
President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva arrived in Johannesburg, South Africa, on Friday (Nov. 21) to attend the G20 Leaders’ Summit, a group of the world’s largest economies. “The G20’s motto for 2025 is Solidarity, Equality, and Sustainability, themes of fundamental importance for Brazil and the Global South,” Lula wrote in a post on social media this morning upon landing in the South African capital.


As president of the bloc in 2024, Brazil also has a prominent role in this edition of the summit, as it is part of the troika alongside South Africa and the United States, the next country to take over the forum. The troika is the cooperation mechanism among the current, previous, and next presidencies of the group to ensure continuity and preparation for the summit.
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In conducting the work, the South African presidency has listed four priorities for discussion: strengthening resilience and disaster response capacity; ensuring the sustainability of public debt in low-income countries; financing a just energy transition; and promoting the role of critical minerals as drivers of development and economic growth.
The G20 is the main forum for international economic cooperation, created in 1999. This year’s summit will be divided into three thematic sessions and will conclude with a leaders’ declaration. Among the expected advances, the document will outline the principles that must be observed in the extraction and processing of strategic minerals and rare earths.
On Saturday (22) morning, leaders will discuss sustainable economic growth, including development financing, trade, and public debt. In the afternoon, a session will be dedicated to climate change, disaster risk reduction, food security, and the energy transition. On Sunday (23), the discussions will turn to critical minerals, decent work, and artificial intelligence.
On the sidelines of the summit, President Lula is also expected to hold bilateral meetings with the heads of state and officials in attendance, and on Sunday, a meeting is scheduled with the leaders of the India-Brazil-South Africa (IBSA) Dialogue Forum. The trilateral initiative was developed in 2003 to promote cooperation among countries in the Global South.
Mozambique
Lula will then travel to Maputo, the capital of Mozambique, where he will make a working visit on Monday (24). The trip is part of the celebrations marking 50 years of diplomatic relations between the two countries.
Mozambique is the largest beneficiary of Brazilian cooperation funded by the Brazilian Cooperation Agency (ABC) in Africa, with initiatives spanning health, agriculture, education, professional training, and other areas, including structural projects. During the visit, cooperation in fields such as agriculture, entrepreneurship, health, education, and the fight against organized crime will be revisited.
The two countries also want to expand trade and investment. To this end, a business forum is being organized, with an attendance estimated at 150 to 200 Brazilian and Mozambican businesspeople, and panels on agribusiness, industry, innovation, and health.
Lula is expected to return to Brazil on Monday.