The Ski Dome on the outskirts of Tokyo was a symbol of Japanese exuberance in the 1980s.
But the world's largest indoor ski resort closed last September, illustrating the collapse of an industry which is turning to snow fanatics from China and South Korea for support.
Official statistics speak for themselves. Japan saw around 10.8 million skiers in 2001 compared with a peak of 18.6 million in 1993, just after its speculative bubble economy burst.
Even when the 5.3 million snowboarders who took to the slopes in 2001 are included, the popularity of winter sports has clearly gone downhill.
"There are fewer children so less people start skiing," said Wataru Tanabe, secretary general of the Hokkaido Ropeway and Lift Association, in the northern region of Japan.
"The younger generation for example spends more time and money on mobile phones," or PC and video games, Tanabe said. "Also because of the recession, people have shifted their priorities on how to spend loose change."
Just two factors -- a snowboarding boom over the past five or six years, and a desire by the older generation to re-don their skis -- have saved Japan's winter sports industry from sliding off the cliff, said Jene-Rene Belliard, chairman of Salomon Taylor Made, part of the Adidas-Salomon group.
Certain resorts are frantically stepping up efforts to attract skiers back to the slopes.
Gala Yuzawa is accessible from Tokyo directly by shinkansen (Japan's bullet train) in just 80 minutes. Ski and snowboard hire shops, along with locker rooms and a cable car to whisk you onto the mountain are actually located in the station -- a world first.
Adding to the ease, special one-day tickets are available that include return travel and a ski pass.
Japan's mass exodus from the pistes has hit smaller, more remote resorts much harder. These old-fashioned resorts, such as those in Tohoku, north Japan, are being forced to scout for snow fans from South Korea and China.
"Our target is to welcome 500 people from Korea this season," said Ryuichi Kobayashi, chairman of the Tohoku Ropeway and Lift Association.
"We are trying to pave the way for Shanghai. We hope by next year, we will be able to welcome people from that city too," Kobayashi said.
The association is working with travel agencies to cut the price of one-day passes to Japanese yen 2,000 (US$16.5) from Japanese yen 4,500 for foreigners who choose to ski in Japan.
But times are tough, admitted Kobayashi, who heads the Inawashiro resort in Fukushima.
"Compared with the boom time of 1992 and 1993, last year ski resorts have only managed to earn around 40 to 50 percent," he said.
All major winter sport brands have suffered a slump in sales in Japan, one of their most important markets. Some 1.8 million skis and snowboards are bought annually, down sharply from around 2.4 million to 2.5 million skis alone sold each year until 1993, according to Belliard from Salomon.
A spokesman for Nippon Cable Co Ltd, Japan's largest manufacturer of ski lifts, estimated the ski areas hit hardest were Tohoku and Nanshin.
"In the Kansai area because of the construction of new roads and an improvement in artificial snow-making machines, they are welcoming more people," he said.
Belliard believes around half of Japan's 700 ski resorts are in reality bankrupt, but they choose instead to keep their business ticking over because under Japanese law they would have to dismantle their equipment and replant the slopes with forest at their own expense if they shut up shop completely.
* Japan saw around 10.8 million skiers in 2001 compared with a peak of 18.6 million in 1993.
* Some 1.8 million skis and snowboards are bought annually, down sharply from around 2.4 million to 2.5 million skis alone sold each year until 1993.
The US government has signed defense cooperation agreements with Japan and the Philippines to boost the deterrence capabilities of countries in the first island chain, a report by the National Security Bureau (NSB) showed. The main countries on the first island chain include the two nations and Taiwan. The bureau is to present the report at a meeting of the legislature’s Foreign Affairs and National Defense Committee tomorrow. The US military has deployed Typhon missile systems to Japan’s Yamaguchi Prefecture and Zambales province in the Philippines during their joint military exercises. It has also installed NMESIS anti-ship systems in Japan’s Okinawa
‘WIN-WIN’: The Philippines, and central and eastern European countries are important potential drone cooperation partners, Minister of Foreign Affairs Lin Chia-lung said Minister of Foreign Affairs Lin Chia-lung (林佳龍) in an interview published yesterday confirmed that there are joint ventures between Taiwan and Poland in the drone industry. Lin made the remark in an exclusive interview with the Chinese-language Liberty Times (the Taipei Times’ sister paper). The government-backed Taiwan Excellence Drone International Business Opportunities Alliance and the Polish Chamber of Unmanned Systems on Wednesday last week signed a memorandum of understanding in Poland to develop a “non-China” supply chain for drones and work together on key technologies. Asked if Taiwan prioritized Poland among central and eastern European countries in drone collaboration, Lin
TRAGEDY STRIKES TAIPEI: The suspect died after falling off a building after he threw smoke grenades into Taipei Main Station and went on a killing spree in Zhongshan A 27-year-old suspect allegedly threw smoke grenades in Taipei Main Station and then proceeded to Zhongshan MRT Station in a random killing spree that resulted in the death of the suspect and two other civilians, and seven injured, including one in critical condition, as of press time last night. The suspect, identified as a man surnamed Chang Wen (張文), allegedly began the attack at Taipei Main Station, the Taipei Fire Department said, adding that it received a report at 5:24pm that smoke grenades had been thrown in the station. One man in his 50s was rushed to hospital after a cardiac arrest
ON ALERT: Taiwan’s partners would issue warnings if China attempted to use Interpol to target Taiwanese, and the global body has mechanisms to prevent it, an official said China has stationed two to four people specializing in Taiwan affairs at its embassies in several democratic countries to monitor and harass Taiwanese, actions that the host nations would not tolerate, National Security Bureau (NSB) Director-General Tsai Ming-yen (蔡明彥) said yesterday. Tsai made the comments at a meeting of the legislature’s Foreign Affairs and National Defense Committee, which asked him and Minister of National Defense Wellington Koo (顧立雄) to report on potential conflicts in the Taiwan Strait and military preparedness. Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Legislator Michelle Lin (林楚茵) expressed concern that Beijing has posted personnel from China’s Taiwan Affairs Office to its