Shizuoka Prefecture in central Japan plans to require people who climb Mt. Fuji to pay a toll starting next season as a way to address risky behavior by some trekkers.
Shizuoka follows a step taken by Yamanashi Prefecture, which also has a trail on the country's highest peak.
Yamanashi began charging 2,000 yen, or about 13 dollars, per trekker this past season to prevent accidents and address dangerous behavior by some climbers such as attempting nighttime treks.
Shizuoka has asked trekkers to pay 1,000 yen or about 6.5 dollars on a voluntary basis to preserve the environment. But it will scrap this scheme and charge between 3,000 yen and 5,000 yen per person, about 20 to 32 dollars, as an entry control fee.
The exact toll will be decided by listening to opinions of local communities and seeing what course Yamanashi Prefecture takes for the next season.
Officials will set up toll gates at the 5th station of the three trails in the Shizuoka prefecture. The most popular Fujinomiya Trail will be closed between 4 p.m. and 3 a.m.
Officials will brief municipal authorities and organizations concerned on their plan in the near future.
They aim to submit a draft ordinance to the prefectural assembly in February in order to introduce the toll from the next season that begins in July.
Shizuoka follows a step taken by Yamanashi Prefecture, which also has a trail on the country's highest peak.
Yamanashi began charging 2,000 yen, or about 13 dollars, per trekker this past season to prevent accidents and address dangerous behavior by some climbers such as attempting nighttime treks.
Shizuoka has asked trekkers to pay 1,000 yen or about 6.5 dollars on a voluntary basis to preserve the environment. But it will scrap this scheme and charge between 3,000 yen and 5,000 yen per person, about 20 to 32 dollars, as an entry control fee.
The exact toll will be decided by listening to opinions of local communities and seeing what course Yamanashi Prefecture takes for the next season.
Officials will set up toll gates at the 5th station of the three trails in the Shizuoka prefecture. The most popular Fujinomiya Trail will be closed between 4 p.m. and 3 a.m.
Officials will brief municipal authorities and organizations concerned on their plan in the near future.
They aim to submit a draft ordinance to the prefectural assembly in February in order to introduce the toll from the next season that begins in July.
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Summary
Shizuoka Prefecture plans to implement a toll system for Mt. Fuji climbers starting next season, following Yamanashi Prefecture's lead. This is aimed at addressing risky behavior and preserving the environment. The toll will range from 3,000 yen to 5,000 yen per person, and toll gates will be set
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ID: bd857493-f01f-4b7b-a0f1-a938cb24c237
Category ID: nhk
URL: https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/20241118_25/
Date: Nov. 18, 2024
Created: 2024/11/19 07:00
Updated: 2025/12/08 08:43
Last Read: 2024/11/19 07:47