INDORE — In a major diplomatic achievement for India’s global agricultural leadership, the 16th BRICS Agriculture Ministers’ Meeting successfully concluded in Indore, Madhya Pradesh. Held on June 12–13, 2026, under India’s BRICS Chairship, the summit brought together roughly 100 delegates, marking a historic milestone as the first ministerial meeting to convene both core member nations and partner countries.
The summit culminated in the unanimous adoption of the BRICS Agriculture Ministers’ Joint Declaration, which focuses on farmer-centric policies, smallholder security, and climate-resilient food production systems.
The Four Pillars of the BRICS Agricultural Blueprint
The Joint Declaration was forged after three months of extensive technical deliberations by the BRICS Agriculture Working Group. The framework establishes four core strategic priorities for the bloc:
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Priority 1: Food Security, Nutrition, and Livelihoods
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Priority 2: Agricultural Trade and Cooperation
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Priority 3: Regenerative Farming, Climate-Resilient, and Sustainable Agriculture
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Priority 4: Strengthening Partnerships for Innovation and Investments to Build Future-Ready Food Systems
Four Major Institutional Takeaways
To turn the declaration’s principles into actionable policy, the ministers ratified the creation of four major international networks, with prominent Indian research institutes selected to lead the initial execution:
1. Network of Centres of Excellence on Agroecology and Regenerative Agriculture
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Objective: Promote natural, climate-resilient, and organic farming methods across the bloc to combat soil degradation and climate shock.
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Indian Coordination: Led by the ICAR–Indian Institute of Farming System Research (IIFSR) in Modipuram, which will serve as the primary hub for sharing natural farming data and capacity building.
2. Network on Digital Agriculture
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Objective: Bridge advanced technology with practical field operations by driving collaboration in artificial intelligence (AI), geospatial mapping, and digital public infrastructure (DPI).
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Indian Coordination: Spearheaded by the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi to create scalable, data-driven agricultural applications.
3. Global Forum on Farmers’ Rights in Seed Systems
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Objective: Protect traditional farming knowledge, safeguard seed heritage, and defend smallholder rights.
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Indian Coordination: Managed by the Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers’ Rights Authority (PPV&FRA) in New Delhi.
4. BRICS AGRIN Framework
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Objective: Establish the Agro-Inputs, Genetic Resources and Information Network to simplify technical cooperation and secure cross-border supply chains for high-quality seeds and genetic resources.
Upgrading Trade and Global Research Platforms
Beyond new frameworks, the ministers committed to strengthening existing trade and scientific platforms to build an equitable multilateral trading system:
The Knowledge-to-Action Hub: The existing BRICS Agricultural Research Platform (BARP) will be systematically upgraded into a dynamic translation hub, ensuring laboratory research is rapidly adapted into field solutions for small farmers.
On the commercial front, India hosted a Special Dialogue on the BRICS Grain Exchange, advancing structural conversations on creating a transparent, predictable framework for agricultural commodity trading among member states. The summit closed with a symbolic tree plantation ceremony at Indore’s Meghdoot Garden, creating the “BRICS Vatika” as a physical marker of the bloc’s commitment to ecological preservation and joint climate action.

