--manage our federal lands informed by local stakeholders including communities and citizens, local governments, environmentalists, sportsmen, and local businesses
--create better partnerships between federal agencies, state governments, and local interests to ensure the continued use and economic viability of natural resources
--allocate enough resources to land and park agencies so they have the budgets needed to implement and enforce rules and protect resources
--protect habitats critical to the survival of the wildlife and fish species that are so vital to the success of local economies
--reduce greenhouse gas emissions
--restore the heat balance in the atmosphere
--return the weather to normal patterns
--develop and expand the new energy economy based on renewable fuels, energy efficiency and natural gas
--develop programs to lower carbon emissions that:
(1) are market-based,
(2) are fair to all stakeholders,
(3) are based in science,
(4) strongly encourage state and local innovation and take advantage of regional strengths, and
(5) provide incentives for other countries to participate in similar reform
--reestablish global leadership and demonstrate its commitment to reducing its carbon emissions to the international community by joining global discussions and negotiating a new international agreement on carbon emissions
--adapt to the new reality of a world impacted by global climate change