Water management spans a long history, dating back to prehistoric attempts in response to seasonal changes in water availability. Water management was crucial during the transition from hunting-gathering to agriculture, and yet became very necessary with the emergence of cities, industrial centers, and administrative centers. Water management has never been entirely a matter of often technical intervention. A good diversity of cultural, social and political arrangements is incorporated at intervals. Water management was important to ensure the water system in places where water was needed when absolutely necessary, as well as to eliminate excess water or contaminated water. Water management was concerned with protecting fields, cities, and sacred sites, just as it was concerned with satisfying domestic, agricultural, industrial, and cultural needs. Collecting and writing the history of different types of water management and flood protection activities in various ecological contexts and river basins around the world and recording sensitive and dangerous experiences within completely different scopes of water management is essential for successful evaluation of our current efforts. . Learning about a wide range of practices and thinking about their consequences will be tremendously helpful for future processing and strategic thinking. According to the Pakistani government “While regional impacts may vary, global climate change internationally can undoubtedly alter agricultural productivity, availability and quality of fresh produce, access to important minerals, coastal and island flooding, and more . Among the results of such impacts are challenges to policy relations, realignments... half of the document... silt accumulation in the country's water bodies, said Qajar us albizzia Choudhary, former director general of the earth sciences department. of the Asian nation.. Pakistan had long warned of the coming water crisis due to poor land management practices, said Allan Savory, president of the Continental Center for Holistic Management, Zimbabwe, which won the 2010 Fuller Challenge, a global competition for solutions to global problems 1983 report for the FAO, had warned that Pakistan's poor land management practices had therefore adversely affected the land surface and watersheds, resulting in semi-synthetic floods and droughts. Although Pakistan did not heed the warning; still used “drip and drip irrigation” solutions and proper water storage to help manage safe water in Pakistan.
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