Pakistan, July 11 -- Beneath the Punjab's lush green fields, a reservoir is running dry - and nobody is counting the drops. For decades, the subterranean aquifers of Punjab have been the unsung lifeline of our agrarian economy. Today, however, a macabre dance of policy paralysis, technological shift, and institutional neglect is draining these hidden reserves at a breakneck pace, leaving behind a toxic legacy of salinity and scarcity.

The sheer scale of this extraction is staggering. Pakistan is the third-largest user of groundwater for irrigation globally, with a whopping 73% of our agricultural footprint relying directly or indirectly on it. Out of the 68 billion cubic meters (bm3) of groundwater extracted nationally, a lion's share-60...