BRICS and the Emerging Science, Technology & Innovation (STI) Architecture


Context

The BRICS bloc—comprising Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa—originally formed to advance a multipolar global order, has progressively widened its mandate. It now places significant emphasis on Science, Technology and Innovation (STI) as a crucial domain of strategic collaboration.


How is the global STI environment transforming?

Geopolitical influence on science
Global research ecosystems are increasingly shaped by geopolitical rivalries, trade restrictions, and technology embargoes.

Emerging relevance of BRICS
In this backdrop, BRICS serves as:

  • A platform for aligning national innovation policies
  • A mechanism to reduce reliance on Western technological systems
  • A support structure via institutions like the New Development Bank

Expansion towards BRICS+
The inclusion of countries such as Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt, Iran, Ethiopia, and Indonesia reflects a shift towards a broader, development-centric scientific coalition.


Evolution of institutional mechanisms

Phased development of cooperation

  • 2011 – Initial acknowledgement of STI collaboration
  • 2015 – Formal MoU recognising STI as a core cooperation pillar

Creation of operational frameworks
Institutional structures have been set up to promote joint research, knowledge exchange, and capacity-building.

Role of STIEP and national agencies
The BRICS STI and Entrepreneurship Partnership (STIEP) drives implementation.
In India, bodies like CSIR and DBT coordinate participation.


Major domains of cooperation

Technology diffusion and innovation networks

  • Establishment of Technology Transfer Centres
  • Promotion of cross-border innovation commercialisation
  • Initiatives like iBRICS to strengthen startup ecosystems

Development-oriented research focus
Shift towards applied research addressing:

  • Energy sustainability
  • Water resource management
  • Healthcare systems
  • Environmental protection

Pandemic-driven collaboration
COVID-19 accelerated joint work in:

  • Vaccine research
  • Biosecurity frameworks
  • Digital health infrastructure

Focus on advanced technologies

Emerging technology partnerships
Collaboration is expanding into:

  • Artificial Intelligence (AI)
  • High-performance computing
  • Advanced materials science
  • ICT and digital infrastructure
  • Space science (boosted by 2021 agreement)

AI governance shift
The 2025 AI Declaration highlights inclusive, equitable, and ethical AI governance as a central priority.


Key achievements so far

  • Establishment of institutions like the BRICS Institute of Future Networks
  • Strengthened cooperation in ICT and supercomputing
  • Growth in joint research initiatives and thematic networks
  • Transition towards innovation-led development models

Persistent challenges

Disparity in R&D capabilities

  • GERD levels remain low across most members (except China)
  • Significant gap with global innovation leaders

Diversity within the grouping

  • Wide variation in economic and scientific capacities
  • Difficulty in aligning priorities among BRICS+ members

Resource and scale constraints

  • Limited research funding
  • Weak commercialisation of innovations

Institutional limitations

  • Absence of a permanent secretariat
  • Rotational leadership affects continuity

Slow progress in large-scale projects

  • Mega-science initiatives
  • Ocean and polar research
  • Infrastructure-heavy collaborations

Knowledge gaps

  • Limited academic research on BRICS STI
  • Lack of robust monitoring and evaluation frameworks

Relevance for India

As a major member and upcoming BRICS+ Chair (2026), India can:

  • Enhance its role in global science diplomacy
  • Strengthen South-South technological cooperation
  • Boost domestic innovation ecosystems
  • Address challenges like climate resilience, healthcare gaps, and digital inequality

Strategic way forward

Institutional strengthening

  • Establish a permanent BRICS STI Secretariat
  • Draw inspiration from models like the EU Horizon Programme

Promote large-scale collaborations

  • Climate research
  • Space exploration
  • Biotechnology innovation

Enhance innovation ecosystems

  • Increase R&D investment
  • Build capacity in newer BRICS+ members
  • Encourage public-private partnerships

Targeted bilateral linkages

  • Foster collaboration between countries with complementary strengths

Expand to governance frameworks

  • Focus on ethical, regulatory, and societal aspects of emerging technologies

Boost financial mechanisms

  • Increase pooled funding
  • Support large-scale innovation commercialisation

Future outlook

BRICS STI cooperation has evolved from a conceptual framework to a more structured and application-oriented model since 2015.

However, issues of funding, institutional depth, and coordination continue to limit its full potential.

In an increasingly fragmented global scientific order, BRICS can emerge as a viable alternative platform for inclusive innovation.

India, as the 2026 Chair, holds a unique opportunity to drive reforms that enhance efficiency, inclusivity, and global relevance of BRICS in shaping the future STI landscape.

Source : The Hindu

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