Global Times

World’s biggest fish market will be moved, says Tokyo governor

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Tokyo’s famed Tsukiji fish market – the world’s biggest – will be moved to a new location, the city’s top official confirmed Tuesday, after months of delays over concerns about toxic contaminat­ion at the new site.

But city governor Yuriko Koike added a new element to the long- standing relocation plan, saying the current site would eventually be redevelope­d to capitalize on Tsukiji’s globally recognized brand. The present location, a popular tourist attraction that hosts an earlymorni­ng tuna auction, is earmarked for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.

“After that, we will turn it into a new market with a food theme park,” Koike told reporters, adding that redevelopm­ent would happen within five years.

“I think it’s wisest to use both Toyosu and Tsukiji,” she said, referring to the new location.

The government initially planned to sell all or part of the current site near the upscale Ginza shopping district.

Koike, a former TV anchorwoma­n elected last year as Tokyo’s first female governor, did not say when the main market would move to Toyosu, a former gas plant.

Last week, the Yomiuri newspaper reported that the governor was mulling the possibilit­y of opening the new site in May next year.

Plans to uproot the more than 80- year- old market have been in the works for years, with advocates citing the need for upgraded technology as they pointed to Tsukiji’s antiquated refrigerat­ion systems. But those plans were put on ice after Koike said last summer she would postpone the move originally set for late 2016.

The relocation plan was marred by problems, including the discovery that contractor­s had inexplicab­ly failed to fill in a basement at the new site with clean soil as a buffer against undergroun­d pollution. In January results of the final testing showed that levels of toxic materials, including benzene, detected in undergroun­d water at the new site were above nationally set limits.

The previous test showed high levels of mercury inside the basement.

Koike said on Tuesday the market could move as long as the pollution issues were tackled.

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