Adaptation Plans help countries identify climate risks, vulnerable sectors, priority areas and long-term needs. A strong plan guides investment, attracts finance and helps departments work together.</p>

  <h4 class="cap-h3"><span class="dot"></span>Coordination and Climate Data</h4>
  <p>Agriculture, water, disaster management, health and urban planning departments must coordinate; when each works alone, adaptation weakens.</p>
  <p>Governments also need reliable climate data &mdash; weather information, flood maps, drought monitoring and local risk assessments &mdash; so that farmers, planners, disaster teams and investors can act with confidence.</p>

  <h3 class="cap-h2">Early Warning Systems and Disaster Preparedness</h3>
  <p>Early warning systems are among the most practical adaptation tools. Timely warnings about floods, storms, heatwaves or drought let farmers protect crops, fishermen avoid dangerous waters, families move to safety and local authorities ready their emergency services.</p>
  <p>But a warning only works when it reaches the right people in a way they understand and trust. In many areas this means SMS alerts, radio, local leaders, mosque announcements, community groups and social media.</p>
  <p>Disaster preparedness also means training communities, marking evacuation routes, keeping emergency supplies, and protecting hospitals and schools. Women, children, persons with disabilities and elderly people must be included, because they often face the highest risk during climate disasters.</p>

  <figure class="cap-fig"><img decoding="async" src="https://makespakistan.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/rescue-team-flood-evacuation-pakistan.webp" alt="Rescue team evacuating stranded residents through floodwater"><figcaption>Rescue team evacuating stranded residents through floodwater</figcaption></figure>

  <h3 class="cap-h2">Nature-Based Solutions for Climate Adaptation</h3>
  <p>Nature-based solutions are powerful for building resilience. Instead of relying only on concrete walls, countries can use natural ecosystems to reduce risk.</p>
  <div style="margin:18px 0 6px;">
    <span class="cap-pill">&#127796; Mangroves protect coasts from storm waves</span>
    <span class="cap-pill">&#128167; Wetlands absorb floodwater</span>
    <span class="cap-pill">&#127794; Forests reduce landslides</span>
    <span class="cap-pill">&#127795; Urban trees cool cities</span>
    <span class="cap-pill">&#127757; Healthy soil stores more water</span>
  </div>
  <p>These solutions are often cost-effective and also support biodiversity, tourism, livelihoods and community well-being.</p>
  <p>But they must be managed well: when forests are cut, wetlands filled or mangroves destroyed, climate risks become far worse. Nature-based adaptation is especially vital where people depend directly on land, water and forests for their income.</p>

  <hr class="cap-divider">

  <h3 class="cap-h2">Main Challenges in Climate Adaptation</h3>

  <h4 class="cap-h3"><span class="dot"></span>Finance</h4>
  <p>The biggest challenge is money. Adaptation projects need funding for planning, infrastructure, technology, training, research and community support, and many developing countries lack enough public funds.</p>
  <p>Because flood protection, early warning systems and farmer training rarely produce quick profit, private investors hesitate &mdash; which makes public finance, international climate funds and donor support essential.</p>

  <h4 class="cap-h3"><span class="dot"></span>Knowledge and Institutions</h4>
  <p>A second barrier is the knowledge gap: without detailed local climate data, decision-makers cannot tell which areas and communities are most at risk.</p>
  <p>Weak institutional capacity is another problem &mdash; policies exist on paper, but uncoordinated departments, untrained staff and missing budgets stall implementation. Good governance, transparency and local participation are the cure.</p>

  <h3 class="cap-h2">Global Cooperation and Climate Adaptation</h3>
  <p>Because climate change is global, adaptation also needs international support. The Paris Agreement recognises adaptation as being as important as cutting emissions, and the Global Goal on Adaptation aims to raise resilience and reduce vulnerability worldwide.</p>
  <p>Climate funds such as the Green Climate Fund and the Adaptation Fund can help vulnerable nations, but many developing countries say the finance is too little and the access procedures too difficult.</p>
  <p>Real progress needs finance that is easier to reach, more predictable and focused on the most exposed communities. Global cooperation also means sharing technology, data, research and best practices &mdash; from small island states protecting their coasts to countries restoring mangroves and upgrading weather stations.</p>

  <h3 class="cap-h2">Why Adaptation Supports Sustainable Development</h3>
  <p>Climate adaptation is strongly linked with sustainable development. A climate-resilient country better protects jobs, food systems, public health, infrastructure and natural resources.</p>
  <p>A farmer using climate-smart methods loses fewer crops, a city with better drainage avoids flood damage, a coast with restored mangroves shields homes and fisheries, and a nation with strong early warning saves lives.</p>
  <p>Investing now also protects future generations, because delay makes adaptation more expensive and more difficult.</p>

  <div class="cap-link">
    <span class="lico">&#128279;</span>
    <div class="ltxt"><b>Go deeper: climate adaptation explained</b><span>Explore practical strategies, frameworks and resilience steps in our complete guide.</span></div>
    <a class="btn" href="https://makespakistan.com/climate-adaptation/">Read the Climate Adaptation guide &rarr;</a>
  </div>

  <h3 class="cap-h2">How Can We Do Climate Adaptation? Practical Steps</h3>
  <div class="cap-steps">
    <div class="cap-step"><h4>Identify Local Climate Risks</h4><p>Check what your area faces most: floods, heatwaves, drought, water shortage, crop damage or storms.</p></div>
    <div class="cap-step"><h4>Make a Local Action Plan</h4><p>Decide what needs protection first: homes, farms, schools, roads, water supply, hospitals and vulnerable people.</p></div>
    <div class="cap-step"><h4>Improve Early Warning Systems</h4><p>Use SMS alerts, weather updates, community announcements and emergency plans before disasters strike.</p></div>
    <div class="cap-step"><h4>Build Climate-Safe Infrastructure</h4><p>Construct stronger drainage, flood barriers, heat-safe buildings, water storage and safer roads.</p></div>
    <div class="cap-step"><h4>Use Climate-Smart Farming</h4><p>Adopt drought-resistant crops, better irrigation, soil protection and rainwater harvesting.</p></div>
    <div class="cap-step"><h4>Protect Nature</h4><p>Plant trees, restore wetlands, protect forests and use mangroves in coastal areas.</p></div>
    <div class="cap-step"><h4>Arrange Funding and Training</h4><p>Governments, NGOs and communities need money, awareness and proper skills to apply these solutions.</p></div>
  </div>

  <div class="cap-conc">
    <h3>Conclusion</h3>
    <p>Climate adaptation is now a basic need for every country, especially developing nations and vulnerable communities. Its main goal is to reduce vulnerability and build resilience through climate-smart farming, early warning systems, better water management, stronger infrastructure, nature-based solutions, disaster preparedness and national adaptation planning.</p>
    <p>But it needs finance, good data, strong governance and community involvement; without these, plans stay only on paper. Climate adaptation is no longer a choice &mdash; it is necessary for survival, development and long-term stability, and the sooner we act, the safer our future will be.</p>
  </div>

  <h3 class="cap-h2">Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) About Climate Adaptation</h3>
  <div class="cap-faq">
    <details open><summary>What is climate adaptation?</summary><p>Climate adaptation is the process of adjusting our homes, farms, cities and natural systems so we can live more safely with the effects of climate change, such as floods, heat and drought.</p></details>
    <details><summary>What is the difference between climate mitigation and adaptation?</summary><p>Climate mitigation reduces the cause of climate change by cutting greenhouse gas emissions, while climate adaptation reduces the damage from climate impacts that are already happening. Both are needed together.</p></details>
    <details><summary>Why is climate change adaptation important?</summary><p>Adaptation is important because even with strong emission cuts, climate impacts will continue for years. It protects lives, food, water, infrastructure and livelihoods, especially for the most vulnerable communities.</p></details>
    <details><summary>What are examples of climate change adaptation measures?</summary><p>Examples include drought-resistant crops, drip irrigation, rainwater harvesting, flood barriers, better drainage, heat action plans, early warning systems, mangrove restoration and resilient roads and buildings.</p></details>
    <details><summary>What are the main climate change adaptation strategies?</summary><p>Key strategies are identifying local risks, climate-smart agriculture, early warning systems, climate-safe infrastructure, nature-based solutions, national adaptation planning, and arranging finance and training.</p></details>
    <details><summary>What is climate adaptation and resilience?</summary><p>Climate adaptation is the action of preparing for climate risks, while climate resilience is the ability of people, systems and ecosystems to absorb shocks, recover quickly and keep functioning despite climate stress.</p></details>
  </div>

</div>
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			</item>
		<item>
		<title>MAKES participates in GEF Eighth Assembly Samarkand 2026</title>
		<link>https://makespakistan.com/gef-eighth-assembly-samarkand/</link>
					<comments>https://makespakistan.com/gef-eighth-assembly-samarkand/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Muhammad Ameen Keryo]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 21 Jun 2026 07:39:13 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Global Environmental Facility Events]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://makespakistan.com/?p=126</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Samarkand, Uzbekistan (30 May – 6 June 2026). The GEF eighth assembly Samarkand gathered the global environmental community, convened by the Global Environment Facility, at the Silk Road Samarkand Congress Center, with the headline governance sessions convened on 4–5 June. Among the delegates was Muhammad Ameen Keryo, Director of MAKES Pakistan, who carried Pakistan’s voice...]]></description>
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<figure style="margin:0 0 28px;border-radius:14px;overflow:hidden;box-shadow:0 10px 30px rgba(45,55,72,.18)"><img decoding="async" src="https://makespakistan.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/muhammad-ameen-keryo-registan-square-samarkand.webp" alt="Muhammad Ameen Keryo of MAKES Pakistan at Registan Square in Samarkand, Uzbekistan" style="width:100%;height:auto;display:block" /></figure><p style="font-size:1.12rem;line-height:1.75;color:#4a5568"><strong>Samarkand, Uzbekistan (30 May – 6 June 2026).</strong> The <strong>GEF eighth assembly Samarkand</strong> gathered the global environmental community, convened by the <a href="https://www.thegef.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Global Environment Facility</a>, at the Silk Road Samarkand Congress Center, with the headline governance sessions convened on 4–5 June. Among the delegates was <strong>Muhammad Ameen Keryo</strong>, Director of MAKES Pakistan, who carried Pakistan’s voice on community-scale climate resilience and ecological sanitation into the discussions.</p><h2 style="color:#2d3748;margin-top:34px">What the GEF eighth assembly Samarkand set out to achieve</h2><p style="line-height:1.75;color:#4a5568">Framed around “the final sprint to 2030,” the gathering pressed for faster, joined-up action across biodiversity, land restoration, oceans, pollution and blended finance. Delegates also welcomed the GEF-9 cycle covering 2026–2030 and a USD 3.9 billion replenishment earmarked for environmental projects worldwide. The recurring message from the closing session — that a healthy planet is what makes lasting development possible — anchored the week’s debates.</p><div style="background:#f7fafc;border-left:5px solid #2ca24c;border-radius:0 12px 12px 0;padding:20px 24px;margin:26px 0"><p style="margin:0;line-height:1.7;color:#2d3748"><strong>At a glance:</strong> hosted in Samarkand from 30 May to 6 June 2026 · main Assembly on 4–5 June · representatives of the GEF’s 186 participant countries · 2,000+ attendees from governments, UN bodies, civil society, Indigenous Peoples, women, youth and the private sector · GEF-9 and a USD 3.9 billion replenishment endorsed.</p></div><h2 style="color:#2d3748;margin-top:34px">Who took part</h2><p style="line-height:1.75;color:#4a5568">Official reporting describes participation drawn from the GEF’s 186 member countries, spanning Africa, Asia and the Pacific, Europe and Central Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, the Middle East and North America, with Uzbekistan serving as host. More than two thousand registered participants — ministers, agency representatives, researchers and community advocates — took part in the Assembly and its associated meetings.</p><h2 style="color:#2d3748;margin-top:34px">Muhammad Ameen Keryo: bringing field-tested solutions to a global stage</h2><p style="line-height:1.75;color:#4a5568">At Samarkand, Keryo engaged with civil-society networks operating under the GEF partnership, contributing to exchanges on regional cooperation across South Asia and on embedding community-driven sustainability into environmental governance. His participation underlined a simple conviction shaped over more than a decade of fieldwork: durable environmental progress is built locally, then scaled.</p><h3 style="color:#2ca24c;margin-top:26px">Ecological wastewater treatment as a practical answer</h3><p style="line-height:1.75;color:#4a5568">Much of Keryo’s work centres on treating wastewater through living systems rather than energy-hungry machinery. Drawing on wetland vegetation, soil media and microbial activity, these <a href="https://makespakistan.com/nature-based-solutions/">nature-based solutions</a> clean water through natural biological pathways — an affordable, low-energy route to sanitation for communities that conventional <a href="https://makespakistan.com/wastewater-treatment/">wastewater treatment</a> infrastructure has not reached.</p><h3 style="color:#2ca24c;margin-top:26px">Pakistan’s pioneering constructed wetland</h3><p style="line-height:1.75;color:#4a5568">Keryo is recognised for building Pakistan’s first <a href="https://makespakistan.com/constructed-wetlands/">constructed wetland</a> in village Majeed Keerio, demonstrating that ecosystem-based engineering can purify wastewater, curb pollution and open the door to water reuse. The project remains a reference point for regions seeking dependable treatment without the cost and complexity of conventional plants — and a working example of <a href="https://makespakistan.com/climate-adaptation/">climate adaptation</a> rooted in local capacity.</p><h2 style="color:#2d3748;margin-top:34px">From a village pilot to a global conversation</h2><p style="line-height:1.75;color:#4a5568">Keryo’s presence at the GEF eighth assembly Samarkand threaded a clear line from one Sindh village to an international forum: that locally engineered, ecologically grounded solutions deserve a seat at the table where global environmental finance and policy are shaped. Under his direction, MAKES Pakistan continues to develop replicable models in sanitation, ecosystem restoration and climate resilience for communities across Pakistan and beyond.</p><h2 style="color:#2d3748;margin-top:34px">Why the GEF eighth assembly Samarkand mattered for Pakistan</h2><p style="line-height:1.75;color:#4a5568">For a delegation focused on water and sanitation, the value of the Samarkand gathering lay in connection: linking a proven village-scale treatment model to the finance, partnerships and policy frameworks that can carry it further. Pakistan faces mounting pressure on freshwater, with untreated effluent contaminating rivers and groundwater that millions depend on. Solutions that are inexpensive to build, simple to maintain and powered by natural processes are exactly the kind of intervention the GEF partnership exists to scale.</p><p style="line-height:1.75;color:#4a5568">By presenting field evidence rather than theory, MAKES Pakistan reinforced a message that ran through the week in Samarkand: the most durable environmental gains often begin in the places furthest from the conference hall. The exchanges at the assembly also opened doors for knowledge-sharing across South Asia, where similar water-quality and sanitation gaps persist.</p><h2 style="color:#2d3748;margin-top:34px">Frequently asked questions</h2><div style="background:#f7fafc;border-radius:12px;padding:8px 22px;margin:18px 0"><h3 style="color:#2ca24c;margin-bottom:6px">When and where was the GEF eighth assembly Samarkand held?</h3><p style="line-height:1.7;color:#4a5568">It ran from 30 May to 6 June 2026 at the Silk Road Samarkand Congress Center in Uzbekistan, with the main Assembly sessions on 4 and 5 June.</p><h3 style="color:#2ca24c;margin-bottom:6px">Who represented MAKES Pakistan?</h3><p style="line-height:1.7;color:#4a5568">Director Muhammad Ameen Keryo attended, contributing to civil-society discussions on climate resilience and ecological sanitation across South Asia.</p><h3 style="color:#2ca24c;margin-bottom:6px">What did the assembly decide?</h3><p style="line-height:1.7;color:#4a5568">Delegates welcomed the GEF-9 funding cycle for 2026–2030 and a USD 3.9 billion replenishment to support environmental action by the GEF’s 186 participant countries.</p></div><div style="background:linear-gradient(135deg,#2ca24c,#00cfcf);border-radius:14px;padding:26px 28px;margin:30px 0;color:#fff"><p style="margin:0 0 6px;font-size:1.15rem;font-weight:700">Explore the work behind the story</p><p style="margin:0;line-height:1.7;opacity:.95">See how MAKES Pakistan applies <a href="https://makespakistan.com/constructed-wetlands/" style="color:#fff;text-decoration:underline">constructed wetland systems</a> and <a href="https://makespakistan.com/environmental-services/" style="color:#fff;text-decoration:underline">environmental services</a> to turn wastewater challenges into community assets.</p></div>


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