Context:
Prime Minister Narendra Modi is attending the BRICS Summit (July 6–7) in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, alongside leaders from the original five member countries and the newly inducted members — Egypt, Ethiopia, UAE, Iran, and Indonesia.
Key Highlights from the Summit
- Geopolitical Focus & Terrorism
- PM Modi will push for a strong joint statement on terrorism, particularly condemning the Pahalgam terror attack and supporting Operation Sindoor.
- BRICS Foreign Ministers had already included a condemnation in their April 2025 Chair Summary.
- A robust paragraph in the Leaders’ Joint Statement is expected.
- De-Dollarisation & Local Currency Trade
- No BRICS currency is being launched.
- BRICS is promoting voluntary trade in local currencies, not anti-dollar, similar to MERCOSUR’s model.
- US tariff threats (100–500%) are acknowledged but viewed as misplaced.
- Major Deliverables Expected
- Climate Change Financing Declaration
- AI Regulation & Governance Framework
- Partnership on Socially Determined Diseases (poverty and inequality-driven diseases)
- Most sessions will be open to partner/invited countries, signaling greater transparency and inclusivity.
- Expansion & Cohesion
- Saudi Arabia’s membership is still pending.
- Brazil emphasizes consensus and diversity, not confrontation—supporting BRICS’ Global South character.
India–Brazil Bilateral Engagement
- PM Modi to meet President Lula in Brasilia post-summit.
- Focus areas for enhanced cooperation:
- Defence, Agriculture, Energy, Pharmaceuticals, Digital tech, and AI.
- Over 110 bilateral missions (trade + govt) conducted in past two years.