Current:Home > reviewsKoi emerges as new source of souring relations between Japan and China -Dynamic Money Growth
Koi emerges as new source of souring relations between Japan and China
View
Date:2025-04-13 14:31:22
TOKYO (AP) — What’s koi got to do with it? Souring relations between Asian rivals Japan and China now seem to be snagged on calm-inducing beauty in spas, museums and gardens. The slippery dispute between Asia’s two biggest economies adds to their spat over Japan’s release into the sea of treated but radioactive water from the tsunami-hit Fukushima nuclear power plant. And it has prompted more questions than answers.
Here’s what you need to know about the fish and their role in the dispute:
WHAT ARE KOI?
Koi are beautifully hued and expensive carp formally called nishikigoi in Japan. The fish, appreciated as “swimming jewels,” represent good luck in life and business. They’re often fixtures of garden ponds for wealthy and influential families in Japan. In recent years, koi have become hugely popular in Asia, with Japan’s koi exports doubling over the past decade to 6.3 billion yen ($43 million) — one-fifth of them shipped to China, the top Japanese koi importer, followed by the United States and Indonesia.
WHAT HAPPEND TO KOI EXPORTS TO CHINA?
Since an outbreak of koi herpes virus in Japan in the 2000s, the country conducts a compulsory quarantine of 7-10 days for all exports, including to China, to make sure the koi are disease-free.
Initially, China had export deals with a total of 15 growers that also provided quarantine, allowing them to skip a separate quarantine process at another facility. But Beijing let many of the contracts expire over the years. Now, China also has not renewed the last remaining pre-export quarantine deal that expired Oct. 30, Japanese officials said.
Not renewing the contract effectively ends China’s import of koi fish from Japan. Fisheries Agency official Satoru Abe, in charge of koi quarantine, said China has not provided any explanation as to why it hasn’t taken the necessary steps to continue koi shipments.
IS THIS RELATED TO FUKUSHIMA DAIICHI’S TREATED WASTEWATER RELEASE?
Despite safety assurances from the International Atomic Energy Agency, Japan’s government and the nuclear plant’s operator, China banned Japanese seafood immediately after the tsunami-hit Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant started discharging treated and diluted radioactive wastewater. There have been concerns internationally about seafood caught from parts of the Pacific where the treated wastewater is being released, but koi are freshwater fish that are ornamental and not typically eaten.
Abe, the koi quarantine official, said Fukushima’s wastewater release is unlikely to be the cause of the koi export stoppage, noting that China allowed Japanese koi in for two months after the water discharge began.
WHAT ARE JAPANESE OFFICIALS SAYING?
Top Japanese officials say Tokyo submitted the necessary documents to facilitate koi export renewals well before the deadline, and will continue diplomatic efforts to resolve the deadlock. Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Minister Ichiro Miyashita told reporters, “Nishikigoi is culture, and fundamentally different from seafood, and I believe it is not related” to the Fukushima Daiichi treated water discharge. “But China has taken scientifically groundless measures, and we need to speak up and call for a withdrawal of practices that lack rationality and distort trade.”
Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno said Japan will continue approaching Chinese authorities about taking necessary steps to resume the koi trade.
WHAT ELSE IS CAUSING TENSION BETWEEN JAPAN AND CHINA?
The two countries have a decadeslong dispute over a cluster of East China Sea islands that Japan controls and calls Senkaku, which Beijing also claims and calls the Diaoyu. Beijing rotates a set of four coast guard boats that routinely violate the Japanese-claimed water around the islands, adding tension with Japanese coast guard patrol vessels and fishing boats.
Tokyo considers China to be a major security threat in the region and is expanding its defense partnerships with other Indo-Pacific nations in addition to its only treaty ally, the United States. Tokyo is also pushing for a military buildup under the new national security strategy that calls for counterstrike capability by long-range missiles in a break from Japan’s postwar self-defense-only principle.
veryGood! (37878)
Related
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- David Beckham talks family, Victoria doc and how Leonardo DiCaprio helped him win an Emmy
- Horoscopes Today, September 20, 2024
- It was unique debut season for 212 MLB players during pandemic-altered 2020
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Wisconsin Supreme Court agrees to decide whether Robert F. Kennedy Jr. stays on ballot
- Robinson will not appear at Trump’s North Carolina rally after report on alleged online comments
- DNA match leads to arrest in 1988 cold case killing of Boston woman Karen Taylor
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- Georgia State Election Board approves rule requiring hand count of ballots
Ranking
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Foster family pleads guilty to abusing children who had been tortured by parents
- Poll shows young men in the US are more at risk for gambling addiction than the general population
- A strike by Boeing factory workers shows no signs of ending after its first week
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Meet the 'golden retriever' of pet reptiles, the bearded dragon
- Conor McGregor, who hasn't fought since 2021, addresses his status, UFC return
- Youngest NFL players: Jets RB Braelon Allen tops list for 2024
Recommendation
Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
Florida deputy accidentally shoots and kills his girlfriend, officials say
Poll shows young men in the US are more at risk for gambling addiction than the general population
DNA match leads to arrest in 1988 cold case killing of Boston woman Karen Taylor
Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
Foster family pleads guilty to abusing children who had been tortured by parents
US stops hazardous waste shipments to Michigan from Ohio after court decision
Michigan deputy jumps into action to save 63-year-old man in medical emergency: Video