The global geopolitical landscape is undergoing its most significant transformation since the end of the Cold War. In 2026, the expansion of the BRICS coalition — now encompassing Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, and seven new full members — is fundamentally reshaping international alliances, trade patterns, and the architecture of global governance. What began as an informal economic grouping has evolved into a formidable counterweight to Western-led institutions, and its implications for global stability are only beginning to be understood.
The New BRICS: From Five to Twelve
The BRICS expansion formally ratified at the 2025 summit in Kazan added Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Indonesia, and Nigeria as full members, more than doubling the bloc’s membership. With these additions, BRICS now represents approximately 45% of the world’s population, 37% of global GDP measured by purchasing power parity, and 56% of global energy production. The strategic significance is difficult to overstate: the expanded bloc controls the majority of the world’s oil reserves, produces most of its rare earth minerals, and includes the two most populous nations on Earth.
The expansion was not merely symbolic. Each new member brings specific strategic assets to the coalition. Saudi Arabia and the UAE contribute energy dominance and sovereign wealth fund capital. Indonesia provides Southeast Asia’s largest economy and strategic control of vital shipping lanes. Nigeria adds Africa’s largest economy and population. Ethiopia offers access to the Horn of Africa and the Red Sea trade corridor. Egypt controls the Suez Canal, through which 12% of global trade passes. The result is a bloc with unprecedented geographic reach and resource diversity.
De-Dollarization and Alternative Financial Architecture
The most consequential development within the expanded BRICS is the accelerating push toward de-dollarization. The BRICS Bridge payment system, launched in prototype form in early 2026, enables direct settlement of trade transactions using a basket of member currencies, bypassing the SWIFT system and the dollar-denominated correspondence banking network. In the first quarter of 2026, approximately 18% of trade among BRICS members was settled outside the dollar system, up from 8% in 2024.
The New Development Bank, BRICS’ multilateral lending institution, has expanded its lending capacity to $50 billion annually and has begun denominating loans in a composite BRICS currency unit rather than the dollar. China’s Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS) now processes over 2.5 trillion yuan in daily transactions, with 30% of that volume coming from non-Chinese BRICS members. Russia, facing comprehensive Western sanctions, has shifted nearly all of its trade with China and India to national currency settlement, creating a template that other members are studying closely.
The implications for the global financial system are profound. While the dollar remains dominant — still accounting for 58% of global foreign exchange reserves and 82% of trade finance — its share has declined from 72% of reserves a decade ago. If current trends continue, the International Monetary Fund projects that a multi-currency reserve system could emerge by the early 2030s, with the dollar, euro, yuan, and a potential BRICS digital currency sharing reserve status.
Geopolitical Realignment and Security Implications
The BRICS expansion has accelerated a broader geopolitical realignment that challenges the post-1945 international order. The bloc has established a BRICS Rapid Response Mechanism for collective diplomatic action during international crises, and member states have coordinated positions on issues ranging from reform of the UN Security Council to the regulation of artificial intelligence in military applications. The BRICS+ format — which includes observer nations and dialogue partners — now encompasses 28 countries, creating a sprawling network of aligned or neutral states that increasingly coordinate independently of Western-led frameworks.
NATO has responded by deepening its partnerships in the Indo-Pacific, with Japan, South Korea, Australia, and New Zealand now holding regular ministerial-level consultations under the NATO+4 framework. The European Union has accelerated its strategic autonomy agenda, including the development of alternative payment systems and a euro-denominated energy trading platform designed to reduce dependence on dollar-denominated markets. The United States has launched the Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment, a $600 billion counter-initiative to China’s Belt and Road, but questions remain about funding commitments and execution capacity.
Critics argue that BRICS faces significant internal contradictions that limit its effectiveness. India and China remain strategic competitors with unresolved border disputes. Saudi Arabia and Iran, both new members, have a history of regional proxy conflicts. Russia’s war in Ukraine has divided member sentiment, with China and India maintaining economic ties with Moscow while Brazil and South Africa have expressed concern about the conflict’s global implications. The bloc operates by consensus, which makes decisive action on contentious issues difficult.
Implications for Global Governance
The BRICS expansion is forcing a reckoning with international institutions designed for a different era. The bloc has formally called for reform of the United Nations Security Council, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the World Trade Organization to better reflect contemporary economic and demographic realities. While Western powers have acknowledged the need for reform, meaningful progress has been slow, and BRICS members have increasingly pursued parallel institutions rather than waiting for existing ones to adapt.
The creation of the BRICS AI Governance Council, announced in April 2026, exemplifies this approach. Rather than participating primarily in OECD and G7-led frameworks for artificial intelligence regulation, BRICS members have established their own governance structure incorporating principles of sovereign AI development, data localization, and divergent approaches to content moderation and surveillance. This parallel institutional development raises the prospect of a fragmented global technology governance landscape, with significant implications for multinational technology companies operating across regulatory jurisdictions.
For the Global South, the BRICS expansion represents an increasingly viable alternative to Western-dominated institutions. The bloc’s emphasis on non-interference in domestic affairs, respect for sovereignty, and alternative development financing has attracted interest from over 20 additional countries that have applied for observer or dialogue partner status. Whether BRICS can translate its growing membership into effective governance and tangible economic benefits for its populations will determine whether the current realignment leads to a more multipolar and stable international order, or simply replaces one set of power imbalances with another.
Related: NATO Summit 2026: A New Era of Collective Defense | The US-China Chip War: Reshaping Global Alliances







