Brazil and India forge alliance on critical minerals and AI to reshape global technology order

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Brazil's President Lula and India's PM Modi are set to announce a framework agreement on critical minerals and artificial intelligence cooperation. With Brazil holding the world's second-largest rare earths reserves, both nations aim to move beyond raw material supply to processing, challenging China's dominance. The partnership positions emerging economies as key voices in shaping AI regulation and technology development.

Brazil and India Alliance Targets Critical Minerals and AI Cooperation

Brazil and India are poised to strengthen cooperation on critical minerals and artificial intelligence as President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva meets Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi

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. The two leaders are discussing a framework agreement on critical minerals and rare earths, which could be announced following their bilateral talks on Saturday

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. This partnership arrives at a critical juncture as emerging economies seek greater influence over global technology and supply chains reshaping the international order.

Source: ET

Source: ET

Brazil, home to the world's second-largest reserves of rare earths, wants a more inclusive global debate on AI, according to officials familiar with the matter

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. Lula arrived in New Delhi on Wednesday for a three-day visit, his fourth as president, accompanied by senior cabinet members and industry leaders who will participate in a business forum reflecting growing trade engagements between the two nations

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Emerging Economies Challenge China's Dominance in Supply Chains

Both nations want to enter into processing of critical minerals rather than remaining suppliers of raw materials

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. China currently dominates both extraction and processing, with countries including the US racing to secure alternative sources and partnerships. As competition between the US and China intensifies over artificial intelligence and critical minerals, closer cooperation between countries like Brazil and India could strengthen the collective clout of developing nations in shaping how the technology is developed and regulated

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Source: Bloomberg

Source: Bloomberg

The timing is significant. New Delhi and Brasilia sought closer ties after US President Donald Trump slapped both countries with 50% tariffs

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. Modi visited Brazil in July, where the two agreed to work closely on defense, energy, food security, and to reduce non-tariff barriers to increase trade. The decisions are likely to influence how emerging economies coordinate on rare earth processing and AI regulation in multilateral forums such as the Group of 20 nations and the BRICS bloc, of which both are members, to prevent concentration of resources in few capitals

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Push for People-Centric, Open-Source AI Models

Brazil and India are pushing for people-centric, open-source, multilingual artificial intelligence models

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. Modi has used the AI summit in New Delhi to showcase the country's vast, tech-savvy population and deep engineering talent as evidence that it can offer an alternative to AI models shaped by major global technology firms. "Design and develop in India. Deliver to the world, deliver to humanity," Modi said during his keynote address at the AI summit on Thursday

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Brazil's aim is to avoid the sort of geopolitical divide that emerged around nuclear energy in which only a handful of nations were allowed to use the technology

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. The South American nation will advocate for democratizing access while strengthening safeguards against disinformation, algorithmic bias and digital manipulation, foreign ministry officials said ahead of the visit. Lula has pushed for a global approach to AI that includes voices from developing nations, arguing that global powers shouldn't hold exclusive control over the technology or rules that govern it.

Brazil Attracts Massive AI Infrastructure Investments

Brazil has emerged as a regional hotspot for AI-related investments, securing a $38 billion commitment from ByteDance's TikTok to build a massive data center complex late last year

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. Elea Data Centers, a company backed by Goldman Sachs, also has plans for a $50 billion project in Rio de Janeiro, and Brazil's Congress is currently weighing legislation aimed at attracting even more investment into data centers. "The governance framework for these technologies will determine who participates, who is exploited and who is left on the sidelines of this process," Lula said in a speech at the AI summit

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The two leaders also met on the sidelines of the Group of 20 summit in Johannesburg in November as part of the India-Brazil-South Africa trilateral grouping, the so-called IBSA forum, which was convened after a decade-long gap

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. This Brazil and India alliance on technology ties and open-source AI models signals a shift in how tech regulation and global technology development may evolve, with implications extending far beyond the immediate framework agreement on cooperation in critical minerals and rare earths being discussed in New Delhi

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