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Challenges remain 6 months to go before Osaka Expo

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13 Oct 2024 01:10:39 GMT9
13 Oct 2024 01:10:39 GMT9

OSAKA: With just six months to go before the 2025 World Exposition in the western Japan city of Osaka, there are still a host of challenges for organizers such as slow sales of advance tickets.

The Expo is scheduled to take place on Yumeshima, an artificial island, from April 13 through Oct. 13 next year.

A ring-shaped roof with a circumference of some 2 kilometers, one of the world’s largest wooden structures that is regarded as a symbol of the Expo, has been completed. The construction of foreign pavilions, which had been slow, has entered its final stages.

As of Wednesday, about 7.14 million advance tickets had been sold since they went on sale at the end of November last year, only 51 pct of the organizers’ target of 14 million.

“We’re a little bit concerned about whether the target will be achieved,” a business leader in the Osaka area said.

Organizers pin high hopes on the display of a rock from Mars to increase momentum for the Expo. The rock is one of the world’s biggest samples of a meteorite from Mars collected by a Japanese Antarctic research expedition.

Music events are also scheduled to take place, including an opening performance by popular Japanese singer Ado.

“We want young people to be interested” in the Expo, said an official at the Japan Association for the 2025 World Exposition, which organizes the Osaka event.

To enhance people’s interest in the Expo outside of the Osaka area, the association opened an information center in Tokyo on Sept. 25 to promote the event and sell character goods.

The Japanese government plans to give lectures on the Expo at schools across the country and promote exchanges between people from foreign countries participating in the event and local residents.

The challenges include transportation bottlenecks. Osaka Metro Co.’s Chuo subway line is the sole railway route for access to Yumeshima, a situation expected to leave trains crowded.

Some local companies have allowed employees to work remotely or commute during off-peak hours on a trial basis at the requests of the Osaka city and prefectural governments.

To ensure the safety of visitors, the association is considering cooperating with neighboring local governments in case the Expo venue is isolated following a disaster.

JIJI Press

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