New Delhi will host the first international offshoot of Russia’s flagship industrial exhibition this September, as Moscow and New Delhi deepen economic ties ahead of the BRICS leaders’ summit.
INNOPROM India 2026 will run September 9–11 at the Bharat Mandapam exhibition and convention complex in New Delhi — marking the first time the INNOPROM brand has been staged outside Russia. The timing is deliberate: the exhibition wraps up just one day before the XVIII BRICS Summit opens in the Indian capital on September 12–13, positioning the trade event to capture the diplomatic spotlight and momentum of the broader gathering.
A High-Level Push for Industrial Cooperation
The Russian delegation will be led by First Deputy Prime Minister Denis Manturov, underscoring the political weight Moscow is placing on the event. Russia’s Ministry of Industry and Trade and India’s Ministry of Commerce and Industry are the lead organizers, with the Formika Group serving as exhibition operator. The Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) will coordinate participation from Indian companies, industry associations, and regional governments.
The centerpiece of the event will be a joint Russian-Indian exposition spanning roughly 10,000 square meters in Pavilion No. 1 — a scale that signals both countries’ ambitions for the show.
Organizers are inviting Russian industrial and technology companies, development institutions, and sector associations to take part, framing the exhibition as a launchpad for B2B contacts with major Indian conglomerates and a platform for advancing joint industrial initiatives across the BRICS space.
Who’s Expected to Attend
On the Russian side, delegations are expected from the Ministry of Industry and Trade, leading industrial and trading companies, development and financial institutions, and Russian regions presenting collective exhibits. India’s delegation will include the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, CII, major industrial holdings and state-owned enterprises, EPC contractors, sector associations, and representatives from Indian states and union territories.
Business Program Highlights
The exhibition’s business agenda is packed with sector-specific sessions, roundtables, and targeted B2B and B2G negotiations — including matchmaking through a dedicated digital platform. There will also be presentations of investment, technology, and infrastructure projects, buyer programs pairing Russian companies with Indian exporters, a national exposition of Indian manufacturers, and region-to-region meetings between Russian constituent territories and Indian states.
The marquee event is a closed-door meeting of top business leaders, jointly organized by the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs (RSPP) and CII. This invitation-only gathering will bring together senior executives from leading Russian and Indian companies to discuss bilateral economic cooperation — including groundwork for a potential free trade agreement between India and the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU).
Sectors on the Agenda
The business program will span a wide sweep of industries: industrial and technological cooperation and localization of production, digital transformation and AI, electronics and microelectronics, energy and renewables, civil aviation and drones, space and satellite systems, metallurgy and critical minerals, chemicals and fertilizers, pharmaceuticals and healthcare technology, transport engineering and shipbuilding, smart-city construction, logistics and international transport corridors, financial and insurance services, retail and e-commerce, and small and medium enterprise development.
The free trade discussions alone suggest this exhibition is meant to be a working session, not just a showcase — with implications reaching well beyond the show floor in New Delhi.

