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Lula says Brazil never to be full member of OPEC+, only observer

Dec 3 (Reuters) – Brazil will never join the OPEC+ group of oil-producing nations as a full member and instead only seeks to participate as an observer, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said on Sunday.
Lula’s remarks to reporters at the U.N. COP28 climate summit in Dubai clarified his statements a day earlier that Brazil would “participate” in OPEC+.
“Brazil should join OPEC+, it could be an observer,” Lula said on Sunday. “Brazil will never be a full member of OPEC, because we don’t want to be. What we want is to influence.”
Environmentalists in Brazil and abroad have criticized Lula’s administration for pitching itself as a climate leader thanks to its success in reining in deforestation in the Amazon rainforest, while still moving ahead with plans to drill massive offshore oil finds.
Emissions from burning fossil fuels like oil and coal are considered the principle cause of climate change.
Lula said that it is important for Brazil to participate in OPEC+ in order to advocate that countries rich from oil proceeds invest some of that money in helping poor developing countries in Africa and Latin America to invest in renewable energy such as solar and wind.
“I think that in participating this way, we will convince people that a part of the money made from oil should be invested for us to nullify oil, creating alternatives,” Lula said. “There is no contradiction.”
Brazil’s state-run petroleum company Petrobras (PETR4.SA) will not give up exploring for oil because fossil fuels will continue to be a part of the global economy for some time to come, Lula said. Petrobras will continue to do what it needs to do to help Brazil grow, but will expand beyond just oil to all energy, Lula added.
On Saturday, the president said Brazil would use its influence in OPEC+
Lula left the COP28 summit on Sunday, traveling to Berlin for the first Brazil-German government talks in eight years.
Reporting by Jake Spring in São Paulo; Editing by Will Dunham
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Thomson Reuters
Jake Spring reports primarily on forests, climate diplomacy, carbon markets and climate science. Based in Brazil, his investigative reporting on destruction of the Amazon rainforest under ex-President Jair Bolsonaro won 2021 Best Reporting in Latin America from the Overseas Press Club of America (https://opcofamerica.org/Awardarchive/the-robert-spiers-benjamin-award-2021/). His beat reporting on Brazil’s environmental destruction won a Covering Climate Now award and was honored by the Society of Environmental Journalists. He joined Reuters in 2014 in China, where he previously worked as editor-in-chief of China Economic Review. He is fluent in Mandarin Chinese and Brazilian Portuguese.

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