Pakistan’s monsoon rains were heavy due to climate change, which made the flood more dangerous, a new study was found.
Report from the specialty of world weatherA group of international scientists who study the role of global warming in the extreme season were released on Thursday.
Pakistan’s monsoon rain, which occurs uniquely from June to September, is variables. According to the country’s Meteorological Department, the country recorded more than one third of the rain or more than 36%in July this year compared to last year.
According to WWA researchers, the rainfall is about 10% to 15% heavy due to climate change, which analyzed rainfall in Pakistan from 24 June to 23 July.
A hot environment keeps more moisture, saying climate scientists, which can make the rain more intense.
“Every tenth of a degree of warming will rains heavy monsoon rains from each tenth of warming,” said Mary Zaciah, the lead author of WWA Studies and author of an environmental revival at Imperial College London.
Pakistan weakened for deadly floods
The government of Pakistan reported at least 300 deaths, about half of them, floods, heavy rains and other seasons between 26 June and 3 August 2025.
Most of the victims were crushed by the buildings.
The report states that Pakistan’s rapid urbanization, which often makes the South Asian country uniquely weak in the monsoon season, with people living in homes in the flood-prone area.
“Half of Pakistan’s urban population lives in delicate settlements, where flood houses collapse and cost life.” “To help reduce the effects of heavy monsoon rainfall to build flood-flexible houses and to avoid construction in flood areas.”
Pakistan, which has a population of 250 million, has experienced several serious monsoon seasons, resulting in widespread and destructive floods.
After the horrific high water in 2022, this year’s floods saw more than 1.700 people during the monsoon.
Earlier this week, Pakistan’s Disaster Management Authority issued fresh flood alerts, warning that rain -major rivers could swell and trigger flash floods in the upper and central regions.
South Asia collided with heavy monsoon
In the last few months, there is a series of disasters as a result of heavy monsoon rains, beating the Himalayan Mountains in the last few months.
Earlier this week, floods and landslides were hit in a village in northern India, killing at least four people and hundreds went missing.
Glassial lakes are flooded as a result of flowing a major bridge connecting Nepal and China with several hydroelectric dams in July.
Edited by: Scene Sinico