President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s state visit to India (February 18-22, 2026) has profoundly advanced the 2006 Strategic Partnership, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s bilateral meeting on February 21 yielding a joint roadmap across 12+ MoUs and private pacts. Amid bilateral trade reaching $15.2 billion in FY2025 (exports $6.77B, imports $5.43B), leaders set a $30 billion target by 2030, a 67% surge from 2024’s $11.9 billion peak.
The joint statement outlined five priority pillars for the next decade: defence/security, food security, energy transition, digital technology, and industry cooperation. Defence highlights included Scorpene submarine lifecycle support and Adani-Embraer MoU for E-175 regional jet Final Assembly Line (FAL) in India, aligning with UDAN and Regional Transport Aircraft (RTA) goals to connect Tier-2/3 cities. Francisco Gomes Neto (Embraer CEO) and Jeet Adani inked the deal before Lula and Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal, fostering “complementary capabilities.”
The critical minerals framework pact targets resilient supply chains for rare-earth processing, countering global disruptions and China’s 80-90% dominance in lithium/cobalt/graphite. NMDC-Vale-Adani ventures explore joint mining, vital for India’s EV/battery ambitions under PLI schemes. Digital pacts emphasize AI governance (post-Lula’s 2nd AI Impact Summit speech), cybersecurity, and OPIN interoperability, exporting India’s DPI stack.
Health MoU harmonizes ANVISA-CDSCO standards for tropical diseases, building on India’s $3B+ pharma exports to Brazil. Trade facilitators: e-Certificate of Origin (e-CoO), 10-year visas, and NTB resolutions on ethanol/dairy. Energy focuses on biofuels/SAF/green hydrogen; MSME/youth exchanges enhance soft ties.
Trade and Economic Deep Dive
Bilateral merchandise trade volume grew from $5B (2015) to $16.8B (2022), then dipped to $11.9B (2024) amid commodity cycles, but rebounded 25.5% in 2025 amid diesel/pharma surges. India leads exports (pharma 20%, petroleum 15%, chemicals/textiles); Brazil dominates agri (soy 30%, crude 20%), minerals (iron ore). ICRIER models predict 15% CAGR with FTAs/MERCOSUR PTA expansion, unlocking $50B potential by addressing 100+ NTBs.
Private deals amplified: Embraer-Adani FAL supports Make in India; Vale-NMDC rare-earth project secures 20% of India’s lithium needs. Lula’s 260-firm delegation rivals Modi’s 2025 Brazil business mission, signaling FDI inflows ($2B Brazilian in India FY25).
India’s Multifaceted Global South Strategy
India’s diplomacy operationalizes “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam” through public goods. Voice of Global South Summits (VGS-I 2023: 30+ nations; VGS-III 2025: 123) platform reforms, echoed in G20 African Union inclusion. BRICS 2026 Chairship (60-city showcase, theme song, holograms) builds on G20, prioritizing resilience/innovation/digital public goods for 10 members. Lula pledged full support, vowing IBSA/BRICS synergy.
Initiatives proliferated: ISA (130 members, 20 GW mobilized); CDRI (140 partners, $1B in pledges post-Cyclone Biparjoy); Vaccine Maitri (300M doses, 101 countries). Lines of Credit ($40B+ to 70 nations); UPI in 40 countries (e.g., Namibia, Trinidad); CoWIN exported to 100+. IMEEC/Chabahar enhances connectivity; LiFE at COP30 complements Lula’s Belém Package.
UNSC reform advocacy (G4 with Brazil) and IMF quota hikes (India’s 2.75% share) champion equity. NDB/BRICS Pay disbursed $35B loans in 2025.
Strategic Analysis
Geopolitically, timing counters Trump’s 10-25% tariffs (effective Jan 2026), hitting BRICS steel/agri; India-Brazil diversification yields 2x resilience vs. North-South ties (WB metrics). Defence interoperability bolsters Quad/IBSAMAR exercises amid tensions in the South China Sea and the Atlantic. Econometrically, gravity models (CEPII) forecast $25B trade sans NTBs; critical minerals cut China’s leverage by 15% via processing hubs.
Risks: Volatility (soy prices), bureaucracy (approval lags 6-12 months), competition (China’s $100B LatAm FDI). Mitigants: Roadmap KPIs, annual summits, BRICS tech fund. Quantitatively, FDI reciprocity (Brazil $2B in India; India $1.5B in Brazil) multipliers at 3.2x GDP impact (NITI Aayog).
India’s South leadership metrics: 50% shift from Global South aid recipient to donor; 25% alignment in multilateral voting (UNGA 2025).d
Paradigm of Southern Solidarity
Lula’s visit epitomizes India’s vanguardism—delivering scalable solutions (DPI to 1B users) sans hegemony, unlike Northern conditionalities. Modi-Lula’s $30B pact, Embraer FAL, rare earths chain exemplify complementarity driving multipolarity. In Trump’s era, this nexus fortifies Global South agency: BRICS as counterweight, not adversary; reforms as imperative, not aspiration.
It reveals untapped synergies—AI for Amazon agri-yield (India’s precision farming to Brazil)—positioning duo as green pioneers. India’s playbook—G20 to BRICS replication—ensures sustained momentum, proving Global South unity yields inclusive prosperity amid Northern retrenchment.