* In Mexico, all political parties in Parliament recently agreed to come together to back a comprehensive climate change law.
* South Korea is in the process of passing legislation for an emissions trading scheme which would be binding by 2015 and covers those facilities producing more than 25,000 tonnes of CO2 per year.
* Australia's carbon tax bill will become law in 2012.
* Germany has outlined a radical new energy plan in response to the Fukushima disaster, including a massive increase in renewable energy investment.
Adoption of such landmark initiatives is - with a few notable exceptions - largely bipartisan. One key reason for this encouraging move towards bipartisanship is that many legislators increasingly recognise the positive co-benefits of climate change legislation which range from energy efficiency and increased energy security to the reduction of air pollution.
This, in turn, symbolises a crucial shift which is a key part of the wider change. Previously, the political debate on climate change has been largely framed around the narrative of sharing a global burden - with governments, naturally, trying to minimise their share. Now, legislators increasingly view the issue as one of national self-interest, with each nation trying to maximise the benefits of climate change legislation. Indeed, those countries with strong national legislation are already attracting most inward investment on low-carbon technologies because there is business certainty (rather than high regulatory risk) for such investments.
Encouraging as this shift is, it is as yet insufficient to avoid dangerous climate change. Nonetheless, the national legal and policy frameworks to measure, report, verify and manage carbon that are now being created could potentially be ratcheted up, especially as governments experience the benefits of lower energy use, reduced costs, improved competitiveness, and greater energy security.
As this happens, the goal must be to translate such progress into a comprehensive, global deal brokered by the UN to build on the Kyoto Protocol's first commitment period which expires at the end of 2012.
Such a deal - as opposed to the incremental one agreed at Cancun last December - will probably only be possible when even more countries are committed to taking action on climate change because it is to their advantage rather than out of perceived altruism.
Given this outlook, a key danger is that some countries might lower their long-term ambition and harden their stances with other countries. At a time when, as we have argued, the climate change debate is undergoing such profound change, this would be ill-timed. Indeed, the forthcoming UN summit is exactly the right time for countries to invest more in climate diplomacy and practical international co-operation to help expedite the creation of conditions on the ground that will enable a comprehensive global treaty to be reached in future.
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About GLOBE: www.globeinternational.info
John Gummer, Lord Deben, is president of the Global Legislators Organisation (Globe) and a former UK Secretary of State for the Environment; John Prescott, Lord Prescott, is a member of Globe, a former UK Deputy PM and Europe's lead negotiator at Kyoto; Michael Jay, Lord Jay, is vice-president of Globe and a former head of the UK Diplomatic Service.