India, having hosted CoP-11 to the Convention on Biodiversity (CBD) in Hyderabad in October 2012, is currently the President of CoP till CoP-12 to be held in Pyeongchang, South Korea in October this year.
Making a suo motu statement in Parliament, Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar said the Protocol on access and benefit sharing will enter into force on 90th day -- October 12, 2014.
He said facilitating early entry into force of this landmark international treaty has been a priority of India as CoP president.
"I had also made a statement at the UN Environment Assembly in Nairobi on June 26 urging countries to ratify the Protocol soon. I also met my couterparts of concerned countries for early ratification, on the sidelines of the Nairobi meeting," Javadekar said.
He said ratification of the Nagoya Protocol by 51 parties to the CBD is also a "major step towards achieving the first of the global Aichi Biodiversity Targets (Target 16 that by 2015, the Nagoya Protocol is in force and operational), and that too more than a year before its target date, which is quite remarkable."