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Published: Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Giant tuna fetches $177,000 at Japan fish auction

  • Retailers stand about fresh tunas today during their first business at the Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo Japan. A fish market official says a bluefin tuna has fetched a nine-year high of 16.28 million yen ($177,000) at the first auction of the year.

    AP

    Retailers stand about fresh tunas today during their first business at the Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo Japan. A fish market official says a bluefin tuna has fetched a nine-year high of 16.28 million yen ($177,000) at the first auction of the year.

TOKYO — A giant bluefin tuna fetched 16.3 million yen ($177,000) in an auction today at the world’s largest wholesale fish market in Japan.

The 513-pound fish was the priciest since 2001 when a 440-pound tuna sold for a record 20.2 million yen ($220,000) at Tokyo’s Tsukiji market.

The gargantuan tuna was bought and shared by the owners of a Japanese sushi restaurant and a Hong Kong-based sushi bar, said a market representative on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to disclose the information.

Caught off the coast of northern Japan, the big tuna was among 570 put up for auction today. About 40 percent of the auctioned tuna came from abroad, including from Indonesia and Mexico, the representative said.

Japan is the world’s biggest consumer of seafood with Japanese eating 80 percent of the Atlantic and Pacific bluefins caught. The two tuna species are the most sought after by sushi-lovers.

However, tuna consumption in Japan has declined because of a prolonged economic slump as the world’s second-largest economy struggles to shake off its worst recession since World War II.

“Consumers are shying away from eating tuna. ... We are very worried about the trend,” the market representative said.

Apart from falling demand for tuna, wholesalers are worried about growing calls for tighter fishing rules amid declining tuna stocks.

The International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas in November slashed the quota for the 2010 catch by about one-third to 13,500 tons — a move criticized by environmentalists as not going far enough.

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