A new report highlights the aggressive ambition of the BRICS grouping in global agriculture, revealing a proposal to establish a dedicated BRICS Grain Exchange. This new platform would consolidate between 30% and 40% of the global supply in key grain crops, effectively creating a major alternative commodity market. The move is a strategic geopolitical response aimed at bolstering food-security independence for member states and the broader Global South, while reducing reliance on Western-dominated commodity trading and price-setting mechanisms.
The Exchange would initially focus on major commodities like wheat, corn, rice, and soybeans, leveraging the vast agricultural output of key members, notably Brazil, Russia, and India. By facilitating direct, coordinated grain trades among the expanded ten-member bloc and its partner nations (BRICS+), the initiative aims to stabilize food prices for consumers in member countries, insulate them from the volatility of external geopolitical shocks (such as sanctions or conflict-related supply disruptions), and ensure reliable, long-term supply chains.The project aligns with the BRICS commitment to reforming global governance and establishing fairer economic frameworks. By developing its own clearing and settlement mechanisms, potentially utilizing local currencies and blockchain technology, the Grain Exchange would challenge the dominance of established exchanges in Chicago and London. The initiative is critical for transforming the bloc’s collective economic weight into tangible influence over the global food system.



