As global balances are reshaped, the BRICS summit in Rio has outlined the contours of a more assertive multipolar influence. Behind the notable absence of Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin, the discussions led to concrete proposals: reform of international institutions, strengthened climate cooperation, regulation of artificial intelligence. Less spectacular but more strategic, this edition provides insight into the ambitions of the global South, while revealing latent tensions that weaken the coherence of a bloc in search of credibility.
The BRICS summit, held in Rio , resulted in a joint declaration entitled “reinforcing global South cooperation for more inclusive and sustainable governance”, in which the members showed a renewed willingness to rethink the architecture of international governance.
The text notably calls for strengthening the representation of the global South within major multilateral institutions. The BRICS explicitly demand that Brazil and India gain permanent membership status on the UN Security Council, emphasizing the need “for UN system reform to make it more equitable, effective, and representative”.
Likewise, the declaration stresses the necessity of rebalancing decision-making power within the IMF and World Bank, stating that it is time to “review voting rights to reflect current economic realities”.
Beyond institutional demands, the final statement highlights several action areas shared by the group members, reflecting a desire to leverage their diplomatic weight on global issues. The main commitments made during the summit are as follows:
Through this set of positions, the BRICS seek to establish themselves as a structured collective actor capable of influencing the rules of the global game without necessarily confronting Western powers head-on. This diplomatic consolidation strategy constitutes the first step toward international autonomy which, to become real, must now be embodied in tangible instruments.
Beyond political demands, a quieter but potentially decisive point emerged from the discussions in Rio: the proposal to create an unprecedented mechanism called BRICS Multilateral Guarantees.
Inspired by the model of MIGA (Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency of the World Bank), this project aims to provide investment guarantees for infrastructure and development projects in Southern countries.
The goal is clear: to reduce the political risk perceived by international investors and, in doing so, attract more capital to regions still considered too unstable or insecure. According to the statement, this structure is intended to “facilitate investment flows across the global South, including beyond the perimeter of BRICS countries”.
This project fits within a logic of disintermediation from major Western financial institutions but without a harsh break. The statement indeed specifies that it is not a tool exclusive to members, opening the way to broader cooperation.
This pragmatic approach reflects a form of economic realism: the BRICS, despite their desire for emancipation, are aware of the structural limits of their economies and seek mechanisms for gradual anchoring in global circuits. Still in embryonic form, the initiative should be the subject of in-depth discussions until 2026, under the future Indian presidency of the group.
This step toward a parallel financial architecture could have medium-term repercussions on how infrastructure projects are financed in the South. If realized, the initiative could offer a genuine alternative to guarantees provided by Western lenders, while strengthening the economic credibility of the BRICS. However, its success will depend on many factors: the volume of financial commitments, governance arrangements, and the ability to maintain cohesion among members with sometimes divergent interests. India, which will chair the group in 2026, will bear the heavy task of bringing this ambition to maturity.