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Pakistan publishes its agriculture census, revealing the federation beneath our fields – Pakistan


Pakistan publishes its agriculture census, revealing the federation beneath our fields – Pakistan

Pakistan’s latest Agricultural Census reveals shrinking farms, a shift from canals to private groundwater not only bringing shift in agriculture but an emancipation from state, a solar revolution in the fields, an interprovincial food economy, and livestock growth that has far outpaced crop acreage.

The state’s desire to count is never entirely innocent. British India turned censuses, land records and irrigation maps into technologies of rule: enumeration made people and property legible, while the canal colonies linked land settlement, water allocation and revenue to a powerful bureaucracy. Pakistan inherited that administrative apparatus. Yet the same numbers that can help a state extract can also help citizens see what is changing and demand a response.
The Agricultural Census 2024 deserves to be read in that critical but constructive spirit. It is Pakistan’s seventh agricultural census and the first to combine agriculture, livestock and farm machinery in one digital exercise.

This 2024 census is the first to combine agriculture, livestock and farm machinery in one digital exercise

Fieldwork was carried out in two phases between September 2024 and February 2025. It was sample-based rather than a literal count of every farm. (This was a different approach from work done before 2010 and from that of methods used by many countries, and therefore, its results merit more scrutiny). Selected mouzas and urban blocks were surveyed, while exceptionally large land holdings were included with certainty. Tablets, GIS mapping and real-time monitoring were used to produce district-level estimates. The numbers are therefore not sacred, but they are the most systematic national picture available.

Families should be able to retain distinct legal titles and income shares while cultivating adjoining parcels as one unit. Producer cooperatives, family farm companies, machinery pools, digital lease markets and voluntary land exchanges can create scale without dispossession. Government can provide cadastral maps, low-cost lease registration, model contracts and quick dispute resolution. Women heirs must be recorded as members, paid directly and given enforceable exit rights. Pakistan does not necessarily need fewer owners; it needs institutions that allow small owners to farm together.

The average fragmented holding was carved from three scattered parcels into seven between the 2010 and 2024 censuses — a 133% rise in pieces per farm.

This is not a story of canals disappearing. It is a shift in the centre of gravity from publicly coordinated surface water to privately controlled groundwater. The number of tubewells and lift pumps rose from 0.93 million in 2004 to 1.83 million in 2024.

It is a shift in the centre of gravity from publicly coordinated surface water to privately controlled groundwater.

The more striking shift is in what powers them. Solar barely registered as a power source for tubewells in 2004. Today it runs an estimated 960,000 of the country’s 1.83 million tubewells and lift pumps—roughly half the entire stock, and more than diesel and electricity combined. Diesel-powered units have fallen as fuel costs rose; grid electricity remains a minority option, constrained by an unreliable and expensive supply. In the space of two census rounds, solar has gone from a rounding error to the single largest power source irrigating Pakistan’s farms. This is one of the most consequential technology shifts in the recent history of Pakistani agriculture, and it has had almost no sustained political or policy conversation attached to it—no coordinated financing programme, no groundwater-metering requirement tied to the subsidy-free upfront cost that made it attractive, no basin-level plan for what happens when pumping is limited only by sunlight rather than by fuel budgets.

The social meaning is as important as the engineering. The colonial canal system created remarkable agricultural production, but it also made access to water dependent on settlement policy, official schedules, irrigation officials and upstream users. The tubewell gives a farmer greater command over timing. It is a limited emancipation from the state and from the collective discipline of the watercourse. Solar power strengthens that autonomy by replacing a recurring diesel or electricity bill with an upfront investment. Would this mean stronger rural classes or sub classes and their relative bargaining terms with urban classes? These are consequences that require more detailed study.

Each square is Pakistan’s irrigated land, split by source. Private tubewells (red) nearly doubled their share — from 18% to 31% — as surface canals lost ground.

But private freedom can create a public crisis. A farmer who pumps groundwater receives the immediate benefit, while the falling water table, salinity and declining aquifer quality are shared by neighbours and future generations. Solar makes each additional hour of pumping appear almost costless. The transition therefore demands much more research: Where are water tables falling fastest? How much pumping is replenished? Who can afford deeper wells? How are groundwater and river flows connected?

By corollary, we need to study how this will affect cities. If agriculture becomes less dependent on canals, more surface water might theoretically become available for urban, industrial or environmental use. But that outcome is not automatic: Pakistan needs basin-level accounting before celebrating either liberation or surplus. The new autonomy of the farmer must be matched by collective rules for the aquifer.

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