Report: Kabul at Risk of Becoming First Modern City to Run Out of Water
KABUL (Dispatches) – The Afghan capital city of Kabul could become the first modern city to completely run out of water, experts have warned in a report.
Water levels within Kabul’s aquifers have dropped by up to 30 metres over the past decade owing to rapid urbanization and climate breakdown, according to a report by the NGO Mercy Corps.
Meanwhile, almost half of the city’s boreholes – the primary source of drinking water for Kabul residents – have dried out. Water extraction currently exceeds the natural recharge rate by 44m cubic meters each year.
If these trends continue, all of Kabul’s aquifers will run dry as early as 2030, posing an existential threat to the city’s seven million inhabitants.
“There should be a committed effort to document this better and to draw international attention to the need to address the crisis,” said Mercy Corps Afghanistan country director, Dayne Curry.
“No water means people leave their communities, so for the international community to not address the water needs of Afghanistan will only result in more migration and more hardship for the Afghan people.”
The report also highlights water contamination as another widespread challenge. Up to 80% of Kabul’s groundwater is deemed unsafe, with high levels of sewage, salinity and arsenic.
Water access has become a daily battle for people in Kabul. Some households spend up to 30% of their income on water, and more than two-thirds have incurred water-related debt.
“Afghanistan is facing a lot of problems, but this water scarcity is one of the hardest,” stated Nazifa, a teacher living in the Khair Khana neighborhood of Kabul.
“Every household is facing difficulty, especially those with low income. Adequate, good quality well water just doesn’t exist.”
Some private companies are capitalizing on the crisis by actively digging new wells and extracting large amounts of public groundwater, then selling it back to city’s residents at inflated prices.
“We used to pay 500 afghanis (£5.30) every 10 days to fill our cans from the water tankers. Now, that same amount of water costs us 1,000 afghanis,” Nazifa continued, adding, “The situation has been getting worse over the past two weeks. We are afraid it will get even more expensive.”
Kabul’s sevenfold growth from less than 1 million people in 2001 has drastically transformed water demands. A lack of centralised governance and regulation has also perpetuated the problem over the decades.
In early 2025, the UN’s office for the coordination of humanitarian affairs announced that its partners had received just $8.4m (£6.2m) of the $264m required to implement planned water and sanitation programming in Afghanistan. A further $3bn in international water and sanitation funding has been frozen since the Taliban’s return to power in August 2021. The U.S.’s recent move to cut more than 80% of its USAID funding has compounded the crisis.
“Everything is so aid-dependent,” said Curry.
“We can throw millions of dollars at short-term water fixes and say we’ve addressed the need, but that need will continue until there’s better investment for longer-term solutions. And that’s where foreign governments are stopping short at this point due to political dynamics.”