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Scientific Collaborations in BRICS

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March 18, 2026

Mains: GS II – International Relations

Why in News?

The BRICS grouping—comprising Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, Conceived as a platform to promote a multipolar world order, has expanded its agenda beyond finance and macroeconomics to include Science, Technology, and Innovation (STI) as a key pillar of cooperation.

What is the evolving global STI landscape?

  • Role of BRICS in STI context – Global scientific collaboration is increasingly influenced by strategic competition, sanctions, and export controls.
  • In this context, BRICS provides:
    • A platform for coordinated research and innovation strategies
    • An avenue to reduce technological dependencies on Western nations
    • Institutional support through mechanisms like the New Development Bank
  • The expansion into BRICS+, including countries such as Saudi Arabia, Egypt, UAE, Ethiopia, Indonesia, and Iran, reflects an effort to create a more inclusive and development-oriented scientific ecosystem.
  • Institutionalisation of STI cooperationSTI cooperation within BRICS has evolved systematically:
    • 2011 – Formal recognition of STI collaboration.
    • 2015 – Memorandum of Understanding establishing STI as a strategic pillar.
  • Creation of institutional frameworks for joint research and capacity-building
  • The BRICS Science, Technology, Innovation and Entrepreneurship Partnership (STIEP) has played a central role in implementing collaborative programmes.
  • In India, agencies such as the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) and the Department of Biotechnology (DBT) coordinate national participation.

What are the key initiatives and areas of collaboration?

  • Innovation and technology transfer
    • Establishment of the BRICS Technology Transfer Centre (TTC)
    • Promotion of cross-border technology commercialisation
    • Initiatives like iBRICS to strengthen innovation ecosystems
  • Socially relevant research areasBRICS has gradually shifted from basic science to addressing developmental challenges, including:
    • Energy security
    • Water management
    • Public health
    • Environmental sustainability
    • The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated cooperation in, Vaccine development, Biosecurity and Digital health systems.
  • Frontier technologiesRecent collaborations focus on:
    • Artificial Intelligence (AI)
    • High-Performance Computing (HPC)
    • Advanced materials
    • Information and Communication Technology (ICT)
    • Space research (boosted by the 2021 intergovernmental agreement)
  • The 2025 AI Declaration marked a shift towards making AI a central pillar of BRICS cooperation, emphasising equitable and inclusive governance.
  • Progress and achievements
    • Establishment of institutions such as the BRICS Institute of Future Networks.
    • Strengthening of ICT and HPC collaboration.
    • Expansion of joint research calls and thematic networks.
    • Increased emphasis on innovation-driven ecosystems.
    • These developments indicate a transition from theoretical collaboration to applied innovation frameworks.

What are the challenges and limitations?

  • Uneven innovation capacityGross Domestic Expenditure on R&D (GERD) remains low across most BRICS nations, except China
  • Significant gap compared to innovation leaders like South Korea
  • Heterogeneity among membersDiverse economic and scientific capacities complicate consensus-building
  • As noted by Irina Dezhina, aligning interests within BRICS+ is challenging
  • Limited funding and scale
    • Research funding remains modest
    • Large-scale commercialisation of innovations is limited
  • Institutional constraints
    • Absence of a permanent institutional mechanism
    • Rotational leadership model limits long-term continuity
  • Slow progress in certain domains
    • Mega-science projects
    • Ocean and polar research
    • Infrastructure-intensive collaborations
  • limited research on STI cooperation
    • Lack of systematic, data-driven evaluation frameworks
    • Insufficient academic focus on BRICS STI mechanisms
  • Significance for INDIAAs a key member and 2026 Chair of BRICS+, India has a strategic opportunity to:
    • Strengthen its leadership in global science diplomacy
    • Promote South-South cooperation
    • Enhance domestic innovation capacity
    • Address challenges like digital divide, public health, and climate resilience

What steps should be taken?

  • Establish a permanent institutional mechanism
    • Creation of a BRICS STI Secretariat.
    • Modelled on frameworks like the EU’s Horizon Programme.
    • Ensure continuity, monitoring, and evaluation.
  • Promote mega-science projectsJoint long-term initiatives in:
    • Climate science.
    • Space exploration.
    • Biotechnology.
  • Strengthen innovation systems
    • Increase investment in R&D.
    • Build capacity in new BRICS+ members.
    • Encourage public-private partnerships.
  • Foster targeted collaborationsDevelop “paired linkages” between countries with complementary strengths.
  • Expand scope to STI governance
    • Research on ethical, regulatory, and societal impacts of emerging technologies.
    • Build capacity for international negotiations.
  • Enhance funding and scale
    • Increase pooled funding mechanisms.
    • Support large-scale commercialisation of innovations.

What lies ahead?

  • Scientific collaboration within BRICS has evolved significantly since 2015, transitioning from basic cooperation to a more structured and innovation-driven framework.
  • However, challenges related to funding, institutional capacity, and coordination persist.
  • As global scientific cooperation becomes increasingly fragmented, BRICS has the potential to emerge as a credible alternative platform for inclusive and equitable innovation.
  • India, as the 2026 Chair, is well-positioned to lead reforms that make the framework more effective, agile, and impactful, thereby strengthening BRICS’ role in shaping the global STI landscape.

Reference

The Hindu| BRICS and Its Scientific Collaboration

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