17TH BRICS SUMMIT

17th BRICS Summit Developments: The summit highlighted India’s role in the bloc, with India set to assume the rotating chairmanship in 2026.

The 17th BRICS Summit, held in October 2025 in Kazan, Russia, marked a pivotal transition for the bloc as it moved from “expansion” to “consolidation.” For India, the summit was a strategic success, reinforcing its position as a bridge between the Global South and the traditional world powers.

India’s Strategic Role at the Summit

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s participation emphasized India’s vision of BRICS as a “Non-Western” rather than an “Anti-Western” grouping.

    • Champion of the Global South: India pushed for the inclusion of more “Partner Countries” rather than full members, ensuring the bloc remains manageable while expanding its influence across Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
    • Economic Leadership: India led discussions on the BRICS Interbank Cooperation Mechanism, focusing on trade in local currencies to reduce reliance on the US Dollar without pursuing a single “BRICS Currency”—a move India views as premature.
    • Counter-Terrorism: India successfully advocated for a unified BRICS stance against cross-border terrorism, securing language in the Kazan Declaration that condemns terror financing and safe havens.

India’s 2026 Chairmanship

A major highlight of the summit was the formal confirmation that India will assume the rotating BRICS Chairmanship in 2026.

    • The Return to India: This will be the first time India chairs the expanded BRICS+ (now including Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, and the UAE).
    • Expected Priorities:
      • Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI): India plans to share its “India Stack” (UPI, Aadhaar, DigiLocker) with BRICS members to foster financial inclusion.
      • Traditional Medicine: Building on the WHO Global Centre for Traditional Medicine in Jamnagar, India will likely propose a BRICS-wide framework for holistic health.
      • Startup Bridge: Expanding the BRICS Startup Forum to encourage venture capital flow between emerging economies.

Major Summit Outcomes

PillarDevelopment
New MembersFocus shifted to the "Partner Country" model, with 13 nations (including Algeria, Nigeria, and Thailand) being considered for this secondary tier.
Financial SystemLaunch of the BRICS Clear system—a mutual settlement and clearing platform to bypass traditional Western financial intermediaries.
Grains & FoodSupport for a BRICS Grain Exchange, proposed by Russia and backed by India, to ensure food security across member nations.
EnergyLaunch of the BRICS Research on Energy and Materials (REM) network to coordinate on the green energy transition.

The “Kazan Consensus” on Regional Conflict

The summit took place amidst global volatility. The Kazan Declaration included significant diplomatic language:

    • Middle East: A call for a permanent ceasefire in Gaza and support for the Two-State Solution (bolstered by France’s recent recognition of Palestine).
    • Ukraine: The leaders acknowledged various peace proposals (including the India-mediated approach) and emphasized the need for dialogue and diplomacy over armed conflict.

 

Strategic Note: The 2025 summit proved that BRICS is no longer just a talk shop. With India taking the helm in 2026, the world expects a shift toward “Practical Multilateralism”—focusing on tech-sharing and infrastructure rather than just geopolitical posturing.

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