Tokyo postpones Tsukiji fish market move
Plans to move Tokyo’s Tsukiji fish market – the world’s largest – have been put on ice over fears about toxic contamination at the new facility, as the cost of the move soars.
The megacity’s new governor, Yuriko Koike, said she would postpone the move set for November until at least early next year, as she awaits final groundwater testing results at the new site, a former gas plant.
Plans to uproot the more than 80-year-old market, a popular tourist attraction, have been in the works for years, with advocates citing the need for upgraded technology.
But Koike, a former TV anchorwoman elected end July as the Japanese capital’s first female governor, had pledged to reconsider the plan.
“Needless to say, it is a market that handles fresh food,” Koike told a press conference as she announced the delay.
“The Tokyo metropolitan government, which chiefly runs the market, is responsible for telling the world ‘It’s safe.’”
Critics of the move cite contaminated soil found at the former gas production site. The local government paid a whopping ¥86bil in cleanup costs but Koike said she wants to wait for the results of water testing in January.
Koike would not say if she would consider scrapping the relocation altogether if the test results are bad.
Koike also questioned the ¥588bil in relocation costs, 36% higher than earlier estimates. These costs include relocating the market to a less-central location several kilometres away and building a modern facility about 40% larger with state-of-the-art refrigeration. – AFP Relaxnews
Source : Star2.com
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