Business World

Tokyo cuts ribbon on new fish market to replace Tsukiji

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TOKYO — Tokyo’s mayor insisted Thursday that the city’s new fish market would be safe, as she inaugurate­d a “cutting-edge” facility to replace the world-famous Tsukiji, which closes next month.

“Toyosu market is safe. I want to say that” to all the wholesaler­s, buyers and consumers, said Yuriko Koike, referring to the new complex, located on a former gas plant further east of Tsukiji.

The new market will be “cutting-edge” with “highly advanced hygiene control,” pledged Ms. Koike.

The 83-year-old Tsukiji had come under fire for its old-fashioned buildings and safety standards.

Plans to move the market have been in the works for years, and the relocation was originally scheduled for 2016.

But myriad delays set back the timeline, including the discovery of soil contaminat­ion at Toyosu, sparking safety fears at the new location.

Hiroyasu Ito, head of the Tsukiji market associatio­n who also attended the event, said he was “deeply moved.”

“About half a century has passed” since the issues at Tsukiji market first surfaced, Mr. Ito said.

“Finally we’re here. We can enter this (Toyosu) market with our heads held high.”

Tsukiji is the world’s biggest fish market and a popular tourist attraction in an area packed with restaurant­s and shops.

It opened in 1935 and is famed for its pre-dawn tuna auctions, with one fish going for more than $320,000 at the market’s final New Year’s auction last year.

Toyosu will officially throw open its doors on October 11.

 ?? AFP ?? TOKYO Governor Yuriko Koike visits Toyosu fish market prior to the opening ceremony in Tokyo on Sept. 13 which will officially open next month. An Aug. 29 photo shows the new Toyosu fish market building in Tokyo. After a fabled 83-year history, the world’s biggest fish market, which is also a huge tourist magnet for its pre-dawn tuna auctions, will move to a brand-new facility in Toyosu, about 2.3 kilometers (1.4 miles) away on the waterfront.
AFP TOKYO Governor Yuriko Koike visits Toyosu fish market prior to the opening ceremony in Tokyo on Sept. 13 which will officially open next month. An Aug. 29 photo shows the new Toyosu fish market building in Tokyo. After a fabled 83-year history, the world’s biggest fish market, which is also a huge tourist magnet for its pre-dawn tuna auctions, will move to a brand-new facility in Toyosu, about 2.3 kilometers (1.4 miles) away on the waterfront.
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