 Thank you very much, and I want to congratulate everybody who's in this room, because the reason why all of you work here is because you want to see a cleaner, better future for all of us and for everybody and for generations to come. I think it's important for me to point out that I'm one of the few engineers in the lab office. I'm actually an electrical engineer, and I'm very, very proud of that. So because of that, I've been in August for 17 years. My colleagues always throw me in the front line when it comes to energy issues. And I'm very, very glad to do that. When I was a council member for 10 years through the city of Los Angeles, I helped and made sure that I drove the largest electrical and water tower district in the country to have a renewable portfolio standard. And we were horribly dependent on the least cleanest energy in the world. And now we have a little drastically into a much cleaner energy. And it's really important for us to understand that it's really the public that demanded that. And luckily for me, I had first of four tables, and I was able to do that on the side of our state and the country. And now that I'm in Congress, this is not only an actual issue, it's a global issue. But with all the respect, one thing that we should understand is American citizens. Even in the worst of the times, we are the consumer jargon on the map. Which means that if every other country does business with us, every other country looks at us, every other country tries to emulate us, and every other country wants to sell us. But the thing that we have still in this country, like no other country on the planet, is we are still the big capital of the world. And therefore when it comes to clean energy, again, it takes in our democracy of people to demand cleaner and cleaner energy. And please continue to do that. But it's important that we have elected officials to understand how important that is. One of the things that I want to point out to you is that this elected official understands that I understand that the cleanest energy is the energy that we don't use. So it's important for us to understand that we are going to be the driver. The United States of America is going to be the driver for innovation, going to be the driver for products, going to be the driver for consumption, between our energy. Yet at the same time, we also need to be the drivers of making sure that we use less and less energy per capita. Very proud to say that the city of Los Angeles over the last 20 years of the day we're using the same amount of megawatts today as we did 20 years ago, even though we had many more people, many more physicists, and much more activity but we're not getting the same time per capita basis for consuming less energy. But yet that should be also on our mind as well as making sure that we create cleaner energy and that we drive the technology so that we can invite industry, as was mentioned earlier, to invest, to invest in cleaner energy. One of the things that I'd also like to say when it comes to this particular caucus and members of Congress by partisan is that this is, in my opinion, what a Sierra Club means to the Chamber of Commerce and they walk toward each other, not in animus, but in friendship and collaboration and shake hands and say, on this one, brothers and sisters, we are together. So congratulations to all of you for being part of this. Thank you very much.