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Japan Introduces Toll Charges For Mt Fuji To Protect The Environs

OT Staff

Overtourism has become an issue in many places across the world. As the number of visitors increases, tourist destinations are overwhelmed by travellers. They are having to contend with the detrimental effects of mass tourism, which include pollution and damage to locations and landmarks. Once a peaceful place of pilgrimage, Mount Fuji in Japan today welcomes millions of tourists every year. The number of hikers climbing the well-known volcano at all hours of the day and night, according to authorities, is an ecological embarrassment. "Mount Fuji is screaming," said the local region's governor not long ago.

Cap On Visitors

According to latest reports, Japan is all set to implement a daily cap and a toll on the number of people who are allowed to ascend Mount Fuji. The proposed regulations call for the installation of a gate near the fifth station, which marks the end of the Fuji Subaru Line toll road on the prefectural side. The gate will be closed from 4 pm to 2 am every day throughout the climbing season.

The maximum number of climbers per day will be 4,000, and once reached, the gate will be locked, even before 4 pm. However, lodge visitors will be excluded from both requirements. Climbers who walk from the mountain's fifth station onward are now requested to give 1,000 yen ($7) to maintenance and conservation. Some climbers, however, choose not to pay because it is entirely elective.

Hikers gather during sunrise on the Mt. Fuji summit

Countering Overtourism

Japan began developing countermeasures against overtourism on September 6, 2023, when many important ministries met in Tokyo. The conversation came after Prime Minister Fumio Kishida told reporters in late August that addressing issues brought on by excessive tourism, particularly the unfavourable effects experienced by locals, is an "important task for the government." Kishida was touring Okinawa at the time.

A citizens' association petitioned Yamanashi Prefecture's governor in December 2023 to halt the projected light rail line's development up Mount Fuji's northwest face. Gov. Kotaro Nagasaki received a petition to stop the "Mount Fuji hiking railway project" from the "Association of citizens opposed to construction." Scientists studying national parks, environmental and pollution studies, journalists, and locals formed the organisation in November.

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