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FROM RHETORIC TO REALITY: THE INSTITUTIONAL EVOLUTION OF BRICS
ENERGY COOPERATION (20092025)
FEVZI KIRBAŞOĞLU
fkirbasoglu@ktu.edu.tr
Research Assistant at Department of International Relations, Karadeniz Technical University
(Turkey), https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8797-4750
Abstract
Structural transformations in global energy markets are reshaping the energy cooperation
and financing needs of emerging economies. In this context, the expanding BRICS group is
becoming an increasingly effective actor in global energy governance. The literature generally
views the group’s structure as a platform for dialogue limited to political declarations.
However, this paper demonstrates that BRICS energy cooperation has gone beyond mere
political rhetoric and has developed into an operational mechanism with technical tools and
financial capacity. The paper analyses the group’s development from an institutional evolution
perspective. This analysis focuses on the simultaneous deepening of political, technical, and
financial dimensions. Using a qualitative research method, this paper examines Leaders’
declarations, Energy Ministers’ Meeting decisions, and data from the New Development Bank
(NDB) and the BRICS Energy Research Cooperation Platform (ERCP) covering the period
2009-2025. The findings show that energy cooperation is built on three core pillars. First,
institutional resilience that sustains the energy agenda despite political tensions. Second,
technical capacity that produces original data and strategies through the ERCP. The third is
the financial infrastructure that provides resources for national development priorities through
the NDB. Consequently, the paper argues that, rather than aiming to dismantle the current
energy order, BRICS has evolved into a pragmatic and functional governance model that
addresses the infrastructure and technology needs of member states through the mechanisms
it has established.
Keywords
BRICS, Energy Governance, New Development Bank, Technological Neutrality, Just Transition.
Resumo
As transformações estruturais nos mercados globais de energia estão a redefinir as
necessidades de cooperação e financiamento energético das economias emergentes. Neste
contexto, o grupo BRICS, em expansão, está a tornar-se um interveniente cada vez mais
eficaz na governação energética global. A literatura considera geralmente a estrutura do grupo
como uma plataforma de diálogo limitada a declarações políticas. No entanto, este artigo
demonstra que a cooperação energética do BRICS foi além da mera retórica política e evoluiu
para um mecanismo operacional dotado de ferramentas técnicas e capacidade financeira. O
artigo analisa o desenvolvimento do grupo numa perspetiva de evolução institucional. Esta
análise centra-se no aprofundamento simultâneo das dimensões política, técnica e financeira.
Utilizando um método de investigação qualitativa, este artigo examina as declarações dos
líderes, as decisões da Reunião de Ministros da Energia e os dados do Novo Banco de
Desenvolvimento (NDB) e da Plataforma de Cooperação em Investigação Energética do BRICS
(ERCP), abrangendo o período de 2009 a 2025. Os resultados mostram que a cooperação
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 17, Nº. 1
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From Rhetoric to Reality: The Institutional Evolution of Brics
Energy Cooperation (20092025)
Fevzi Kirbaşoğlu
325
energética assenta em três pilares fundamentais. Em primeiro lugar, a resiliência institucional
que sustenta a agenda energética apesar das tensões políticas. Em segundo lugar, a
capacidade técnica que produz dados e estratégias originais através da ERCP. O terceiro é a
infraestrutura financeira que fornece recursos para as prioridades de desenvolvimento
nacional através do NDB. Consequentemente, o artigo argumenta que, em vez de visar o
desmantelamento da atual ordem energética, o BRICS evoluiu para um modelo de governação
pragmático e funcional que responde às necessidades de infraestruturas e tecnologia dos
Estados-Membros através dos mecanismos que estabeleceu.
Palavras-chave
BRICS, Governação Energética, Novo Banco de Desenvolvimento, Neutralidade Tecnológica,
Transição Justa.
How to cite this article
Kirbaşoğlu, Fevzi (2026). From Rhetoric to Reality: The Institutional Evolution of Brics Energy
Cooperation (20092025). Janus.net, e-journal of international relations, VOL. 17, Nº. 1, May
2026, pp. 324-350. https://doi.org/10.26619/1647-7251.17.1.17
Article submitted on 27 November 2025 and accepted on 25 February 2026.
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 17, Nº. 1
May 2026, pp. 324-350
From Rhetoric to Reality: The Institutional Evolution of Brics
Energy Cooperation (20092025)
Fevzi Kirbaşoğlu
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FROM RHETORIC TO REALITY: THE INSTITUTIONAL EVOLUTION
OF BRICS ENERGY COOPERATION (20092025)
1
FEVZI KIRBAŞOĞLU
Introduction
The global energy landscape in the 21st century is undergoing a fundamental
transformation driven by rising demand, geopolitical competition, and climate change. In
this new era, where Western-centric governance structures are being questioned, the
BRICS
2
group has expanded to include Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran, and the United
Arab Emirates, in addition to its existing members. This expanding structure has the
potential to reshape the global energy architecture, now that it has reached a level of
maturity capable of challenging established powers like the European Union and limiting
the dominance of Western-centric global governance through instruments such as
summit diplomacy (Kırbaşoğlu & Tüfekçi, 2020; Dağ & Tüfekçi, 2025). Given the group’s
significant share of global energy production and consumption, collective action in
sustainable development, energy security, and energy access is of great importance. In
this context, analyzing the foundations and current status of BRICS’ institutional policies
in the energy sector is essential for future global energy projections, particularly during
this transformation process where conceptual uncertainties in global politics and new
forms of diplomacy signal a transition from an unsettled structure to a new order (Tüfekçi
& Dağ, 2022; Dağ & Tüfekçi, 2022).
The international relations literature examines the role of the BRICS in global energy
governance from various perspectives. On the one hand, skeptical authors such as
Downie (2015) argue that the group’s economic and political heterogeneity prevents the
establishment of a concrete cooperation regime. In particular, the asymmetric interests
between energy importers (China and India) and exporters (Russia and Brazil) contribute
to this situation. Similarly, Cecchi (2025) and Mboya & Arun (2025) highlight the
1
In this paper, AI tools such as DeepL and Gemini were used solely for translation support and grammatical
correction. Suggestions provided by these tools were reviewed and finalized by the author(s). The scientific
content, analyses, and results were independently developed by the author(s), who accept full ethical
responsibility for the originality of the paper.
2
Following the 2024 expansion, terms such as “BRICS+,” “Expanded BRICS,” and “BRICS+5have become
common in the literature. However, this paper prefers the acronym “BRICS” to emphasize the group’s historical
and institutional identity.
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Energy Cooperation (20092025)
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competition between China and India in the maritime domain. The authors argue that
this competition complicates energy security cooperation. The literature addresses this
competition from a soft balancing perspective (Pape, 2005; Hall, 2025). This perspective
shows that India’s BRICS strategy is based on limiting China’s hegemony. Particularly
after the 2020 Galwan Valley clashes, India has distanced itself from projects such as
China’s proposed Global Energy Interconnection for national security reasons.
Furthermore, India has positioned the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor
initiative as an alternative to the Belt and Road Initiative. These developments clearly
reveal the limitations of cooperation in the realm of low politics (Quimbre et al., 2023;
Hall, 2025; Yurchenko & Tüfekçi, 2025; Rizzi, 2024). Beyond these debates over
geopolitical competition, Ramluckun et al. (2024) highlight significant structural
differences in the energy production profiles of member countries. The paper emphasizes
that, unlike Brazil’s largely renewable-based structure, South Africa and India continue
to rely heavily on coal-based production models. The authors empirically demonstrate
that these differences create technical asymmetry and complicate the establishment of
a common policy ground.
In contrast, Lagutina (2019) emphasizes that the group has developed institutional
resilience despite geopolitical competition. The author draws attention to the group’s
capacity to create an alternative to the Western-centric liberal order. Furthermore, the
author notes that technical cooperation has deepened through institutional learning.
Similarly, Wso & Mahmood (2025) focus on the group’s motivation to create normative
consistency against Western hegemony. The authors state that this motivation
suppresses internal tensions stemming from national interests. Stuenkel (2020) expands
on this perspective. The author notes that BRICS does not directly challenge the existing
order, but instead builds its own institutions, as exemplified by the New Development
Bank (NDB), and follows strategies of competitive multilateralism or institutional
entrepreneurship. Thus, the group establishes alternative structures that are integrated
into but complementary to the system. Cooper (2016), conceptualizing this institutional
flexibility as club culture, considers the group’s adoption of an informal, flexible operating
model rather than a rigid charter or permanent secretariat a strategic choice. According
to Cooper, this flexible structure allows for the compartmentalization of high-politics
tensions, such as border disputes between China and India. Thanks to the pragmatic
foundation this strategy establishes, cooperation in low-politics areas such as energy,
infrastructure, and development financing can continue uninterrupted even if political
competition persists. Turning to the recent waves of expansion, Griffin (2024) posits that
BRICS has transformed into an energy super-bloc controlling 42% of global oil
production. Liu & Papa (2022) examine the consequences of this transformation. The
authors argue that the process has accelerated de-dollarization, including the petroyuan
and trade in local currencies.
Carvalho et al. (2025) go beyond this binary opposition. The authors integrate Amitav
Acharya’s concept of multiplexity with Susan Strange’s framework of structural power.
The paper offers a more nuanced middle ground by proposing a structural-multiplex
analytical framework. According to the authors, BRICS’ role in energy governance is not
a revolutionary movement that completely overturns the existing order. Nor is it a
passive adaptation that fully integrates into the system. Instead, the group balances
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Energy Cooperation (20092025)
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systemic constraints with the pursuit of strategic autonomy. The group has followed a
more complex route, which the authors describe as tempered incremental revisionism.
According to this approach, the group is subject to Western-centric constraints at the
systemic level, such as dollar hegemony and the established financial architecture.
Therefore, the group has continued to exhibit structural dependence. However, the
situation is different at the networked level. Instead of rigid institutional structures, the
group has developed minilateral diplomacy and flexible, issue-specific coalitions. Thus, it
has created a pragmatic sphere of influence in energy markets. Particularly after the
expansion, a strategic overlap has emerged between BRICS membership and the OPEC+
structure. This has allowed the group to act as an informal but effective caucus in
managing global oil supply. This networked pluralism strategy has enabled the group to
act as an energy actor controlling 42% of global oil production, despite its internal
differences. Consequently, this outcome shows that the group is following a sophisticated
middle path aimed at transforming the system from within.
This paper aims to contribute to the post-expansion order debate highlighted by Patrick
& Hogan (2025). The paper makes this contribution through the evolution of intra-group
energy norms. Furthermore, the paper aims to fill an essential gap in the literature. This
gap is the lack of a comprehensive paper assessing the financial and technical
implications of these policies in the field. The paper essentially seeks to answer the
questions: “How did BRICS energy cooperation evolve from a declaration-based political
dialogue to an operational management mechanism during the period 2009-2025?” and
“Through which institutional tools was this transformation achieved?” Based on these
questions, the paper argues that BRICS energy cooperation did not remain merely
rhetorical. The cooperation aligns with the parallel governance model. The group does
not aim to dismantle existing energy institutions or completely break away from them.
Instead, the group has evolved into a sui generis and concrete regime. This regime is
based on mechanisms such as the NDB, the BRICS Energy Research Cooperation Platform
(ERCP), and Energy Ministers’ Meetings. This structure operationalizes the political vision
set out in the summit declarations. Furthermore, the structure reflects the priorities of
sovereignty, technological neutrality, and the right to development. This strategy grants
member states the flexibility to act within the framework of their own just transition
pathways. This flexibility eliminates the requirement for full compliance with Western-
centric norms, such as restrictions on coal financing (BRICS Think Tanks Council, 2024).
The theoretical basis of the paper is a hybrid approach. This approach examines the
evolutionary process of BRICS energy cooperation from a multi-layered perspective. The
initial phase of cooperation is evaluated within the framework of the soft balancing
concept defined by Pape (2005). This concept envisions the formation of coalitions
through non-military diplomatic means to challenge the hegemony of the United States
and the dollar’s status as a reserve currency. However, energy projects require high
capital intensity and long-term commitments. Diplomatic rhetoric alone has been
insufficient to meet the growing energy and infrastructure needs of member countries.
This situation has compelled the group to adopt a more organized, rule-based structure.
The institutionalization process, in which cooperation has evolved into concrete
mechanisms, is analyzed using Keohane’s (1984) approach. Keohane views international
regimes as a means of overcoming political market failure. According to Keohane,
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Energy Cooperation (20092025)
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cooperation is possible even in the absence of a hegemonic power. Institutions reduce
transaction costs. They also address quality uncertainty by mitigating asymmetric
information among members. In this context, the paper approaches the BRICS,
positioning regional cooperation as a strategic lever, structured as the construction of an
energy regime. The group has established technical platforms and financial mechanisms.
These tools reduce uncertainty and information asymmetry and increase reputation
costs. As a result, this structure enables member states to achieve long-term absolute
gains rather than myopic self-interest (Dağ, 2025).
This paper, employing a qualitative research methodology, used document analysis
techniques in the data collection and analysis. The paper adhered to Bowen’s (2009)
methodological framework. In this context, a systematic procedure comprising the stages
of “skimming,” reading,” and “interpretation” was followed. The paper’s data set consists
of 17 Leaders’ Summit Declarations, Joint Statements from Energy Ministers’ Meetings,
ERCP technical reports, and NDB project databases covering the period 20092025. As
Prior (2008) emphasized, these documents are not merely secondary sources. They also
constitute primary data on the institutional evolution of BRICS energy cooperation. The
paper examined these documents using a descriptive analytical approach. The analysis
focused on key themes, including energy security, financing mechanisms, technological
orientations, and the just transition. Furthermore, the analysis considers historical
contexts. While seeking answers to the fundamental research question, the paper
operationalized the phenomenon of institutional evolution. This process was conducted
around three key qualitative monitoring parameters. The first is thematic deepening. This
parameter tracks the transformation of concepts such as technology transfer and local
currency. The analysis focused on how these concepts evolved from abstract aspirations
into concrete policy items. The second is institutional functionality. This parameter
measures the capacity of ERCP technical reports. The reports’ capacity to inform decision-
making mechanisms was evaluated. The third is financial consistency. This parameter
interrogates the strategic alignment of NDB financing. The alignment of financing with
committed clean energy and national development goals was examined. The data
obtained was analyzed within this framework. The paper conducted a comparative
consistency analysis between diplomatic discourse at the leadership level and technical
reports and financed projects. This triangulation strategy provides an analytical basis.
This basis addresses whether BRICS energy cooperation is a normative discourse space
or an operational governance mechanism.
Framing Period (2009-2015)
During its incipient phase, BRICS energy cooperation was based on a shared perception
of threats and political rhetoric. The primary motivation during this period was to
minimize uncertainty in energy markets following the 2008 global financial crisis. The
group also aimed to pursue a soft balancing strategy against the Western hegemony over
global energy governance.
The BRICS’s first concrete vision for energy was presented at the 1st Summit, held in
Yekaterinburg in 2009. At this summit, leaders emphasized the need to strengthen
coordination and cooperation to reduce uncertainty among energy producers, consumers,
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Energy Cooperation (20092025)
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and transit countries and to ensure stability and sustainability (Ministry of Foreign Affairs
of the People’s Republic of China, 2009). To this end, the final communiqué published at
the summit established the group’s energy policy on three main pillars. First, it aimed to
ensure diversification of energy sources and supply, including renewable energy. Second,
it sought to establish the security of energy transmission lines and encourage new energy
investments and infrastructure projects. Third, the communiqué underscored
international cooperation on energy efficiency and stated that the fight against climate
change should be integrated with socio-economic development goals, based on the
principle of “Common but Differentiated Responsibilities” under the United Nations (UN)
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) (BRICS Information Centre, 2009).
The 2nd Summit, held in Brasilia in 2010, was built on these fundamental principles. At
the summit, energy was defined as a fundamental resource for raising the quality of life,
and the critical importance of access to energy for equitable and socially inclusive
economic growth was reaffirmed. Leaders at this summit broadened their vision,
committing to diversifying the energy mix by promoting the cleaner use of fossil fuels
and increasing the share of renewable sources. In particular, the summit expressed a
strong commitment to developing concrete cooperation in sustainable biofuel production,
R&D, and technology transfer (BRICS Think Tanks Council, 2010). At these summits,
leaders re-examined energy security in terms of the interdependence of supply and
demand security and, contrary to the importer-focused security approach that dominates
Western literature, presented a new vision for dialogue that balances the interests of
producers (Russia, Brazil) and consumers (China, India). This approach reframes energy,
transcending its status as merely a market commodity and positioning it as an integral
component of states’ right to development and a strategic public good (Umutlu & Çalışkan
Terzioğlu, 2025).
At the 2011 Sanya Summit, where institutionalization deepened and the structure
formalized the BRICS configuration with South Africa’s participation, support for
renewable energy sources was reiterated, and the critical role of these sources in
combating climate change was reiterated. However, the key factor distinguishing this
summit from previous ones in terms of energy policies was that nuclear energy was
included as a concrete agenda item for the first time. The summit communiqué stated
that nuclear energy would continue to be an important element in the future energy mix
of member countries and emphasized the need for international cooperation in
developing peaceful nuclear capacity, strictly adhering to high safety standards (Sekine,
2011; The World and Japan Database, 2011). This move, which marks a critical juncture
in the normative evolution of BRICS, is of vital importance because it represents the
group’s first significant divergence from global norms. Particularly at a time when
Germany, one of the driving forces of the EU, is transitioning toward a nuclear-free
economy with its Energiewende policies, BRICS’s endorsement of nuclear energy as an
indispensable part of its energy mix is a declaration of strategic autonomy developed
against Western-centric approaches. This situation also supports the contestation
literature, which argues that the energy security perceptions of rising powers are shaped
by priorities justified by the need for rapid industrialization and developmentalism rather
than by Western environmental sensitivities (Ekman & Everts, 2024).
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Following this emphasis on nuclear energy and renewable sources, a more pragmatic
approach was adopted at the 4th Summit, held in New Delhi in 2012, acknowledging that
fossil fuels would remain dominant in the energy mix in the medium to long term.
Although leaders reiterated their commitment to expanding clean energy sources to meet
growing demand while addressing climate concerns, the summit’s main focus was market
stability. The declaration emphasized that extreme volatility in energy and food prices
threatens global prosperity, and a call was made to strengthen producer-consumer
dialogue. Furthermore, in line with International Atomic Energy Agency standards on
nuclear energy, it was noted that compliance with safety protocols in the design and
operation of power plants is essential for public safety a stance likely reinforced by the
prevailing global concerns following the Fukushima incident (Embassy of the Russian
Federation in the Republic of Tunisia, 2012).
Following a period in which market stability was prioritized, the 5th Summit, held in
Durban in 2013, marked a critical turning point, with energy cooperation taking concrete
shape in its financial and institutional dimensions. The inadequacy of the Bretton Woods
system in financing infrastructure and energy gaps on the African continent led the BRICS
countries to explore the feasibility of establishing the NDB. At this summit, where
environmental sustainability was once again placed at the center, commitment to
fundamental goals such as universal energy access, supply security, and affordability was
reaffirmed. The Durban Declaration stated that the diversity of renewable and low-carbon
sources must be increased to strengthen energy security and highlighted the role of
public-private partnerships in financing these projects. Furthermore, leaders agreed that
the energy transition should not be limited to the supply side (production) but must also
be accelerated on the demand side, specifically in consumption sectors such as
transportation, heating, and industry (Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India,
2013).
In the 6th Summit declaration held in Fortaleza in 2014, this transformation process was
framed primarily through an economic lens rather than its environmental dimension.
While acknowledging that fossil fuels remain the primary energy source, it was reiterated
that renewable energy, R&D, and energy efficiency are the fundamental drivers of
sustainable development. The declaration underscored that these elements have the
potential to be engines of growth, reduce energy costs, and increase the efficiency of
natural resource use. Furthermore, the need to strengthen international cooperation for
universal energy access and clean energy incentives, which directly affect standards of
living, was emphasized (Law and Business Review of the Americas, 2014).
The 7th Summit, held in Ufa in 2015, represented a pivotal milestone in establishing a
concrete, institutional framework for BRICS energy cooperation. The Summit adopted
“The Strategy for BRICS Economic Partnership,” which outlined the main features of the
bloc’s future economic partnership (Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of
China, 2015). The energy section of the strategy stated that promoting sustainable
production and consumption is vital for the economic development of member countries.
A number of priority areas were defined within the scope of the document to enhance
energy security. These were identified as diversifying sources, developing infrastructure,
ensuring universal access, increasing efficiency, sharing clean technologies, and making
optimal use of low-emission sources such as natural gas. A regular energy dialogue
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mechanism was established to achieve these goals and coordinate long-term strategies.
As the first concrete step in this mechanism, Russia was designated to host the inaugural
BRICS Energy Ministers’ Meeting (Russian Presidency of the 7th BRICS Summit, 2015;
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China, 2015). This effort, which
marked the beginning of the institutionalization of the energy dialogue at the highest
level, was reinforced in the same year by the Memorandum of Mutual Understanding in
Energy Saving and Energy Efficiency among the respective ministries. This text stipulated
the creation of an inventory of energy-efficient technologies and laid the foundation for
technical cooperation mechanisms such as the BRICS Working Group on Energy Saving
and Improvement of Energy Efficiency (BRICS Information Centre, 2015).
Corporate Building Process (2016-2020)
The institutional framework established in 2015, symbolizing the transition from political
rhetoric to practical cooperation, acquired operational momentum through actionable
projects during India’s chairmanship in 2016. The BRICS Working Group on Energy
Saving and Improvement of Energy Efficiency, which met in Visakhapatnam, India, on
July 4-5, 2016, served as a platform for sharing national strategies and best practices,
such as the LED conversion and Performance Achievement & Trade program led by India.
The meeting resulted in the adoption of a Joint Statement setting out a roadmap for
cooperation and a tangible Work Plan (Press Information Bureau, Government of India,
2016). The 8th Goa Summit, held immediately after the Paris Climate Agreement, was
of strategic importance, confirming the key role of nuclear energy in fulfilling
commitments and long-term greenhouse gas reduction. In this context, it was
emphasized that predictable access to technology and finance is vital for increasing civil
nuclear capacity (Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India, 2016). Parallel to
political and institutional steps, 2016 also stands out as the year in which the NDB
approved its first six projects in the field of clean energy and energy efficiency.
3
This first project package demonstrates the implementation of the Goa Summit’s energy
transition vision through the NDB. By financing diverse energy modalities, such as solar
and wind in China and hydroelectricity in Russia, the NDB has ensured resource
diversification, particularly in Chinese projects, by advancing de-dollarization in the
financial architecture by using local currencies. In Brazil, channeling funds through
national development banks has supported institutional capacity-building. Through this
multifaceted strategy, the NDB has become a pivotal actor in financing the energy
transition of the Global South, in line with the goals of the Paris Climate Agreement.
Developments in 2017 gained momentum with the Second BRICS Energy Ministers’
Meeting held in Beijing on June 7, prior to the leaders’ summit. The Joint Statement
issued at the end of the meeting codified the common understanding that underpins
energy cooperation.
3
Project areas supported by the NDB include transport infrastructure, water and sanitation, environmental
protection, social infrastructure, digital infrastructure, multiple areas, and COVID-19 emergency assistance.
However, this paper focuses on the energy and energy efficiency sector, as it represents a concrete indicator
of financial commitments to energy transition and signifies the evolution of cooperation from a theoretical
framework to practical applications.
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Table 1. The first clean energy and energy efficiency projects approved/completed by NDB in
2016
Project Name
Country
Approval
Date and
Status
4
NDB
Financing
Limit
Project Purpose and
Summary
Lingang Distributed
Solar Power Project
China
April 13, 2016
(completed)
RMB 222.6
million
To promote clean energy
development with rooftop
solar panels in Shanghai’s
Lingang district.
Financing of
Renewable Energy
Projects and
Associated
Transmission Project
Brazil
April 13, 2016
(completed)
USD 300
million
To provide a loan to the
Brazilian Development Bank
(BNDES) to reduce reliance
on hydroelectric power.
Project Finance
Facility for Eskom
South
Africa
April 13, 2016
(approved)
USD 180
million
To support grid connection
infrastructure and reduce
dependence on fossil fuels.
Beliy Porog Hydro
Powerplant Project
Russia
July 20, 2016
(approved)
USD 100
million
To construct two run-of-
river hydroelectric power
plants with a total installed
capacity of 49.8 MW in the
Karelia region.
Putian Pinghai Bay
Offshore Wind Power
Project
China
November 22,
2016
(completed)
RMB 1.97
billion
To build a 246 MW offshore
wind power plant in Fujian.
Source: NDB, 2016.
The communiqué acknowledged that fossil fuels remain the dominant energy source,
while reiterating that renewable energy and new technologies are the primary drivers of
sustainable development. The ministers agreed to promote cooperation in solar, wind,
bioenergy, and hydroelectricity, to create strategic reserves for energy security, and to
recognize natural gas as a critical bridge fuel in the energy transition. One of the most
tangible outcomes of the meeting was the decision to launch feasibility studies for
establishing an ERCP that will integrate the resource and technology capacities of
member countries. Additionally, the NDB’s role, particularly in clean energy and energy
efficiency, was acknowledged, and the bank’s inaugural RMB green bond issuance was
warmly welcomed (Ministry of Energy of the Russian Federation, 2017). This technical
and strategic framework was also endorsed at the leadership level at the 9th Summit
held in Xiamen that same year. Addressing energy in the context of green development,
the leaders supported continuing the dialogue on establishing the research platform
proposed at the Ministerial Meeting, thereby paving the way for the next institutional
milestone (The State Council Information Office of the People’s Republic of China, 2017).
The year 2018 marked a deepening of the institutionalization of BRICS energy
cooperation. While high-level official mechanisms were strengthened on one hand, the
bloc’s youth structure made substantive contributions to the energy agenda on the other.
4
To analyze the tangible outcomes and actual financial commitments of BRICS’ financial mechanisms, this
paper includes only projects with completed and approved status, projects in the cancelled or proposed stage
have been excluded.
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At the official level, the declaration issued at the 3rd BRICS Energy Ministers Meeting,
held in Johannesburg on June 28, outlined the common vision. While confirming their
commitment to the UN Agenda 2030 and the Paris Agreement, the ministers emphasized
that a just transition could be achieved through the technological opportunities offered
by the fourth industrial revolution. The most concrete outcome of the meeting was the
establishment of a Senior Energy Officials Committee to coordinate cooperation (Ministry
of Mines and Energy of Brazil, 2018). In addition to developments at the official level,
2018 also drew attention with the work of the BRICS Youth Energy Agency (BRICS YEA).
The BRICS Youth Energy Outlook 2018, published by the agency with the main theme of
“Energy in the digital future,” presented a shared vision of the contribution of
digitalization in areas such as cost reduction and network stability (BRICS Youth Energy
Agency, 2018). These technical and youth-focused activities received formal institutional
endorsement at the 10th Summit held in Johannesburg that same year. The most
strategic outcome of the Summit was the official establishment of the ERCP, which will
guide future joint efforts, and the adoption of its Terms of Reference (BRICS Information
Centre, 2018). Financially, the NDB supported this vision by approving three major
projects focused on clean energy and efficiency in 2018.
Table 2. Clean energy and energy efficiency projects approved/completed by NDB in 2018
Country
Approval
Date and
Status
NDB
Financing
Limit
Project Purpose and
Summary
China
November 16,
2018
(approved)
USD 400
million
To balance the coal-based
structure, construct 2,134 km
of pipelines and storage
facilities in Jiangxi.
South
Africa
July 20, 2018
(completed)
USD 300
million
To support renewable energy
projects and provide loans
from the Development Bank
of Southern Africa (DBSA) for
structural transformation.
China
November 16,
2018
(completed)
RMB 2
billion
To prevent 499,500 tons of
carbon emissions annually by
establishing a 300 MW
offshore wind power plant in
Guangdong.
Source: NDB, 2018.
Table 2 illustrates that the NDB has pursued a pragmatic energy financing strategy
aligned with the national realities of its member countries. In particular, the acceptance
of natural gas as a transition fuel in the Jiangxi project in China and the DBSA-focused
model in South Africa demonstrate the equilibrium between energy security and climate
goals. Wang (2019) characterizes the NDB’s rejection of the conditionality principle
inherent in Bretton Woods institutions as a model of multilateral development. The Eskom
and BNDES loans in South Africa and Brazil, respectively, corroborate this
characterization. The NDB financed public institutions in fiscal distress with these projects
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and, contrary to the privatization pressure of Western institutions, aimed to strengthen
the state’s institutional capacity.
The year 2019 marked a period during Brazil’s presidency when energy cooperation
gained an operational foundation. The 4th BRICS Energy Ministers’ Meeting held in
Brasilia on November 11 represented a critical milestone in the institutionalization
process with the adoption of the ERCP’s Terms of Reference. This step provided the
platform with the necessary institutional framework for joint research in technology and
innovation. Ministers also reached consensus on the role of natural gas and nuclear
energy in line with Sustainable Development Goal 7 (SDG 7-Affordable and clean energy)
(BRICS Information Centre, 2019a). The BRICS Youth Energy Outlook 2019 report, which
provided intellectual impetus to the formal process, addressed topics such as hydrogen
and digitalization under the theme of Energy 4.0 (BRICS Youth Energy Agency, 2019).
This report is significant because it is the first comprehensive international study to reflect
the energy vision of youth. Technical and academic preparations throughout the year
culminated in political approval at the 11th Leaders Summit, and the ERCP officially
commenced operations (BRICS Information Centre, 2019b). In the financial sphere, the
NDB approved four projects focusing on battery storage technologies and renewable
energy infrastructure, which are critical for grid stability.
Table 3. Clean energy and energy efficiency projects approved/completed by NDB in 2019
Project Name
Country
Approval
Date and
Status
NDB
Financing
Limit
Project Purpose and
Summary
IDC Renewable
Energy Sector
Development
Project
South
Africa
March 31,
2019
(approved)
ZAR 1.15
billion
As part of the coal phase-out
strategy, finance wind, solar,
and biomass projects through
the Industrial Development
Corporation (IDC).
Development of the
Renewable Energy
Sector in Russia
Project
Russia
September 12,
2019
(completed)
USD 300
million
Provide credit for renewable
energy projects through the
Eurasian Development Bank
(EDB) to diversify the energy
mix.
REC Renewable
Energy Sector
Development
Project
India
October 14,
2019
(completed)
USD 300
million
Finance a 655 MW power
plant and transmission lines
to reduce thermal power
dependency.
Battery Energy
Storage Project
South
Africa
December 16,
2019
(approved)
ZAR 6,000
million
Establish large-scale battery
storage systems with a
capacity of 1,440 MWh within
Eskom to ensure grid
stability.
Source: NDB, 2019.
The project distribution in Table 3 indicates that the NDB’s 2019 financing strategy
focused on system integration. In particular, the battery storage project in South Africa
is an important initiative that addresses the intermittency profile of renewable energy
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and ensures grid stability, in line with the Energy 4.0 vision. Furthermore, the NDB’s use
of intermediary institutions such as IDC and EDB to allocate resources demonstrates that
its strategy of spreading financing to channel finance and strengthening local institutional
capacity has become an institutionalized strategy.
Under Russia’s chairmanship, and notwithstanding the challenging conditions
precipitated by the COVID-19 pandemic, 2020 was a period in which the strategic
framework for energy cooperation was deepened. At the 12th Summit in Moscow, leaders
approved critical documents that will shape the bloc’s future vision. The pivotal document
was the “Roadmap for BRICS energy cooperation up to 2025,” adopted at the end of the
5th Energy Ministers’ Meeting. This roadmap aims to establish a strategic partnership by
promoting coordination across energy policies, trade, investments, and technological
cooperation. The document delineates a three-phase approach to cooperation. The first
phase involves continuing joint analyses and institutionalizing the ERCP; the second
phase focuses on identifying energy security needs and solutions, and the third phase
envisions concrete areas of cooperation for the diffusion of advanced technologies and
investments (Ministry of Mines and Energy of Brazil, 2020). The document “Strategy for
BRICS Economic Partnership 2025,” adopted in the same year, also positions energy as
one of the main pillars of sustainable development (Russian Presidency of the 12th BRICS
Summit, 2020).
2020 also marks the year in which the ERCP yielded its first tangible results. Two
important reports, prepared within the framework of the platform and welcomed at both
the Ministerial Meeting and the Leaders’ Summit, were published. The “BRICS Energy
Report” revealed that while the bloc accounts for 40% of the global population, it only
contributes 37% to global energy consumption, with coal dominating the current energy
mix (49%). However, it is projected that this balance would shift in favor of renewables
and natural gas by 2040 (BRICS Energy Research Cooperation Platform, 2020a). The
“BRICS Energy Technology Report,” aimed at identifying areas of mutual interest in
energy technologies, mapped 547 different technologies, including digitalization and
smart grids. According to the report’s findings, smart grids, digital twins, grid monitoring
technologies, and autonomous processing of seismic data emerged as the most promising
avenues for cooperation (BRICS Energy Research Cooperation Platform, 2020b). On the
youth engagement front, BRICS YEA published the BRICS Youth Energy Outlook report,
prepared with more than 180 young experts, and sought answers to critical questions
such as emission reduction in the context of Industry 4.0 and the post-pandemic period
from the perspective of youth (BRICS Youth Energy Agency, 2020).
This period served as a critical litmus test for the rival explanations adopted in the paper.
The approval process of the roadmap revealed that the issue was more than just a
technical procedure. Despite the high politics crisis between China and India in the
Galwan Valley that resulted in casualties that same year, the parties’ agreement on the
roadmap and ERCP reports demonstrate that institutional mechanisms can be insulated
from political conflicts. This resilience confirms Cooper’s (2016) compartmentalization
hypothesis and refutes skeptical arguments that geopolitical competition would end
cooperation. In parallel, the NDB’s portfolio during this period highlights the difference
between its financing strategy vis-à-vis Western institutions. Neunuebel et al. (2025)
highlight that the NDB’s model, characterized by non-conditionality, aligns with national
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priorities and is sensitive to local issues. Unlike commercial banks, this development-
oriented approach has mitigated currency risk by using local currencies and increased
the feasibility of green projects.
Deepening and Norm Production (2021-2025)
In the post-2020 period, the global climate regime that consolidated around the Paris
Agreement and the increased geopolitical fractures following the Ukraine War have
enabled the BRICS to evolve from a defensive position to a norm-entrepreneurial role.
The most tangible manifestation of this strategic transformation was seen in 2021, under
India’s chairmanship, with a shift in energy cooperation to a more practical and strategic
footing. The Joint Declaration adopted at the 6th Energy Ministers’ Meeting held within
the framework of the 13th Summit in New Delhi has established a new norm against
Western-centric prescriptions, asserting the sovereign rights of member countries to
determine the pace of energy transition in accordance with their own national conditions.
For the first time in the history of the Summit, a vision for an inclusive energy system
encompassing fossil fuels, hydrogen, nuclear, and renewable sources was presented,
while the concept of energy security was expanded beyond supply stability to include the
secure supply of critical minerals and the necessity of material recycling. (Ministry of
Power, Government of India, 2021).
This normative consensus is the result of contentious intra-group negotiations rather
than a spontaneous, smooth process. While India and Russia, heavily reliant on fossil
fuels, resisted Western pressure for rapid decarbonization, China and Brazil aimed to
strengthen their leadership in renewable energy. In this context, just transition served
not only as an environmental goal but also as a strategic variable balancing conflicting
interests. Indeed, instead of completely excluding fossil fuels, the parties managed to
transform friction into cooperation by agreeing on the principle of technological
neutrality, which includes hydrogen and Carbon Capture, Utilization and Storage (CCUS)
technologies.
Under India’s leadership, this consensus has catalyzed the way for an expanded agenda,
leading to the publication of two key documents on CCUS and Circular Carbon Economy
technologies. First, the BRICS Energy Technology Report 2021 prioritized clinker
substitution and direct-reduced iron technologies in industry, as well as transportation
and building automation, within the scope of deep decarbonization (BRICS Youth Energy
Agency, 2021a). The second document, the BRICS Energy Research Directory,
aggregated more than 50 research institutions to create an inventory for scientific
cooperation (BRICS Youth Energy Agency, 2021b). On the financial front, the NDB has
approved a critical LNG project for China’s transition from coal to gas, transforming the
discursive cooperation, which extends to strategic areas such as hydrogen and deep
decarbonization, into concrete investment.
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Table 4. Clean energy and energy efficiency projects approved by NDB in 2021
Project Name
Country
Approval
Date and
Status
NDB
Financing
Limit
Project Purpose and Summary
Beijing Gas
Tianjin Nangang
LNG Emergency
Reserve Project
China
March 9,
2021
(approved)
EUR 436
million
As part of the “transition from
coal to gas” policy, an LNG
terminal and storage facility are
being constructed in the Beijing-
Tianjin-Hebei region to meet peak
demand during the winter
months.
Source: NDB, 2021.
The 14th Summit, held in Beijing in 2022, took place amidst geopolitical tensions and
concerns about energy supply security. The summit emphasized the central role of
energy security in achieving sustainable development goals, recognizing each country’s
right to an energy transition specific to its national circumstances, and reiterated the
importance of access to modern and reliable energy (Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the
People’s Republic of China, 2022a). This political framework was subsequently translated
into the technical domain with the 7th Energy Ministers Meeting, held virtually on
September 22, 2022. At the meeting, consensus was reached on the future of the ERCP
and the low-carbon transition, resulting in the publication of three critical reports
prepared by the ERCP: the BRICS Energy Report 2022, the BRICS Renewable Energy
Report 2022, and the BRICS Smart Grid Report 2022 (Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the
People’s Republic of China, 2022b). These efforts have been confirmed at the leadership
level, securing top-level political support for technical cooperation. In parallel with the
formal processes, BRICS YEA has expanded its work to the BRICS+ format. The BRICS
Plus Youth Energy Outlook 2022 report, focusing particularly on energy access, climate
risks, and clean cooking opportunities in Africa, highlights one of its most striking
findings: 68.7% prefer electrification as the fuel of the future in transportation and
cooking technologies. Reflecting the vision of young stakeholders amidst the uncertainty
created by the pandemic and political tensions, the report indicates that young people
believe the current energy crisis will accelerate the transition to renewable energy despite
the costs. Notably, 70% of young participants support nuclear energy as a solution to
climate change, while seeing SDG 7 and SDG 9 (Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure)
as closely linked. With the planned presentation of this report at the UNFCCC in Egypt
(COP27), the bloc’s youth voice was effectively amplified on the global stage (BRICS
Youth Energy Agency, 2022).
The 15th Summit held in Johannesburg in 2023 placed the concept of a just, affordable,
and sustainable transition at the center of the energy agenda. The Summit communiqué
emphasized that, given the dual status of BRICS countries as both major producers and
consumers, energy security and transformation processes must be managed in a
balanced manner. While the need for full participation in clean energy value chains and
increased supply chain investments was noted, the role of fossil fuels in supporting
energy security was also confirmed (South African Government, 2023a). The foundation
for this agenda was laid at the 8th Energy Ministers Meeting held on August 18, 2023,
where host South Africa’s just (energy) transition priorities for the continent were
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articulated (South African Government, 2023b). The most concrete outputs of the year
were two comprehensive reports prepared by the ERCP, which substantiated the concept
of just transition with empirical data. First, the BRICS Energy Security Report 2023 was
published, proposing that the bloc, which consumes 40% of global energy, manage the
balance between fossil fuel dominance and renewable energy through resource
diversification and joint trade (South African National Energy Development Institute,
2023a). In addition, the BRICS Energy Transition Skills Report 2023, which addresses
the human dimension of the transition, emphasizes that the process is not only
technological but also a profound workforce restructuring transformation for member
countries, which account for 80% of the global coal sector workforce; it has identified a
serious skills gap, particularly in the areas of digital network management and
cybersecurity (South African National Energy Development Institute, 2023b).
The 2023 studies have shown that BRICS no longer confines its energy future exclusively
to the traditional paradigm of supply security. With this summit, the bloc has solidified
its commitment to a transformation that protects the workforce and is inclusive and
equitable. This normative orientation, cultivated under South Africa’s chairmanship, is far
from arbitrary. Indeed, Ramluckun et al. (2024), in their analysis of BRICS members’
Nationally Determined Contribution documents, found that South Africa was the only
member to categorically include the concept of Just Energy Transition in the context of
protecting the workforce and social dialogue. This reality not only elucidates why the
country sought to transform this vision into a bloc norm during its 2023 presidency, but
also explains the creation of an alternative to Western-centric Just Energy Transition
Partnership models. In this context, Csanadi & Helmeci (2025) note that the Western
model tethers financial aid to the condition of a rapid exit from coal, whereas the BRICS
approach, led by South Africa, advocates a more flexible, gradual transition that
prioritizes energy security and economic growth.
In 2024, under the chairmanship of the Russian Federation, the energy policies of the
expanding bloc were concretized around the twin pillars of technological neutrality and
just transition. At the 16th Leaders’ Summit in Kazan, it was emphasized that BRICS
members are the world’s largest producers of natural resources, and a call for cooperation
across the value chain was made (President of Russia, 2024). This vision was further
detailed in the Communique issued at the 9th Energy Ministers’ Meeting in Moscow on
September 26, 2024. The ministers confirmed that the bloc’s expansion creates
complementarity in energy systems and prioritized the issue of using national currencies
in energy trade. The Communique emphasized that ensuring universal access to
affordable, reliable, and modern energy, in line with SDG 7, is a priority of the global
energy agenda. The most strategic element of the text was adopting the principle of
technological neutrality. This principle envisages the non-discriminatory use of all sources
that reduce emissions, such as renewable energy, nuclear energy, low-emission
hydrogen, and fossil fuels with carbon capture technology. Furthermore, terrorist attacks
against cross-border energy infrastructure were condemned, and attention was drawn to
market stability (Ministry of Energy of the Russian Federation, 2024). A seminal
deliverable of 2024 was the BRICS Just Energy Transition Report 2024, prepared by ERCP.
The report advocated for each country’s right to access energy, essential for national
security and social stability, through country-specific transition pathways rather than a
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single, uniform prescription (South African National Energy Development Institute,
2024). On the youth front, the BRICS Youth Energy Outlook 2024, reflecting the voice of
the Global South and featuring over 120 young experts, offered analyses across a wide
range of areas, from a just and sustainable energy transition and resource management
to critical minerals and nuclear energy (BRICS Youth Energy Agency, 2024). On the
financial front, the NDB continued its energy commitment in 2024 by approving three
critical infrastructure projects in Brazil and India focused on clean energy and energy
efficiency.
Table 5. Clean energy and energy efficiency projects approved by NDB in 2024
Project Name
Country
Approval
Date and
Status
NDB
Financing
Limit
Project Purpose and
Summary
Electricity
Distribution
Infrastructure
Modernization
Project
Brazil
October 23,
2024
(approved)
RMB 1,425
million
Modernizing infrastructure in
São Paulo to provide access
to electricity for households
without power and to increase
efficiency.
Brasilia Capital of
Solar Lighting
Project
Brazil
December 26,
2024
(approved)
EUR 77
million
Replacing 129,000 lamps with
LEDs in public lighting and
building a 100 MW solar
power plant.
SAEL 300MW
Renewable Energy
Project
India
December 27,
2024
(approved)
USD 63
million
Constructing a 300 MW solar
power plant and transmission
line in Andhra Pradesh.
Source: NDB, 2024.
Table 5 illustrates the tangible financial operationalization of the technological neutrality
and just transition vision articulated at the Kazan Summit. In 2024, the NDB moved
beyond the traditional approach focused solely on increasing production capacity, directly
linking SDG 7 goals to social welfare through public lighting and grid modernization
projects in Brazil. The preference for RMB financing, particularly for the São Paulo project,
serves as empirical evidence that the strategy of using national currencies, emphasized
at the Ministerial Meeting, is being effectively implemented in infrastructure financing.
When considered alongside the solar energy investment in India, this demonstrates the
Bank’s establishment of a flexible financing regime that respects country-specific
transition patterns. However, to maintain analytical rigor, it is essential to note the
challenges in implementing these projects. In particular, the restrictions on the NDB’s
access to international capital markets following the Ukraine War constrained its financing
capacity. As Neunuebel et al. (2025) point out, the bank’s shift towards local currencies
in its São Paulo and India projects is not merely a preference, but a necessary and
pragmatic adaptation strategy developed in response to the tightening of dollar liquidity.
This demonstrates that the collaboration is not immune to external shocks but can
develop institutional resilience against them.
2025 marked a historic turning point for energy cooperation under Brazil’s presidency,
attaining a level of institutional maturity. Transcending the phase of mere rhetorical
reiteration, the bloc adopted fundamental documents defining its medium-term strategy
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(Department of International Relations and Cooperation, Republic of South Africa, 2025).
At the heart of this process was the 10th Energy Ministers Meeting, convened on May 19,
2025, and the Joint Communiqué adopted. The Communiqué formally endorsed the
Roadmap for BRICS Energy Cooperation 2025-2030, prepared by the BRICS Committee
of Senior Energy Officials, outlining the vision for the next five years. While
acknowledging the role of fossil fuels in developing economies, the ministers called for a
just, orderly, and equitable energy transition. The process is built upon the SDG 7 goals,
technological neutrality, and the principles of common but differentiated responsibilities
and respective capabilities. The most strategic innovation of the Communiqué is the
promotion of local currencies in energy trade and the recording of concerns against
unilateral sanctions. Furthermore, the secure supply of critical minerals for low-emission
technologies has been prioritized, and constructive engagement towards the COP30
summit in Brazil has been confirmed (Ministry of Mines and Energy of Brazil, 2025;
Ministry of Mines and Energy of Brazil BRICS Committee of Senior Energy Officials,
2025a). The 2025-2030 Roadmap, which translates this political framework into concrete
actions and is technically implemented by the ERCP, focuses cooperation on four key
objectives: strengthening BRICS cooperation and coordination on the international
energy agenda; expanding the scope of cooperation based on energy security and
equitable and inclusive energy transitions; improving governance, decision-making, and
implementation processes for cooperation initiatives; and increasing trade in energy-
related goods and mutual investment. To achieve these objectives, the cooperation
structure is divided into two main branches: Sectoral Cooperation and Cross-cutting
Areas. Sectoral Cooperation covers sectoral issues such as renewable energy, bioenergy,
hydrogen, and CCUS, while Cross-cutting Areas details priorities such as financing,
critical minerals, digitalization, and skills development for a just transition (Ministry of
Mines and Energy of Brazil, BRICS Committee of Senior Energy Officials, 2025b). The
NDB, which forms the financial component of the roadmap, has approved two critical
projects in 2025 that are fully aligned with current targets.
Table 6. Clean energy and energy efficiency projects approved by NDB in 2025
Project
Name
Country
Approval
Date and
Status
NDB
Financing
Limit
Project Purpose and Summary
Shanxi
Taiyuan Wusu
Zero-Carbon
Airport Project
China
July 14, 2025
(approved)
RMB 1.448
billion
Installation of solar, geothermal,
smart energy, and storage systems
to reduce the airport’s net CO2
emissions to zero.
Serra da
Palmeira Wind
Power Project
Brazil
September
17, 2025
(approved)
RMB 1,400
million
Construction of a 648 MW wind
power plant in Paraíba Prefecture.
The use of Chinese-made turbines
exemplifies intra-BRICS technology
trade and the use of local
currencies.
Source: NDB, 2025.
The projects in Table 6 demonstrate that the 2025-2030 Roadmap has moved beyond a
theoretical framework and has been operationalized through the NDB. The project in
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China presents a comprehensive model integrating renewable energy, storage, and
digitalization under the Sectoral Cooperation heading defined in the Roadmap. However,
the profound strategic significance lies in the Serra da Palmeira project in Brazil. The use
of Chinese-made turbines and financing in RMB for this project directly implements the
goals of increasing energy-related goods trade and promoting local currencies outlined
in the Ministerial Declaration. This is fully consistent with Liu & Papa’s (2022) thesis of
de-dollarization. With this move, the NDB has moved beyond being merely an
infrastructure financier to assume the role of a market and rule maker governing
technology transfer and trade integration within BRICS. This emerging picture indicates
that intra-group trade is shifting away from a raw-materials-focused structure toward a
South-South Technology Ecosystem, and that the energy transition is being used not
only as an environmental necessity but also as a means of geo-economic autonomy.
Conclusion
This paper analyzed the evolution of BRICS energy cooperation during the 2009-2025
period from an institutional perspective and revealed that the group has transformed
from a consultative platform into an operational mechanism with concrete tools. The
findings show that BRICS’ institutional development in the energy sector is predicated on
three pillars: institutional flexibility, technocratic knowledge production, and financial
infrastructure.
Firstly, the soft balancing strategy discussed within the theoretical framework of this
paper has given way to functional institutionalization in the post-2015 period. The
analyzed Leaders’ Summit and Energy Ministers’ declarations demonstrate that
cooperation is not merely a reaction based on a shared perception of threat, but also the
construction of a sui generis regime that prioritizes the energy security and development
imperatives of member states. The unabated persistence of energy cooperation,
particularly amid geopolitical tensions between China and India, and the adoption of the
2025-2030 Roadmap empirically validate that the group has successfully executed its
compartmentalization strategy and developed institutional resilience against high politics
crises.
Secondly, the paper’s empirical data show that BRICS has produced not only rhetorical
but also practical alternatives to Western-centric energy governance. Technical reports
produced through the ERCP demonstrate that the group has gained epistemic autonomy
by generating its own data and strategy; financing provided through the NDB,
meanwhile, reveals the group’s concrete pursuit of financial autonomy. The NDB’s
promotion of local currencies in its projects and its adoption of a flexible, development-
oriented financing model rather than the Bretton Woods institutions’ conditionality
principle have opened up a new normative space in global energy finance.
The third and perhaps most critical finding is the normative consensus developed to
manage the group’s heterogeneous structure. The paper shows that the concepts of
technological neutrality and just transition are used as strategic tools to bridge the
differences in interests among member countries. Instead of imposing a uniform
decarbonization prescription, BRICS has institutionalized a flexible transition model
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covering a wide range from fossil fuels to renewable energy and from nuclear to
hydrogen, offering a more inclusive governance model for the Global South.
Ultimately, the process that began as a declaration of intention in Yekaterinburg in 2009
has matured under Brazil’s presidency in 2025, evolving into a structural force that is
characterized by financial autonomy, indigenous technological development, and that
prioritizes national currencies in energy trade. In this context, BRICS energy cooperation
should be conceptualized not as a revisionist movement aiming to completely dismantle
the existing global energy order, but rather as a transformative and complementary
governance model that integrates into the system through parallel mechanisms while
protecting the sovereign rights and development priorities of member states.
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