Brics nations discuss shared response to Trump trade policies

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Brazilian Foreign Minister Mauro Vieira and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi shake hands, on the day of the BRICS Meeting of Ministers of Foreign Affairs in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, April 28, 2025. REUTERS/Pilar Olivares

Brazilian Foreign Minister Mauro Vieira and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi exchanging a handshake on April 28 in Rio de Janeiro.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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RIO DE JANEIRO – Foreign ministers from the Brics group of developing nations met on April 28 to discuss a shared defence of the global trade system, coordinating their response to the barrage of new tariffs from US President Donald Trump.

The meeting in Rio de Janeiro is expected to produce a joint statement criticising “unilateral measures” on trade from the group formed by Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa and recently expanded to include six more nations.

“The ministers are negotiating a declaration to reaffirm the centrality of... multilateral trade negotiations as the main axis of action in trade,” Brazilian Ambassador Mauricio Lyrio said. “They will reaffirm their criticism of unilateral measures of any origin, which has been a longstanding position of Brics countries.”

The expanded Brics group, which added Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Ethiopia, Indonesia and Iran in 2024, faces daunting challenges from US trade actions.

China, which was

hit with 145 per cent tariffs

on its exports to the United States, has pushed for a harsher tone in the communique but, according to a source familiar with negotiations, the final text will be critical but not confrontational.

The Brics group as a whole has come under fire from Mr Trump, who threatened another 100 per cent in tariffs if the bloc moves ahead with a single currency to replace the dollar in trade relations.

Brazil has already dropped the

pursuit of a common currency

in its Brics presidency, Reuters reported in February, although its agenda may pave the way for less reliance on the US dollar in global trade.

With an eye on the United Nations climate summit Brazil is hosting in November, the Brics ministers also will discuss a shared position on climate finance, a key priority for Brazil’s presidency.

A Brics meeting of foreign ministers on April 28 in Rio de Janeiro.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Major developing nations including China face growing pressure from wealthier nations to contribute to financing adaptation and mitigation initiatives in the poorest countries.

“What is not on the agenda is the revision of which countries have to pay for the energy transition and the countries that can eventually, voluntarily, also finance it. This distinction is absolutely fundamental,” said Mr Lyrio.

“The financial obligation to finance the fight against climate change and the energy transition in developing countries lies with rich countries,” he added. REUTERS

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