logo
Narita Airport begins full-scale work on expansion, including third runway

Narita Airport begins full-scale work on expansion, including third runway

NHK25-05-2025
A ceremony has been held at Narita Airport, near Tokyo, to mark the start of full-scale construction work to extend one of the current runways and build a third one.
Seventy people, including transport ministry officials and the governor of Chiba Prefecture, attended Sunday's event held by Narita International Airport Corporation.
The company plans to extend the 2,500-meter-long B Runway to 3,500 meters, and to build a new 3,500-meter C Runway to raise the number of takeoffs and landings to 500,000 per year -- about 1.7 times the current level. It aims to complete the project by the end of March 2029.
The preparatory work that has already been carried out includes the construction of an underground tunnel for the roads on the site. Full-scale construction, including ground improvement work and landscaping, has begun at the site where the third runway will be built.
The head of Narita International Airport Corporation, Tamura Akihiko, said he believes the expansion will create a new future for the area and that his firm will carry out the work safely and smoothly with the local community's understanding.
The company says it has already secured 900 of the approximately 1,100 hectares of land needed for the project, and is working with local municipalities to acquire more.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fujifilm raises camera and lens prices in the U.S. due to tariffs
Fujifilm raises camera and lens prices in the U.S. due to tariffs

Japan Times

time16 minutes ago

  • Japan Times

Fujifilm raises camera and lens prices in the U.S. due to tariffs

Fujifilm Holdings raised U.S. prices for the majority of its digital cameras and lenses on Friday, in some cases by hundreds of dollars, as President Donald Trump's tariffs continue to reverberate across the consumer tech industry. Many of the company's camera bodies, which are popular with creators and professionals on account of their film simulations and unique color rendering, are now $200 more expensive than they were on Thursday evening. For instance, Fujifilm's premier consumer camera, the X-T5, sold for $1,699 early last week but now costs $1,899, a 12% bump. The Japanese firm did not respond to an emailed request for comment. Japan is subject to a baseline 15% tariff under a deal that the Trump administration struck with the country last month. Fujifilm subsequently relocated manufacturing for a few camera models from China to Japan; during that time, the prices remained stable. Other consumer hardware makers have also raised prices in recent months, including Kyoto-based Nintendo, which earlier announced a U.S. price increase for the original Switch console, citing "market conditions.' Fujifilm is the fourth-largest camera-maker behind Canon, Sony and Nikon, according to market research firm Techno Systems Research. But the brand's products often stir an outsize buzz on social media among tech enthusiasts. Its X100 series went viral on TikTok during the COVID-19 pandemic and has consistently been on backorder at most retailers since then. The latest model in that lineup, the X100VI, has risen to $1,799 with the latest price changes — up from $1,599. As for the other major camera manufacturers, Canon, Sony and Nikon already raised prices for a number of products earlier this year. Smaller players like Sigma have also given in after months of global tariff anxiety; that brand increased the cost of its lenses by around 10% in June, the photography outlet PetaPixel reported at the time, but the company told retail partners it's not planning another hike despite the new 15% rate levied on Japan. Fujifilm's most recently announced mirrorless camera, the X-E5 unveiled in June, has not undergone any price adjustments. That product is scheduled to ship later in August. The X Half, a compact, lightweight model the company introduced this year to attract more Gen Z customers, has also maintained its $850 price for the time being.

Tepco wraps up latest round of treated water release in Fukushima
Tepco wraps up latest round of treated water release in Fukushima

Japan Times

time2 hours ago

  • Japan Times

Tepco wraps up latest round of treated water release in Fukushima

Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings said Sunday that it has completed the second round of its fiscal 2025 release of treated water into the ocean from the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant. The discharge of the water, containing radioactive tritium, was suspended due to a tsunami caused by a major earthquake near Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula last week, but there were no problems with the facilities involved in the operation. In the second round, which began on July 14, Tepco diluted 7,800 tons of treated water with large amounts of seawater before releasing it about 1 kilometer off the coast of Fukushima Prefecture through an undersea tunnel. In the current fiscal year through next March, a total of 54,600 tons will be released into the sea in seven rounds, at the same pace as the previous year. The nuclear plant in northeastern Japan had a triple meltdown following the March 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and tsunami disaster.

'Kōsen' tech colleges and HR firm tie up for student entrepreneurs
'Kōsen' tech colleges and HR firm tie up for student entrepreneurs

Japan Times

time2 hours ago

  • Japan Times

'Kōsen' tech colleges and HR firm tie up for student entrepreneurs

Japan's kōsen technical colleges and a human resources company have teamed up to help student entrepreneurs trying to revitalize local economies. The National Institute of Technology, which oversees the 51 national kōsen across Japan, signed a partnership agreement with BizReach last month. The alliance is aimed at introducing kōsen students planning to launch businesses in their local areas to people with extensive business experience. The NIT aims to facilitate the establishment of startups by kōsen students so that all national kōsen will have at least one such business within five years. Kōsen students learn specialized skills while interacting with local companies, allowing them to encounter problems unique to their local communities, such as declining and aging populations as well as the resulting shortage of labor and business successors. Some students have launched startups to address the problems. Including those started by graduates, 37 companies have been established by students at 22 national kōsen over the five years through March this year. But kōsen students often lack practical business experience, such as sales and accounting. Under the new partnership, BizReach will use its job search website, which has over 2.9 million registered users, to match professionals with students. "Utilizing kōsen is a key issue for regional revitalization," NIT chief Isao Taniguchi said. "I hope many (experts) will lend support." As the first project under the agreement, D-yorozu, a company based in Mitoyo, Kagawa Prefecture, began recruiting for positions, including marketing manager on the BizReach website. The company, which supports local businesses using technologies such as optical character readers, was launched in 2023 by Yuto Kashihara while he was a student at the NIT's Kagawa College. "We can solve problems with technologies, but we aren't good at expanding our business while considering cost effectiveness," Kashihara said. "I hope people who can make such business plans will come."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store