Japan sushi tycoon pays record tuna price
4 hours ago
A Japanese sushi boss has paid a record $3.1m (£2.5m) for a
giant tuna at the first new year's auction in Tokyo's new fish market.
Self-styled "Tuna King" Kiyoshi Kimura bought the
278kg (612lbs) bluefin tuna, which is an endangered species.
He spent more than twice the previous record of $1.4m, which
he paid in 2013.
Wholesalers and sushi company owners often pay high prices
for the best fish at the first pre-dawn auction of the new year.
"I bought a good tuna," Mr Kimura told AFP after
the auction.
"The price was higher than originally thought, but I
hope our customers will eat this excellent tuna."
Mr Kimura has been the highest bidder at the new year
auction for seven of the past eight years.
On a normal day a similar sized fish would sell for around
$60,000. Today's record is in part about status - and it creates a lot of
publicity for Mr Kimura and his sushi empire.
But it is also a reflection of the scarcity of large Pacific
bluefin tuna. They are officially listed by the WWF (World Wildlife Fund) as an
endangered species.
In 2018 catches off the coast of Japan were significantly
down, and since the middle of last year prices in Tokyo have climbed by more
than 40%.
The 2019 auction is the first new year sale to take place at
the new fish market on the site of a former gas plant in Toyosu, which opened
in October.
The first auction of the new year sees the best fish command
high prices
The previous site at Tsukiji opened in 1935 and became the
world's biggest fish market and a popular tourist attraction.
However issues including concerns about outdated fire
regulations and hygiene controls prompted the market to be moved to a larger
and more modern site.
The International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red
List of Threatened Species says Atlantic Bluefin are endangered while the
Pacific Bluefin are vulnerable.
Last month Japan announced it would restart commercial
whaling.
The country said it would withdraw from the International
Whaling Commission (IWC), which banned commercial whaling in 1986 after some
species were driven almost to extinction.
Conservation groups have warned that the move will have
serious consequences
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário