At M360 Tashkent, an event hosted by GSMA and VEON focused on digital transformation across Eurasia, Jazz CEO Aamir Ibrahim emphasized how digital connectivity is reshaping resilience in Pakistan.
“Pakistan isn’t just digitizing, it’s adapting,” Aamir declared, highlighting that in a climate-vulnerable country with energy shortages and rapid population growth, smart technology isn’t a luxury—it’s a necessity.
He underscored the power of convergence, where climate resilience, financial inclusion, and digital access intersect. “Digital isn’t a layer, it’s the infrastructure for daily life,” he explained.
Jazz is advancing sustainability by transitioning users to 4G networks, adopting an asset-light model, and collaborating with national organizations like NDMA to scale disaster response efforts.
“Meaningful scale doesn’t come from more devices but from more agency in the hands of the people who need it most,” Aamir noted.
From rooftop solar monitoring to heatwave alerts, Pakistan’s mobile ecosystem—driven by Jazz—is proving that connectivity is about more than communication; it’s about survival.