Special Report: Fight against Global
Warming
LOS ANGELES, Feb. 13
(Xinhua) -- California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and visiting Mexican
President Felipe Calderon pledged on Wednesday to join hands in fighting climate
change.
During Calderon's visit to California, officials from
both sides signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to team up in the fight
against climate change, to protect the environment and conserve precious natural
resources.
"It is an agreement between Mexico and California to
work cooperatively on ways to enhance policies for environmental protection and
sustainable natural resources," Schwarzenegger said in a statement.
The agreement calls for a joint action plan to be
developed in the future and implemented by the signing agencies.
Both sides agreed that Schwarzenegger will chair the
26th Annual Border Governors' Conference in Los Angeles in August. The
conference will be attended by governors from Arizona, New Mexico and Texas on
the U.S. side and governors from Baja California, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo
Leon, Sonora and Tamaulipas on the Mexican side, the statement said.
The meeting will address many issues impacting states
on both sides of the U.S./Mexico border, including agriculture, security,
economic development, education, energy, environment, health and tourism, said
the statement.
"I am encouraged that President Calderon is on the
same page with California on many issues, such as increasing trade, creating
more jobs, improving our aging infrastructures and improving the quality of life
for our people," Schwarzenegger said.
Mexico accounts for approximately 19.6 billion
dollars in export trade annually from California. Since 2002, California's
agricultural exports to Mexico have nearly doubled in value, making it one of
the state's fastest growing export markets. California's agricultural exports to
Mexico represent an estimated 5 percent of the total U.S. agricultural exports
to this market.