India's Ministry of External Affairs has confirmed that foreign ministers of all BRICS member nations will convene in New Delhi on May 14 and 15, 2026, in a high-stakes two-day gathering that will shape the multilateral agenda ahead of the 18th BRICS Leaders Summit scheduled for September in the capital. With Russia's Lavrov, Iran's Araghchi, and counterparts from ten nations attending, this is arguably the most geopolitically charged BRICS ministerial meeting in recent years.
India formally took over the BRICS chairmanship on January 1, 2026, and the foreign ministers' meeting is the bloc's most consequential diplomatic event before the September leaders summit. India holds the 2026 BRICS chairmanship under the theme "Building for Resilience, Innovation, Cooperation and Sustainability", reflecting a people-centric and humanity-first approach. This marks the fourth time India has led the influential grouping, having previously hosted summits in 2012, 2016, and 2021.
Who Is Coming To The Table
The participant list reads like a geopolitical who's who. Russia confirmed on April 29 that Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov will attend the full-format meeting in New Delhi on May 14-15. Iran's Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi is also likely to visit, with the visit underscoring deepening engagement between New Delhi and Tehran within the expanded BRICS framework, Iran having joined the bloc in 2024 alongside Egypt, Ethiopia, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE.
Participants will include ministers from Brazil, Russia, South Africa, Egypt, Ethiopia, and Indonesia, with the UAE and Iran at deputy level, and China's Sherpa delegation.
The West Asia Dimension That Hangs Over Everything
The meeting arrives at a moment of acute geopolitical tension. External Affairs Minister Jaishankar and Iran's Araghchi held a detailed phone conversation on April 29, 2026, discussing India's energy security concerns including stranded Indian vessels in the Strait of Hormuz, alongside preparations for the BRICS foreign ministers' meeting. The BRICS meeting offers India a platform to advocate for de-escalation without alienating key partners, though the bloc has struggled to forge a unified stance on the West Asia conflict due to internal divisions, including tensions between Iran and the UAE.
What The Agenda Will Focus On
Special attention will be given to enhancing strategic partnerships in preparation for the 18th BRICS summit, which is also scheduled to take place in New Delhi in September. The two-day session will probe Global South empowerment, multilateral synergies, economic alliances, security landscapes, and geopolitical pressures. A meeting of BRICS Deputy Foreign Ministers and Special Envoys for the Middle East and North Africa was already held on April 23-24 in New Delhi, where views were exchanged on regional developments.
The Bigger Picture For India's BRICS Year
The BRICS group's average GDP growth rate of 3.4% in 2025 is nearly three times the G7's 1.2% average, with India's 6.2% growth making it the bloc's fastest-growing member. India's Reserve Bank proposed in January 2026 linking BRICS members' central bank digital currencies as a core agenda item for the September New Delhi summit, making the May foreign ministers' meeting an important staging ground for that and other ambitious cooperation proposals.
Key Highlights
- BRICS Foreign Ministers' Meeting confirmed for May 14-15, 2026 in New Delhi under India's chairmanship
- Russia's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov officially confirmed to attend, with Iran's Araghchi also expected
- BRICS now comprises eleven major emerging economies including Brazil, China, Egypt, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Iran, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, and the UAE
- India holds the BRICS chairmanship for the fourth time under the theme "Building for Resilience, Innovation, Cooperation and Sustainability"
- The meeting serves as a direct precursor to the 18th BRICS Leaders Summit scheduled for September 2026 in New Delhi
- West Asia tensions, energy security, and Strait of Hormuz shipping access are expected to dominate bilateral conversations on the sidelines
- A BRICS MENA envoys' meeting was already held in New Delhi on April 23-24 to prepare the ground
- CBDC interoperability and financial architecture reform are among the structural agenda items for the year
- A joint statement, if achieved, could signal BRICS' relevance as a unified Global South voice on conflict and governance
Sources: Indian Ministry of External Affairs, Business Standard, Republic World, WION News, Free Press Journal, India TV News, BRICS2026.gov.in