Two consecutive winters of more than 50 per cent precipitation deficit should serve as a structural warning, not a seasonal aberration. Jammu and Kashmir’s snow-fed economy cannot afford to normalise such sharp shortfalls. With official data showing a 50.11 per cent deficit in 2024–25 and a steeper 54.33 per cent drop
in 2025–26, the region is staring at a slow-moving water crisis whose consequences will unfold across agriculture, hydropower and drinking water security in 2026–27.
The government’s response, on paper, reflects administrative alertness. Irrigation scheduling, warabandi, stage contracts, tanker deployment, leakage control and district-level control rooms indicate preparedness for scarcity management. The Agriculture Production Department’s emphasis on micro-irrigation, crop
diversification and climate-resilient strategies under the Holistic Agriculture Development Programme signals a shift towards adaptation. The proposed installation of four new Doppler radars and 34 automatic weather stations, alongside hyper-local forecasting in Ramban and Kishtwar, strengthens the early- warning grid, a necessary investment in a Himalayan region where variability is the new normal.
Yet preparedness is not the same as policy clarity. The absence of a dedicated snowfall-deficit framework for hydropower, despite its direct dependence on winter accumulation is a notable gap. Run-of- the-river projects, already vulnerable to lean inflows, require more than an early warning system; they need integrated water-energy planning aligned with climate projections.
More fundamentally, two back-to-back deficient winters call for a shift from reactive drought management to basin-level water governance. Catchment restoration, groundwater mapping, urban demand rationalisation and transparent reservoir data must complement tanker logistics and advisories Kashmir’s winters have long been its natural reservoir. If that reservoir is shrinking, policy must move beyond contingency to structural reform. Climate variability is no longer a forecast; it is the operating reality.

