India’s External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar and Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov / PIB
As the world navigates an increasingly fractured geopolitical landscape, the meeting between India’s External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar and Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in New Delhi carries significance far beyond bilateral diplomacy. The two countries reaffirmed their ambition to expand bilateral trade to $100 billion by 2030, a goal that reflects not merely economic cooperation but the emergence of a new geopolitical alignment within BRICS.
The timing of this commitment is important. India currently holds the 2026 BRICS presidency, hosting a series of ministerial meetings leading up to the leaders’ summit later this year. In a world shaped by supply-chain disruptions, sanctions regimes and rising strategic competition, the India–Russia partnership is increasingly becoming a cornerstone of the Global South’s economic architecture.
India–Russia trade has expanded rapidly in recent years, particularly due to energy cooperation and alternative payment mechanisms that emerged after Western sanctions on Moscow. Bilateral trade has already approached nearly $60–70 billion, largely driven by Indian imports of Russian oil and fertilizers.
The new $100 billion target aims to diversify this relationship beyond hydrocarbons. Discussions between New Delhi and Moscow include:
India and Russia have also discussed joint manufacturing, innovation partnerships, and cooperation in sectors such as electric mobility and advanced industrial technologies.
This transformation signals a shift from a traditional defense-centric relationship to a broad economic and technological partnership.
The India–Russia economic push is unfolding alongside the BRICS Foreign Ministers’ meeting in New Delhi, which has drawn attention due to rising global tensions.
Today’s BRICS is no longer the original five-nation grouping. With new members including Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, the UAE and Indonesia, the bloc now represents a far larger share of the Global South.
However, the expanded BRICS also faces internal challenges. Conflicts in West Asia, disagreements over global sanctions regimes, and competing geopolitical interests have complicated consensus-building within the grouping.
India’s diplomatic approach has therefore emphasized stability, dialogue and open maritime trade routes, recognizing that global supply chains and energy flows remain vulnerable to geopolitical shocks.
For India, the India–Russia partnership is part of a broader strategy of strategic autonomy. New Delhi maintains close ties with Western partners while simultaneously strengthening relations with Russia and the Global South.
This multi-vector diplomacy reflects three realities:
The $100 billion trade target is ambitious but achievable if both countries overcome regulatory barriers and logistical constraints. Simplifying customs processes, enabling banking channels and building stronger connectivity corridors will be critical.
More importantly, the India–Russia partnership will likely shape the trajectory of BRICS in the coming decade. If the grouping succeeds in fostering economic cooperation, financial innovation and development financing, it could become a powerful counterweight in the evolving global order.
As India hosts the BRICS process in 2026, the message from New Delhi is clear: the future of global diplomacy will not be dictated solely by traditional power centers. Instead, it will be shaped by a network of partnerships among emerging economies—with India and Russia playing a central role in that transformation.
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