Lula Hails India-Brazil "Non-Coloniser" Partnership, Eyes $30B Trade

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has praised the India-Brazil strategic partnership as one between equals, contrasting it with negotiations with wealthier nations. He announced an ambitious target to increase bilateral trade to $30 billion, surpassing a previous $20 billion goal. A key development was the exchange of an MoU between Indian and Brazilian drug regulators to deepen cooperation in the pharmaceutical and medical products sector. The visit, which included seven agreements, follows closely on the heels of Prime Minister Modi's state visit to Brazil last year, signaling rapidly strengthening ties.

Key Points: Lula, Modi Set $30B India-Brazil Trade Target

  • Peer-to-peer partnership
  • $30 billion trade target
  • Regulatory cooperation in pharma
  • Shared Global South vision
  • Seven new agreements signed
3 min read

''Not dealing with a coloniser'': Lula hails India-Brazil partnership, sets USD 30 billion trade target

Brazilian President Lula praises strategic partnership with India, aiming to boost bilateral trade to $30 billion through new regulatory agreements.

"What is really more important is that when we're talking about a negotiation with a country like India, we are not dealing with a coloniser. - Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva"

New Delhi, February 22

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has lauded the strategic partnership between Brazil and India, describing it as a relationship between peers that shuns the "authoritarianism" often found in negotiations with wealthier nations.

Speaking at the India-Brazil Economic Forum, the President emphasised the deep-rooted similarities between the two countries and their shared vision for growth.

Highlighting the unique nature of this bilateral bond, President Lula remarked, "What is really more important is that when we're talking about a negotiation with a country like India, we are not dealing with a coloniser."

He further observed that, unlike dealings with rich countries that often fail to account for the happiness of individual nations, "with India, it's different."

This balanced power dynamic, where "no one is above the other country," stems from a mutual understanding of shared needs and attitudes.

President Lula noted that despite differences in religion and language, there is a profound similarity in the challenges both nations face. He asserted that this shared perspective makes it "much easier for us to work and to establish an action plan" and build partnerships between entrepreneurs from both sides.

This ease of collaboration has already resulted in a significant economic trajectory.

Since the President's first visit, trade has surged from USD 2.4 billion to USD 10.5 billion. While Prime Minister Narendra Modi previously established a target of USD 20 billion by 2030, President Lula expressed even greater ambition, stating, "We'll reach 30 billion dollars of trade because the economic potential of the two countries is very strong."

A key driver of this growth is the healthcare and pharmaceutical sector.

Underlining this priority, India and Brazil exchanged a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to strengthen bilateral cooperation in the regulation of pharmaceutical and medical products. Exchanged between India's Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO) and the Brazilian Health Regulatory Agency (ANVISA), the agreement marks a vital step toward deeper regulatory collaboration.

The MoU establishes a structured framework for the exchange of information on medical products, including pharmaceutical ingredients, biological products, and medical devices.

By promoting convergence in regulatory practices, the partnership aims to enhance the oversight of medical products and ensure the availability of safe, quality-assured medicines for both populations.

This regulatory alignment complements broader cooperation in the health sector and underscores the growing synergy between the two leading Global South partners.

President Lula noted that the seven agreements signed during this trip are "something that is very important" for the development of Brazil's industrial sector.

The President's current visit, his fifth to India, follows his participation in the India AI Impact Summit earlier this week.

This period of intense diplomatic activity comes just seven months after PM Modi's state visit to Brasilia in July 2025, further solidifying the evolving strategic and economic ties between the two nations.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
President Lula's words resonate deeply. "Not dealing with a coloniser" – what a powerful statement. It's refreshing to see leaders acknowledge the historical context and build a relationship based on mutual respect, not exploitation. More power to this alliance.
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Rohit P
The trade jump from $2.4B to $10.5B is impressive, but $30B is a huge leap. Hope our infrastructure and trade policies can keep up. The focus on pharma regulation is good, but we need similar pushes in agriculture, tech, and defence to make this target real.
S
Sarah B
As someone working in the pharmaceutical sector, the regulatory MoU with ANVISA is a game-changer. Streamlining approvals will help Indian generic medicines reach Brazilian patients faster and more reliably. This is practical diplomacy that benefits common people.
V
Vikram M
While the sentiment is good, we must be careful. Big targets are announced often, but ground-level trade barriers, logistics costs, and bureaucratic delays need to be addressed seriously. Hope this isn't just another headline-grabbing number.
M
Meera T
Shared challenges, shared growth. Brazil and India both understand what it means to develop while lifting millions out of poverty. This partnership feels more genuine than many others. Excited to see Indian startups explore the Brazilian market! 🚀

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