Russia's Mining Education Goes Global via TV BRICS Media Partnership

The TV BRICS International Media Network has signed a cooperation agreement with the International Competence Centre for Mining Engineering Education under UNESCO to enhance the global profile of Russia's mining engineering education. The partnership aims to foster academic exchanges, promote Russia's standing in mineral resources development, and strengthen collaboration among BRICS+ nations in technical education. Officials state the collaboration will focus on expanding dialogue and knowledge-sharing, particularly in the mining sector and vocational training. The move also seeks to counter what Russian officials describe as an information blockade from Western countries.

Key Points: Russia's Mining Education Gains Global Reach Through TV BRICS

  • Boost global visibility of Russian mining education
  • Strengthen BRICS+ science and innovation ties
  • Expand academic exchanges and certification standards
  • Counter Western information blockade
2 min read

Russia's mining engineering education system to gain global visibility through TV BRICS

TV BRICS partners with UNESCO centre to boost international recognition of Russia's mining engineering education and BRICS+ collaboration.

"The role of the TV BRICS media platform is increasingly significant at a time when Russia faces an information blockade - Vladimir Litvinenko"

Moscow, March 10

The TV BRICS International Media Network and the International Competence Centre for Mining Engineering Education have signed a cooperation agreement aimed at boosting international recognition of Russia's mining engineering education and strengthening collaboration among BRICS+ countries in science, innovation and education.

According to TV BRICS, the agreement involves the autonomous non-profit organisation operating under the auspices of UNESCO and based at the Empress Catherine II Saint Petersburg Mining University. The partnership seeks to promote academic and research exchanges while enhancing Russia's global standing in mining education and mineral resources development.

According to officials, the collaboration will focus on expanding dialogue and knowledge-sharing across the BRICS+ bloc, particularly in technical education and the mining sector.

Chairman of the governing board of the competence centre and rector of the mining university, Vladimir Litvinenko, said the role of the TV BRICS media platform is increasingly significant at a time when Russia faces what he described as an information blockade from Western countries.

Litvinenko noted that the competence centre has already launched several international initiatives, including the Russian-Chinese Mineral Resources University project, the Russian-African and Russian-Malaysian raw materials dialogues, an international professional retraining programme titled "Management of Subsoil Use Facilities," and summer school programmes involving partners from more than 80 countries.

The competence centre primarily focuses on strengthening higher and vocational education systems for the mining industry, creating international certification standards for engineering professionals, supporting technological research and innovation, and facilitating academic mobility for students, researchers and faculty members worldwide.

Chief Executive Officer of TV BRICS, Janna Tolstikova, said cooperation between the two institutions would deepen analytical coverage of Russia's mining sector and expand the reach of industry-related information to a global audience.

She added that education, mineral resources and their role in economic development remain central themes within the BRICS+ agenda, particularly following the outcomes of the 17th BRICS Summit, which emphasised technical and vocational education as a strategic priority aligned with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.

Currently, more than 30 governmental and academic institutions from Russia, Brazil, India, China, Cuba, South Africa and Iran cooperate with the media network in areas related to science and higher education.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
Interesting. But I hope our IITs and mining institutes in Dhanbad and elsewhere are also part of this "academic mobility" they mention. We should not just be consumers of their education system but equal partners contributing our own expertise.
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Aman W
BRICS+ is becoming a real alternative platform. Education and skill development are key areas where we can cooperate without geopolitical baggage. Russia has strong fundamentals in core engineering, something we should leverage.
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Sarah B
While international collaboration in education is always positive, the article frames this heavily as a response to an "information blockade." I hope the focus remains purely on academic excellence and sustainable development goals, not just political messaging.
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Vikram M
Mining is crucial for India's growth, but we must ensure any collaboration includes strong modules on environmental sustainability and community impact. Russia's record on that front is... mixed. Let's learn the engineering but adapt it responsibly for our context.
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Karthik V
Good initiative. The mention of partners from over 80 countries is impressive. Indian students looking for specialized mining engineering programs abroad now have another credible option. Hope the certification standards are globally recognized.

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