The Borneo Post

Fukushima looks to top-tier sake to beat stigma, lift biz

- January 14, 2018 By Mashahiro Hidaka & Yuko Takeo

IN AN area of Japan still devastated by a nuclear disaster, sake is giving cause for hope.

For the past five years, the sake brewers of Fukushima, on a twodecade quest to develop premium products, have captured the most gold medals in a key national competitio­n and have won numerous internatio­nal awards. Drinkers worldwide have noticed the rising quality, with the result that sake exports from Fukushima have more than doubled since 2012.

Now the prefectura­l government and local brewers are promoting their success. The hope is that Fukushima’s championsh­ip sake — made from local rice and water — will serve as a symbol of the safety of local agricultur­al and fishery products and of the prospects for the prefecture’s broader revival.

“If we can show that Fukushima makes the best sake in the world, surely we can overcome the stigma,” said Hiroyuki Karahashi, the president of Homare Sake Brewery Co., which won first place in the sake category at the 2015 London Internatio­nal Wine Challenge.

Fukushima’s challenge is enormous. The earthquake, tsunami and nuclear meltdown that devastated the region in March 2011 killed 4,000 people in Fukushima alone. Many of the 50,000 people forced to leave their homes have no plans to return. The local economy has been largely propped up by reconstruc­tion spending the years since, but that spending is expected to fall in the years to come.

Meanwhile, local companies still struggle with lingering public fears of radiation contaminat­ion. Only around 30 per cent of businesses in the important fisheries and food processing sectors have seen their sales rise to pre-disaster levels, according to the nation’s reconstruc­tion agency.

All agricultur­al products from Fukushima — including every bag of rice — are tested for radiation using internatio­nally accepted standards before shipment. Since 2015, no rice has registered radiation above the safety level, national broadcaste­r NHK has reported.

Still, 55 countries have some kind of restrictio­n or requiremen­t for additional documentat­ion on imports of Fukushima products, according to Japan’s Foreign Affairs Ministry.

Takahiro Ichimura, a director of trade promotion at the Fukushima Prefectura­l Government, who’s spearheadi­ng efforts on the sake promotion efforts, said the importance of ingredient­s in the sake should help change people’s perception of Fukushima.

“Water and rice are crucial,” he said. “Once Fukushima’s sake gains broader recognitio­n and more people drink it, we think that overall appreciati­on for Fukushima should also increase.”

The surge in sake exports follows a plunge in consumptio­n in Japan — by half over the past 20 years, as consumers broadened their tastes.

Fukushima is trying to increase sales in the US and Europe, including with promotiona­l tours, Ichimura said. It has allocated 100 million yen (RM3.52 million) this fiscal year to promote local sake at events in major cities in Japan and abroad, as well as at trade shows and promotiona­l websites, in a campaign run by a private public relations agency. It plans to increase the budget 10 per cent next year.

One event near Shimbashi station, a Tokyo business area teeming with salarymen, drew 30,000 people this year, up from 20,000 last year, according to the prefecture.

Behind the brewers’ recent success lies a shift in strategy toward premium products. Twenty years ago many of Fukushima’s breweries produced cheap sake that included distilled alcohol, earning them a poor reputation in Japan’s northeast, historical­ly a major sakeproduc­ing region.

The prefectura­l sake academy, establishe­d in 1992, changed the game. The various breweries’ heirs came together there to pool their secret brewing techniques, raising the bar for the entire prefecture. At one three-century old brewery, the focus is now on using organic rice, while at another an older, more timeconsum­ing technique to create yeast mash — a key ingredient — is being revived to improve flavour.

To be sure, changing Fukushima’s image will be a struggle. While Japan’s latest national budget included billions of yen for the purpose, 13 per cent of Japanese respondent­s to a recent survey said they would hesitate before buying produce from Fukushima due to worries about radiation. Ichimura remains optimistic. “Fukushima’s sake is a symbol of its recovery,” he said. “It’s managed to achieve results despite the odds. My hope is that people will see this, and see how Fukushima is moving forward.” — Bloomberg

If we can show that Fukushima makes the best sake in the world, surely we can overcome the stigma. – Hiroyuki Karahashi, president of Homare Sake Brewery Co

 ??  ?? An employee pours a bottle of Homare Sake Brewery Co. Aizu Homare sake into a cup at the company’s tasting room in Kitakata, Japan, on Nov 30, 2017. — WP Bloomberg photo by Tomohiro Ohsumi.
An employee pours a bottle of Homare Sake Brewery Co. Aizu Homare sake into a cup at the company’s tasting room in Kitakata, Japan, on Nov 30, 2017. — WP Bloomberg photo by Tomohiro Ohsumi.

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