Key Points

The United Arab Emirates is strategically positioning itself as a key player in global economic collaboration through the BRICS forum. Minister Thani bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi emphasized the potential for mutual growth across critical sectors like technology, energy, and healthcare. The UAE's recent BRICS membership reflects its commitment to expanding diplomatic and economic relationships worldwide. With robust trade growth and ambitious partnership goals, the UAE is actively shaping its economic future through strategic international alliances.

Key Points: UAE Minister Al Zeyoudi Boosts BRICS Trade at Rio Forum

  • UAE aims to maximize economic partnerships with BRICS nations
  • Non-oil trade with BRICS reaches $243 billion in 2024
  • UAE ranks 5th in internal BRICS trade exchanges
  • Collaborative focus on innovation and cross-border investments
3 min read

UAE highlights potential of deeper trade, investment collaboration between BRICS nations

UAE highlights massive economic potential with BRICS nations, targeting strategic collaboration in key sectors like energy, technology, and logistics

"The BRICS community provides a compelling model for growth in the current economic climate. - Thani bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi"

Rio de Janeiro

The United Arab Emirates, represented by Thani bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi, Minister of Foreign Trade, has participated in the BRICS Business Forum on the sidelines of the 17th BRICS Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

During the Forum, Al Zeyoudi highlighted the UAE's strong relationships with BRICS nations and the community's role in driving innovation, accelerating trade and creating opportunities for cross-border investment. Al Zeyoudi also promoted closer collaboration in key sectors, including logistics, agriculture, renewable energy, technology and healthcare.

The BRICS Business Forum gathered leaders and business representatives from the community's 10 member nations - Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Indonesia, Ethiopia, Egypt, Iran, and the UAE - to exchange views and ideas on how their public and private sectors can work together to navigate the world's current economic and geopolitical climate.

The UAE's participation reflects its belief in constructive collaboration and its commitment to pursuing mutually beneficial global partnerships. The Forum resulted in the endorsement of several initiatives aimed at deepening economic cooperation as well as new private sector partnerships that will enhance trade and investment flows.

Al Zeyoudi said the Forum provided an important opportunity to engage with a group of like-minded nations undergoing significant economic transformations: "The BRICS community provides a compelling model for growth in the current economic climate. Each of us are seeking economic growth based on investment, innovation, entrepreneurship and trade relationships free from barriers and bureaucracy. This is how the UAE is building our next chapter of economic development, from attracting FDI and fostering new, technology-driven industries to securing free-trade deals with like-minded nations such as BRICS members India, Indonesia and Russia.

We are eager to maximize this relationship to the fullest extent and build upon these strong foundations in vital economic sectors including energy, logistics, technology, healthcare, and food security."

Al Zeyoudi was in Brazil, joined by Saleh Ahmad Salem Alzaraim Al Suwaidi, the UAE's Ambassador to Brazil.

The UAE and the BRICS nations have been experiencing robust trade growth. In 2024, they shared non-oil trade worth USD 243 billion, a 10.5 per cent increase on 2023. The momentum has accelerated in 2025, with non-oil trade reaching USD 68.3 billion, a year-on-year growth rate of 18.2 per cent, and 2.4 per cent more than Q4, 2024.

The UAE's total non-oil exports to BRICS countries grew to USD 39.4 billion in 2024, nearly double the level from 2019, while re-exports reached USD 50.5 billion. The UAE ranks 14th globally among BRICS trading partners and 5th when measuring internal trade among BRICS nations, behind China, Russia, India and Brazil.

The BRICS community, which initially comprised of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa before expanding to 10 nations this year, represents a significant portion of the global economy. It accounts for approximately 40% of the world's population and around 25 per cent of global GDP. The UAE became a member of BRICS in 2024, reflecting its strategic focus on expanding diplomatic and economic ties with markets throughout the world to further enhance its role in driving global economic growth and prosperity. (ANI/WAM)

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
While the numbers look impressive, I hope this doesn't mean India will compromise on local manufacturing. We've seen how Chinese imports hurt our MSMEs. Need balanced trade agreements that protect domestic industries too.
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Arjun K
UAE-India relations are already strong with CEPA agreement. Now with BRICS collaboration, imagine the possibilities in renewable energy! Solar power partnerships could be game-changing for both nations 🌞
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Sarah B
As an expat in Dubai, I've seen firsthand how UAE-India trade benefits both economies. The gold trade alone creates thousands of jobs in Kerala and Gujarat. More BRICS cooperation means more opportunities for Indian professionals abroad.
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Karthik V
Hope this leads to better logistics infrastructure between BRICS nations. Indian ports need upgrades to handle increased trade volumes. Maybe UAE investment can help modernize our shipping terminals!
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Nisha Z
The healthcare collaboration part excites me most! Indian generic medicines + UAE funding could make treatments more affordable across BRICS nations. This is how South-South cooperation should work 💊

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