Washington, DC - U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), Chairman of the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works, today joined with 14 of her Senate colleagues, including Majority Leader Harry Reid (D - NV), to send a letter to the Executive Secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), Mr. Yvo de Boer. The letter details recent developments in Congress on combating global warming and urges conference participants to take encouragement in these actions as they move forward.

The text of the letter is as follows, and a pdf version is attached:

December 10, 2007

Mr. Yvo de Boer
Executive Secretary
Climate Change Secretariat (UNFCCC)
P.O. Box 260 124
53153 Bonn, Germany

Dear Mr. de Boer:

High level ministerial meetings will begin shortly at the United Nations Climate Change Conference that is taking place in Bali, Indonesia. We share your hope that these meetings will produce a roadmap for a new international agreement to curb manmade global climate change. Like you, we believe it is important that the new agreement enter into force before the end of 2012, when the Kyoto Protocol will cease requiring additional reductions in its members' greenhouse gas emissions.

We feel that forestalling catastrophic global climate change requires the United States to begin emerging now as a leading participant in the post 2012 international effort to reduce global warming pollution worldwide. Fortunately, we can report to you and the conference delegates in Bali that the federal government in Washington is finally moving forward on global warming policy.

On December 5, the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee voted to send the Lieberman Warner Climate Security Act to the full Senate for consideration. This historic vote signals a rapidly growing commitment, in Congress and across America, to cap the nation's greenhouse gas emissions and steadily reduce that cap. The bill has grown stronger at each step of the legislative process, and we look forward to its consideration by the full Senate early next year.

The Congress is also working on an Energy Bill that would make a significant contribution toward reducing the United States' carbon footprint. Action has also been taken to support the science of climate change in the U.S. Senate Commerce Committee.

The building momentum for strong, effective action on global warming is also supported by progress in the United States outside the federal government. From coast to coast, U.S. cities, states and counties are adopting aggressive goals and plans for dealing with their own greenhouse emissions. Coalitions of America's largest corporations are calling for mandatory cuts and a program to put a market price on carbon emissions. And diverse constituencies from municipal officials to public health experts to religious leaders are calling on the federal government to act now.

As the participants in the Bali discussions consider the future of the global effort to avoid dangerous climate change, we urge you all to take encouragement from these recent developments in our country. Change is happening now, and even bigger changes are on the horizon.

Sincerely,

HARRY REID                               BARBARA BOXER

JOSEPH LIEBERMAN                 JOHN KERRY

JOSEPH BIDEN                           CHRISTOPHER DODD

JEFF BINGAMAN                       BILL NELSON

FRANK LAUTENBERG              JACK REED

BERNARD SANDERS                 AMY KLOBUCHAR

BENJAMIN CARDIN                  SHERROD BROWN

CHUCK SCHUMER

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