India will host the next BRICS Summit in 2026, focusing on resilience and an inclusive green agenda.
The Donald Trump administration's stance against multilateralism and climate change necessitates a stabilizing force like BRICS.
Climate change impacts are a common concern across BRICS nations, requiring collective action on adaptation and sustainable development.
The July 2025 BRICS Summit in Rio de Janeiro resulted in the BRICS Leaders’ Framework Declaration on Climate Finance.
India's leadership of BRICS in 2026 provides an opportunity to drive collaborative global action on resilience and a green agenda.
Detailed Insights:
Given increased vulnerabilities to climate change, resilience is a top priority for the Global South, underscoring India's global leadership on an inclusive green agenda.
The BASIC grouping (Brazil, South Africa, India, China) has been useful at the UNFCCC, but a larger grouping of major developing country players may add greater heft.
Several BRICS members have steered the global climate process after the Paris Agreement, with Brazil, Egypt, and the UAE presiding over climate conferences post-COVID-19.
A BRICS act would be useful on a unilateral side-stepping of UNFCCC principles such as the European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism.
Including the World Bank and International Monetary Fund chiefs in the BRICS Summit is essential for a global push on climate finance.
India's green agenda focusing on resilience at the BRICS Summit 2026 would resonate with Ethiopia, the host of COP32 in 2027.
A BRICS push keeps Chinese ambitions on global leadership on a green agenda in check.
Key Concepts Involved:
BRICS: An acronym for Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, representing major emerging economies.
UNFCCC: United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, an international environmental treaty addressing climate change.
Climate Finance: Financial resources aimed at supporting mitigation and adaptation activities to address climate change.