Key Points

India, represented by Union Minister of State for Communications Pemmasani Chandra Sekhar, highlighted its digital achievements at the 11th BRICS Communications Ministers' Meeting in Brasilia. Focusing on Aadhaar and UPI, Sekhar showcased India's progress towards universal connectivity and its leadership in global digital transactions. The Minister urged BRICS nations to enhance collaboration on digital infrastructure, aiming for a resilient, future-ready digital ecosystem. India's digital transformation is anchored in initiatives like BharatNet, affordable data rates, and the development of domestic 4G and 5G technologies.

Key Points: India Boosts BRICS Digital Ties with Aadhaar and UPI

  • India presents Digital Public Infrastructure as global benchmark
  • Aadhaar empowers over 950 million citizens with digital identity
  • UPI revolutionises and leads global digital transactions
  • BRICS urged to collaborate for resilient digital economies
3 min read

India calls for closer BRICS ties to build future-ready digital ecosystem

India champions Aadhaar and UPI at BRICS meet, urging stronger digital collaboration for a sustainable future.

"Productive bilateral talks with Brazil towards strengthening digital ties for a smarter, secure future. - Chandra Sekhar"

Brasilia, June 3

India reaffirmed its commitment to inclusive, sustainable, and future-ready digital development during the 11th BRICS Communications Ministers' Meeting in Brasilia, Brazil.

Union Minister of State for Communications Pemmasani Chandra Sekhar presented India's Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) as a global benchmark for inclusive and transformative digital governance at the BRICS ministers' meeting held here.

The Minister highlighted the pivotal role of flagship initiatives like Aadhaar and the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) in advancing universal and meaningful connectivity. He noted that Aadhaar has empowered over 950 million citizens with a secure digital identity, enabling seamless access to essential public and private services. UPI, he emphasised, has revolutionised real-time digital payments and now accounts for 46 per cent of global digital transactions.

He called upon BRICS nations to deepen collaboration in harnessing digital public infrastructure to drive inclusive growth and build resilient digital economies. He underscored that India's DPI model -- built on open, interoperable platforms -- serves as a catalyst for financial inclusion, good governance, and digital innovation, while also guarding against monopolistic practices.

Chandra Sekhar shared India's progress on four pillars -- Universal and Meaningful Connectivity, Space and Environmental Sustainability, and Digital Ecosystems -- under the visionary leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the meeting in Brasilia on Monday.

BRICS members include 11 nations -- Brazil, Russia, India, China, Egypt, South Africa, the United Arab Emirates, Ethiopia, Iran, Indonesia and Saudi Arabia.

Dwelling on India's vibrant startup ecosystem, robust digital skills initiatives, and progressive legislation such as the Telecommunications Act and the Data Protection Act, Dr Sekhar emphasised the importance of trust and user safety in the digital age.

He also spoke about India's Sanchar Saathi initiative -- a key effort to combat telecom fraud -- and called for enhanced BRICS cooperation in cybersecurity, data protection, and digital trust to ensure the safety and integrity of interconnected digital societies.

Dr Chandra Sekhar highlighted India's digital journey, celebrating the transition from digital divide to digital leadership. India's ambitious Digital Bharat Nidhi programme was showcased as a cornerstone initiative, funding landmark projects such as BharatNet, which now connects over 2,18,000 village councils with optical fiber infrastructure. India's indigenous development and mass deployment of 4G and 5G technologies have enabled near-universal high-speed connectivity, now covering over 95 per cent of the population with 4G and more than 80 per cent with 5G. The country has also emerged as a global leader in affordable digital access, with the lowest data rates worldwide -- just 12 cents per gigabyte.

Earlier, welcoming the adoption of the Final Declaration, Dr Sekhar commended the collaborative spirit among BRICS nations and acknowledged the expanded membership's role in enriching the dialogue.

The Indian minister also held bilateral talks with his Brazilian counterpart.

"Productive bilateral talks with Brazil towards strengthening digital ties for a smarter, secure future. Discussed India's strides in indigenous 4G/5G development, and domestic manufacturing and explored cooperation in 6G, Quantum Tech and Satcom. Also, discussed Brazil's 6GHz trials and satcom needs, telecom security and global DPI cooperation," Chandra Sekhar posted on X on Tuesday.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

Here are 5 diverse Indian perspective comments for the BRICS digital ecosystem article:
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Rajesh K.
UPI has truly been a game changer! Proud to see India leading in digital payments globally 🇮🇳 Hope other BRICS nations can learn from our DPI model. The 12 cents/GB data rate is unbelievable - no wonder we're the world's largest data consumers!
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Priya M.
While I appreciate our digital progress, I hope we're also focusing on digital literacy in rural areas. Many farmers in my village still struggle with basic UPI transactions. BRICS collaboration should include training programs for grassroots adoption.
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Amit S.
Exciting to see India taking leadership in BRICS digital initiatives! But we must be cautious about data sharing with certain members like China. Our digital sovereignty is as important as collaboration. Jai Hind!
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Sunita R.
As a small business owner, UPI has transformed my life! No more waiting for cheques to clear. Hope BRICS countries adopt similar systems. Though I worry about cyber fraud - good to see Sanchar Saathi being highlighted. More awareness needed!
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Vikram J.
Impressive stats on BharatNet! But ground reality is different in many villages - fiber is laid but not operational. Before exporting our DPI model, we should fix our own implementation gaps. Still, proud moment for Indian tech diplomacy 👏

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