III
118TH CONGRESS
1ST SESSION
S. CON. RES. 9
Expressing the sense of Congress that there is a climate emergency which
demands a massive-scale mobilization to halt, reverse, and address its
consequences and causes.
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
APRIL 27, 2023
Mr. SANDERS (for himself, Ms. WARREN, Mr. MERKLEY, Mr. MARKEY, Mr.
BOOKER, and Mr. WELCH) submitted the following concurrent resolution;
which was referred to the Committee on Environment and Public Works
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
Expressing the sense of Congress that there is a climate
emergency which demands a massive-scale mobilization
to halt, reverse, and address its consequences and causes.
Whereas the 8 warmest years on record have now occurred
since 2014, with 2016 as the hottest year recorded, and
each of the past 4 decades have been warmer than the
one preceding;
Whereas global atmospheric concentrations of the primary
global warming pollutant, carbon dioxide—
(1) have increased, primarily due to human activi-
ties, including the burning of fossil fuels and deforest-
ation, by 40 percent since preindustrial times, from 280
parts per million to 415 parts per million;
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(2) are rising at a rate of 2 to 3 parts per million
annually; and
(3) must be reduced to not more than 350 parts per
million, and likely lower, ‘‘if humanity wishes to preserve
a planet similar to that on which civilization developed
and to which life on Earth is adapted’’, according to
former National Aeronautics and Space Administration
climatologist Dr. James Hansen;
Whereas global atmospheric concentrations of other global
warming pollutants, including methane, nitrous oxide,
and hydrofluorocarbons, have also increased substantially
since preindustrial times, primarily due to human activi-
ties, including the burning of fossil fuels;
Whereas climate science and observations of climate change
impacts, including ocean warming, ocean acidification,
floods, droughts, wildfires, and extreme weather, dem-
onstrate that a global rise in concentrations of global
warming pollutants is already having dangerous impacts
on human populations and the environment;
Whereas, with the current 1.1 degrees Celsius of warming
above preindustrial levels, the National Oceanic and At-
mospheric Administration finds that climate change is al-
ready increasing the frequency of extreme weather and
other climate-related disasters, including drought, wild-
fire, and storms that include precipitation;
Whereas the overall costs of these disasters for the United
States in 2022 was roughly $165,000,000,000, the third
highest recorded total costs, including 18 separate weath-
er
and
climate
disasters
which
cost
at
least
$1,000,000,000 each and caused at least 474 direct or
indirect known fatalities;
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Whereas the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
finds that there are wide-ranging, acute, and fatal public
health consequences from climate change that impact
communities across the United States;
Whereas, according to the National Climate and Health As-
sessment of the United States Global Change Research
Program, climate change is a significant threat to the
health of the people of the United States, leading to in-
creased—
(1) temperature-related deaths and illnesses;
(2) air quality impacts;
(3) extreme weather events;
(4) numbers of vector-borne diseases;
(5) waterborne illnesses;
(6) food safety, nutrition, and distribution complica-
tions; and
(7) mental health and well-being concerns;
Whereas environmental and public health threats from cli-
mate change and climate disasters are not randomly dis-
tributed and disproportionately affect low-income commu-
nities and communities of color;
Whereas the consequences of climate change are felt most se-
verely by frontline communities and endanger populations
made especially vulnerable by existing exposure to ex-
treme weather events, such as children, the elderly, and
individuals with pre-existing disabilities and health condi-
tions;
Whereas individuals and families on the frontlines of climate
change across the United States, including territories, liv-
ing with income inequality and poverty, institutional rac-
ism, inequity on the basis of gender and sexual orienta-
tion, poor infrastructure, and lack of access to health
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care, housing, clean water, and food security are often in
close proximity to environmental stressors or sources of
pollution, particularly communities of color, indigenous
communities, and low-income communities, which—
(1) are often the first exposed to the impacts of cli-
mate change;
(2) experience outsized risk because of the close
proximity of the community to environmental hazards
and stressors, in addition to collocation with waste and
other sources of pollution; and
(3) have the fewest resources to mitigate those im-
pacts or to relocate, which will exacerbate preexisting
challenges;
Whereas climate change holds grave and immediate con-
sequences not just for the population of the United
States, including territories, but for communities across
the world, particularly those communities in the Global
South on the frontlines of the climate crisis that are at
risk of forced displacement;
Whereas the Department of State, the Department of De-
fense, and the intelligence community have identified cli-
mate change as a threat to national security, and the De-
partment of Homeland Security views climate change as
a top national security risk;
Whereas the climatic changes resulting from global warming
above 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels, in-
cluding changes resulting from global warming of more
than 2 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels, are pro-
jected to result in irreversible, catastrophic changes to
public health, livelihoods, quality of life, food security,
water supplies, human security, and economic growth;
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Whereas, even with global warming up to 1.5 degrees Celsius
above preindustrial levels, the planet is projected to expe-
rience—
(1) a significant rise in sea levels;
(2) extraordinary loss of biodiversity; and
(3) intensifying droughts, floods, wildfires, and other
extreme weather events;
Whereas, according to climate scientists, addressing the cli-
mate emergency will require a just phase-out of the use
of oil, gas, and coal in order to keep the carbon that is
the primary constituent of fossil fuels in the ground and
out of the atmosphere;
Whereas, in 2022, some of the largest oil and gas companies
in the world reported record annual profits and rewarded
shareholders with buybacks while knowingly exacerbating
the ongoing climate crisis;
Whereas the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Cli-
mate Change has determined that limiting warming
through emissions reduction and carbon sequestration
will require rapid and immediate acceleration and pro-
liferation of ‘‘far-reaching, multilevel, and cross-sectoral
climate mitigation’’ and ‘‘transitions in energy, land,
urban and rural infrastructure (including transport and
buildings), and industrial systems’’;
Whereas, in August 2022, the United States took its single
most aggressive action to tackle the climate crisis and
transition to create renewable energy solutions when Pub-
lic Law 117–169 (commonly known as the Inflation Re-
duction Act of 2022 and referred to in this preamble as
the ‘‘IRA’’) was signed into law by President Biden;
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Whereas the IRA includes $369,000,000,000 for energy secu-
rity and climate change, including investments in dis-
advantaged communities, projects that repurpose retired
fossil fuel infrastructure and employ displaced workers,
and setting the United States on course for a renewable
energy transition as soon as possible;
Whereas the IRA creates new environmental justice block
grants, establishes renewable energy financing, provides
funding for Tribal communities to boost climate resil-
ience, makes it more affordable to purchase energy effi-
cient and electric appliances, incentivizes domestic manu-
facturing of renewable energy technologies, and will boost
the renewable energy economy;
Whereas the passage of the IRA is projected to reduce global
warming emissions in the United States between 31 per-
cent to 44 percent below 2005 levels by 2030;
Whereas the United Nations Environment Programme still
found in October 2022 that the existing commitments
made in the Nationally Determined Contributions since
the 2015 Paris Climate Conference are insufficient to
limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius;
Whereas urgent governmental action is still required to ad-
dress the severe environmental, economic, social, public
health, and national security threats posed by the climate
crisis;
Whereas the massive scope and scale of action necessary to
stabilize the climate will continue to require unprece-
dented levels of public awareness, engagement, and delib-
eration to develop and implement effective, just, and eq-
uitable policies to address the climate crisis;
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Whereas the United States has a proud history of collabo-
rative, constructive, massive-scale Federal mobilizations
of resources and labor in order to solve great challenges,
such as the Interstate Highway System, the Apollo 11
moon landing, Reconstruction, the New Deal, and World
War II;
Whereas the Constitution of the United States protects the
fundamental rights to life, liberty, property, and equal
protection of the laws, and a climate system capable of
sustaining human life is fundamental to a free and or-
dered society and the preservation of those fundamental
rights;
Whereas 18 national governments across the world and the
European Union have declared a climate emergency, as
well as the State of Hawaii and more than 190 cities,
counties, and local jurisdictions in the United States;
Whereas the United States maintains existing resources and
international commitments for bilateral and multilateral
assistance to support economically emerging countries,
including the Green Climate Fund, the Clean Technology
Fund, the Adaptation Fund, the Least Developed Coun-
tries Fund, and the International Sustainable Land-
scapes programs, which should be supported with robust
funding levels;
Whereas President Biden also maintains existing Executive
authority under the National Environmental Policy Act
of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), the Mineral Leasing
Act (30 U.S.C. 181 et seq.), the Outer Continental Shelf
Lands Act (43 U.S.C. 1331 et seq.), the Naval Petro-
leum Reserves Production Act of 1976 (42 U.S.C. 6501
et seq.), the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (33
U.S.C. 1251 et seq.), the various Acts concerning rivers
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and harbors, the Natural Gas Act (15 U.S.C. 717 et
seq.), and the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.)
that can be used to address the ongoing climate crisis;
Whereas, under these existing authorities, the President can
phase down the rate of fossil fuel production on Federal
lands and in Federal waters, limit gas exports, halt ap-
proval of new fossil fuel infrastructure projects, establish
national limits for greenhouse gases, and decarbonize
transportation;
Whereas a national climate emergency declaration would fur-
ther unlock the broad powers of the National Emer-
gencies Act (50 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.), the Defense Pro-
duction Act of 1950 (50 U.S.C. 4501 et seq.), and the
Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency As-
sistance Act (42 U.S.C. 5121 et seq.);
Whereas such a declaration can be used to further reduce
greenhouse gas emissions, address environmental injus-
tice, invest in large scale mitigation and resiliency
projects, create additional jobs with family-sustaining
wages and benefits, and ensure a just transition to a re-
newable energy economy;
Whereas such a declaration will allow the United States to
further mobilize domestic industry, ramp up domestic
manufacturing of renewable energy technologies, and de-
ploy resilient energy infrastructure;
Whereas such a declaration can also reinstate the ban on
crude oil exports, suspend offshore fossil fuel leases, curb
fossil fuel imports, and stop the hundreds of billions of
dollars in investments in fossil fuel projects abroad while
taking additional steps toward strengthening our emer-
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gency preparedness for thousands of high-risk commu-
nities;
Whereas such a declaration necessitates the adoption of poli-
cies and processes rooted in principles of racial equity,
self-determination, and democracy, as well as the funda-
mental human rights of all people to clean air and water,
healthy food, and adequate land, education, and shelter,
as promulgated in the 1991 Principles of Environmental
Justice;
Whereas frontline communities, Tribal governments and com-
munities, people of color, and labor unions must be equi-
tably and actively engaged in a national climate emer-
gency declaration, in such a way that aligns with the
1996 Jemez Principles of Democratic Organizing, and
prioritized through local climate mitigation and adapta-
tion planning, policy, and program delivery so that work-
ers in the United States, and the communities of those
workers, are guaranteed a strong, viable economic future;
and
Whereas the United States has an obligation, as a primary
driver of accelerated climate change, to mobilize at emer-
gency speed to ensure the safest climate and environment
possible, not just for communities of the United States
but for communities across the world, particularly those
on the frontlines of the climate crisis which have least
contributed to the crisis, and to account for global and
community impacts of any actions the United States
[Text truncated for display. Full text available on Congress.gov.]