Home News Cattle farms or bullet train? Japanese village faces uncertain future.

Cattle farms or bullet train? Japanese village faces uncertain future.

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At her wooden house that clings to the mountain slope with views of the Japanese Alps, Tohno Midori once enjoyed watching monkeys saunter into her yard and eat persimmons. 

But she hasn’t seen any since Central Japan Railway cut down hundreds of nearby trees for a new superconducting magnetic levitation train. Expected to connect Tokyo and Osaka in just 67 minutes, the “maglev” will run through the rural village of Oshika, where many of the 940 residents, including Ms. Tohno, have complained about blasting operations, traffic, and tunneling debris since construction launched in 2016. 

Why We Wrote This

In a small mountain village, a controversial train project is stirring up debate over ecological preservation and economic development. Behind that lies a bigger question about the future of the Japanese countryside.

Critics say Oshika is the latest in a long list of rural communities bearing the brunt of Japan’s rapid economic growth. Some residents welcome the development and hope a new high-speed rail stop located an hour’s drive from Oshika will help address the village’s population decline. But many others argue that the project threatens the very character of the village, and call for more grassroots, sustainable forms of development. 

“Villagers are opposed to each other over the maglev project,” says Konno Kaito, who comes from a family of local cattle ranchers. “But what we have in common is we love Oshika.”

Oshika, Japan

In a remote and hidden valley with a babbling brook in the southern Japanese Alps region, Aoki Ren used to proudly show his cattle farm’s serene surroundings to fastidious buyers of quality wagyu beef. 

That tranquility, however, has been shattered by helicopter noises, blasting operations, and truck traffic since the launch of local construction for the superconducting magnetic levitation train in 2016, operated by Central Japan Railway.  The “maglev” train is expected to connect Tokyo and Osaka in 67 minutes – compared with the 150-minute trip offered by Central Japan Railway’s existing shinkansen bullet train – with the majority of the route enclosed in tunnels. The project cuts right through the mountain village of Oshika, where Mr. Aoki and about 940 others live among nature. 

“This is supposed to be a wonderful setting,” Mr. Aoki says, shrugging his shoulders in resignation. 

Why We Wrote This

In a small mountain village, a controversial train project is stirring up debate over ecological preservation and economic development. Behind that lies a bigger question about the future of the Japanese countryside.

Critics of the maglev project say Oshika is the latest in a long list of rural communities bearing the brunt of Japan’s rapid economic growth, without seeing the reward. Some residents welcome the development and hope a new high-speed rail stop located an hour’s drive from Oshika will help address the village’s population decline. But many others argue that the project threatens the very character of the village, and call for more grassroots, sustainable forms of development. 

“Villagers are opposed to each other over the maglev project,” says Konno Kaito, sister of Mr. Aoki. “But what we have in common is we love Oshika.” 

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