People of Afghanistan are faced with the worst humanitarian crisis due to severe climatic conditions. Lives of people and those of the livestock are at risk owing to the severe drought in the country.

Afghanistan, one of the barren landscapes on earth, is among the most vulnerable list of countries to be affected by climate change. The gradual rise in the global temperature due to the phenomenon of ‘global warming’ has severe impacts for the countries mainly relying on agriculture and livestock. Of the most dramatic effects of climate change are floods and drought that mainly affect the arable lands.

Afghanistan is confronted with severe drought these days, affecting the lives of the farmers and the shepherds the most. the worst drought in the decade has resulted in the displacement of over 250,000 people who are faced with many odds, according to Aljazeera news.

Nooruddin watched helplessly as his flock of 100 sheep began to die from hunger and thirst on the dry drought-ravaged hillsides of Balkh. Rather than let more of the prized creatures die a slow death on the dry hillsides of Balkh province in the north, he made the decision to slaughter most of the rest.

It's been a tough year in #Afghanistan, where a drought and 2 floods left 200,000 people in urgent need of help. WFP provided emergency food assistance to the worst affected areas. WFP has been in Afghanistan since 1963, helping the most vulnerable to improve their livelihoods. pic.twitter.com/0sEgdZ1d9a — World Food Programme (@WFP) April 27, 2019

“I cut their heads off,” the 65-year-old herder said, adding that their malnourished frames meant their meat was “useless”.

“We fed it to the dogs,” Nooruddin told AFP.

He’s one of many whose traditional livelihoods – from farmers to carpet weavers – are under threat as changing weather patterns wreak havoc.

Experts warn the situation will only get worse, with Afghanistan one of the countries most vulnerable to climate change, even though it produces just 0.1 percent of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions.

Read more: The wrath of Climate Change

For many, this latest drought is the worst they can recall. “I’ve seen droughts before, but never as severe,” said livestock trader Mirza, who like many residents only uses one name.

“A lot of sheep and animals died on the mountains and in the desert,” the 45-year-old added.

Mohammed Aref, a 19-year-old shepherd who raises karakul sheep – famed for their curly-haired lambs’ pelts that are turned into traditional hats – said shepherds sold off their undernourished animals for pittance to butchers.

“A lot of us had a big loss,” Aref told AFP from the noisy livestock market outside Mazar-i-Sharif, on a crisp, early winter morning.

“Most of us can’t afford to get more (livestock) and now our life is ruined.”

Huge temperature rise

Aref and other Balkh residents have no notion of climate change as it is understood in places with better access to information and education, but all agreed things were changing.

The last big drought they remembered was about a decade ago. Before that, there hadn’t been one for about 50 years, they said.

“We had a drought 12 years ago,” recalled 68-year-old Aynoddin, another karakul sheep farmer, “but last year’s was the worst”.

"If we can help the people restore their environment it may have a positive cascading effect on other aspects of life." Afghanistan's worst drought in a decade has displaced an estimated 260,000 people https://t.co/PM6FLncDwu pic.twitter.com/sMvxVhMvVY — Al Jazeera English (@AJEnglish) May 8, 2019

According to the United Nations Development Programme, about 80 percent of Afghans rely on rain-fed crop and animal farming for their incomes.

Over the next four decades in Afghanistan, scientists predict a decrease in rainfall and a rise in average temperatures of up to 4 degrees Celsius compared to 1999, the UNDP said.

The agency noted droughts could soon be considered the norm, unleashing further desertification and loss of arable land.

Read more: Climate Change: A Serious Threat To World And Pakistan

Problems are only compounded when rains do eventually come. Last spring, flash floods swept entire villages and fields away.

The UN said in an overview of last year’s aid operations that nearly half of all rural residents now face some level of food insecurity in Afghanistan, a country where unemployment and poverty are already major drivers of the war.

While light rains in the autumn eased woes for some, the weather has since dried up again.

Asked if they worried for the coming year, several farmers gave a common Afghan response.

“If there is a drought, God will decide, so I don’t worry,” Aynoddin said.

Looming crisis for weavers

The Global Adaptation Initiative, run by the University of Notre Dame in the US, currently ranks Afghanistan 173 out of the 181 countries it scored in terms of a nation’s vulnerability to climate change and its ability to adapt.

The human cost is plain to see at a camp for internally displaced people just outside Mazar-i-Sharif, where rows of white UN tents house hundreds of families and the main source of water is from a large communal tank.

Years of drought in Afghanistan affected millions of people, who lost their livestock and livelihood. Earlier this year, this situation was worsened by flooding. We're declaring the climate crisis a dire humanitarian emergency. #FacesOfClimateChange pic.twitter.com/EYslTNpZry — IFRC Asia Pacific (@IFRCAsiaPacific) September 19, 2019

Shamayel, a 35-year-old mother from Faryab province in the northwest, said her family came to the camp to escape conflict and the drought.

She used to weave colourful traditional kilim rugs, but increasing wool prices made it impossible.

Read more: Climate change and worsening water situation in Pakistan

Seven kilogrammes of wool previously cost about $19, she said, but the price rose to $31 in the past year or two.

Perhaps surprisingly, though, rising wool costs haven’t caused a price jump for Afghan rugs and carpets.

Traders in Mazar complained about the ongoing uncertainty and anxiety around delayed election results and talks between the Taliban and the US have essentially frozen the market.

Another former weaver at the camp, Ghulam Sakhi, 50, said that he too had been forced to give up his trade when he arrived.

“I want to weave, I miss it,” he said, smiling as he described his craft. “Now I feel useless.”