India Sets BRICS 2026 Agenda: Resilience, Innovation, Cooperation, Sustainability

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar has outlined four broad priorities for India's upcoming BRICS Chairship in 2026: resilience, innovation, cooperation, and sustainability. He stated these priorities will guide the grouping's work across political, economic, and cultural pillars. India aims to build structural resilience in areas like agriculture, health, and supply chains through cooperative frameworks. The launch of the official BRICS 2026 logo and website marks the beginning of India's preparatory phase for the summit.

Key Points: India's 4 Priorities for BRICS 2026 Chairship Revealed

  • Build resilience in key sectors like health and energy
  • Leverage innovation for socio-economic challenges
  • Enhance cooperation in startups and tech
  • Advance climate action and sustainable development
3 min read

EAM says "resilience, innovation, cooperation, and sustainability" four "broad priorities" for India's BRICS 2026 Chairship

EAM Jaishankar outlines resilience, innovation, cooperation, and sustainability as India's guiding priorities for its 2026 BRICS leadership.

"resilience, innovation, cooperation, and sustainability - S Jaishankar"

New Delhi, January 13

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Tuesday noted down "four broad priorities" guiding India's BRICS 2026 Chairship, stating that "resilience, innovation, cooperation, and sustainability" are the precedents that will lead the 18th summit of the grouping.

Speaking at the launch of the BRICS 2026 logo and official website, the EAM said these priorities will provide a coherent framework across the grouping's three foundational pillars: "political and security, economic and financial, and cultural and people-to-people exchanges."

"Under the resilience pillar, we will endeavour to build structural institutional strengths capable of weathering global shocks. India intends to work with BRICS partners to build resilience in agriculture, in health, in disaster risk reduction, energy and supply chains, including through cooperative frameworks that enhance collective preparedness and response," Jaishankar said.

He added that innovation remains a central driver of global economic development, noting that leveraging new and emerging technologies is crucial for tackling socio-economic challenges, especially those faced by developing nations, while keeping a people-focused perspective.

"The deployment of new and emerging technologies is essential to addressing socio-economic challenges, particularly those confronting developing countries, while maintaining a people-centric approach. Enhanced cooperation in areas such as start-ups, MSMEs, and emerging technologies can contribute meaningfully to building a more equitable world," the EAM said.

Jaishankar also emphasised cooperation and sustainability as equally important priorities.

"India will work to advance climate action, promote clean energy, and support sustainable development pathways in a manner that is fair and sensitive," he added.

Highlighting the significance of the newly unveiled BRICS logo, the EAM said it reflects India's approach to its chairship by combining elements of "tradition and modernity".

"The petals incorporate the colours of all BRICS member countries, representing unity in diversity and a strong sense of shared purpose. The logo conveys that BRICS draws strength from the collective contributions of its members while respecting their distinct identities," he said.

The BRICS India website, also launched during the event, will serve as a common platform for information on meetings, initiatives, and outcomes during India's chairship and is expected to enhance transparency, engagement, and timely dissemination of information among member countries and global stakeholders.

The acronym BRIC was first coined in 2001 by Goldman Sachs in their Global Economics Paper, "The World Needs Better Economic BRICs", based on analyses projecting that Brazil, Russia, India, and China would individually and collectively occupy a larger share of the global economy and become among the world's largest economies over the following decades.

In 2010, it was agreed to expand BRIC to BRICS, with South Africa joining at the 3rd BRICS Summit in Sanya in 2011.

The grouping expanded further in 2024, with Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, and the UAE becoming full members on January 1, 2024. Indonesia joined as a full member in January 2025, while Belarus, Bolivia, Kazakhstan, Cuba, Malaysia, Nigeria, Thailand, Uganda, and Uzbekistan were inducted as partner countries of BRICS.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
The focus on innovation and start-ups is excellent. As someone working in tech, I'm keen to see how BRICS can foster collaboration in emerging tech like AI and green tech. A people-centric approach is the right way to go.
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Priya S
Unity in diversity - perfectly captured in the logo description. It's good to see India taking a leadership role on a platform that now includes so many nations. The priorities are spot on, especially sustainability. Our traditional practices have a lot to offer in that area.
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Rohit P
All good points, but I hope this isn't just talk. We've heard about cooperation and equity before. The real test will be in 2026 - will there be tangible outcomes for MSMEs and actual tech transfer to developing nations? The intent is good, execution is key.
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Karthik V
Building resilience in health and disaster management is a lesson from the pandemic. If BRICS can create a framework for faster vaccine or medicine sharing during crises, it would be a massive achievement. India's pharmaceutical strength can lead this.
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Nisha Z
The expansion of BRICS is interesting. With so many new members and partners, maintaining a coherent "shared purpose" as mentioned will be the biggest challenge. India's diplomatic skill will be truly tested in managing these diverse interests.

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