Mapping the Winds for Safe Drone Flights

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — Kyoto-based startup MetroWeather has gained a contract from the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to create wind maps that will enhance the safety of drones and eVTOL (flying cars) in urban areas.

The Urban Weather Sensing Infrastructure project will see MetroWeather partner with Virginia-based TruWeather Solutions to build an urban weather observation infrastructure to be used for a wide-scale deployment of commercial drones and eVTOL.

MetroWeather will play its role by providing the optimal sensing algorithm and sampling strategy for lidar (light detection and ranging, a technology that uses light to measure distances) in urban areas and developing the model for lidar data to be organized into a useable form.

The practical application is that this data will be used by pilots “to visualize local wind gusts and
windshear that affect drone takeoffs, landings, and flights in real time,” in the words of MetroWeather CEO Junichi Furumoto.

He added that the project is “expected to deploy a number of lidars not only at drone ports but also at regional airports. As such, we believe we can contribute to the realization of safe drone operations and air safety and security. MetroWeather is very proud to partner with TruWeather and to engage in this NASA-funded project, which will bring us even closer to realizing such world.”

The funding is part of NASA’s Small Business Innovation Research grant program.

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PlayStation Falls Short as Nintendo Dominates

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — Last month video game magazine Shukan Famitsu revealed that all thirty of the most popular games on its weekly software sales chart were for the Nintendo Switch, an unprecedented degree of domination by a single gaming platform.

While many other kinds of companies in Japan struggled to maintain sales and profits during the pandemic, the gaming industry had an extraordinarily good year in 2020. Covid lockdowns and restrictions forced many Japanese to stay home and isolate, pushing many to look for more sedentary options for entertainment.

Nintendo, in particular, benefitted from this situation.

In the fall of 2020, Nintendo saw its quarterly profits go up by 400% from the previous year thanks to Covid lockdowns and a strong product line. The convenience of the Switch, which allows players to use the console as a hand-held device or on a big screen, contributed to its success.

Meanwhile, competitors such as Sony and Microsoft, which might have ridden the same wave in 2020, were less well positioned to do so.

While Sony’s Playstation 5 (PS5) has seen massive success internationally, Japan’s gaming community has been less excited about the console and its November 2020 release for multiple reasons.

In terms of marketing, Sony had long been shifting away from its Japanese customer base and more towards a global approach. Back in 2014, Sony released the PS4 in Japan over three months after the console had been released in North America.

In 2016, Sony Interactive Entertainment, the subsidiary responsible for PlayStation, moved its headquarters from Japan to the United States. This move by Sony caused resentment among many Japanese players towards the video game giant.

In the PS5 release, Sony even neglected to add Japanese narration to the console’s reveal video, a move that further alienated its customer base in Japan.

Sony’s shift away from the Japanese market, as well as supply limitations, contributed to the PS5 having the worst launch performance of any PlayStation console since the PlayStation Portable in 2004.

In more recent months, PS5 sales have been rising, finally overcoming the PS4 in sales.

But PS5 games have continued to sell poorly in Japan, at least when compared to the massive success of the Nintendo Switch.

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Bouncing 5G Waves to Devices

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — Dai Nippon Printing has announced the development of a “Reflect Array” that can bounce the millimeter waves used in 5G mobile communications systems to devices in an expanded coverage area.

Once installed–for example on the side of a building–the Reflect Array helps the 5G signals emitted from base stations and relays to cover a wider area than would otherwise be the case.

Unlike the conventional 4G technology, the higher frequency 5G milliwaves have more difficulty passing through solid objects such as buildings, and thus it requires more base stations and relays to ensure that 5G capable devices are receiving the signals.

The Dai Nippon Printing Reflect Arrays are constructed to selectively reflect predetermined frequency bands. It can also be adjusted to reflect the milliwaves in a desired direction. This creates a solution for many urban spaces that is cheaper than installing additional base stations and associated relay equipment.

It is also possible to print various patterns on the surface of the array, making it possible to add external designs, including advertising signboards.

A related product was unveiled by NTT Docomo and glass manufacturer AGC in January. In that case, the product was a prototype metasurface that allows 5G radio signals to pass through closed windows, also expanding the reach of 5G networks.

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Notable Japan Smart Home Startups

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — Artificial Intelligence, robotics, and sensor innovations means Japanese homes may be smarter than ever, and these startups aim to lead the way.

Among the emerging smart home companies in Japan are DG Takano, First Ascent, mui Lab, nextEDGE Technology, Nature, Nekoriko, Crossdoor, Photosynth, Groove X, and Bitkey.

DG Takano is a technology design company established by Masaaki Takano. Released in 2020, DG Takano’s Bubble90 is a water-saving nozzle that conserves up to 95% water and requires no electricity to function. It works by shooting jets made up of 90% air and 10% water, creating strong water pressure without overconsumption. The Bubble90 is currently used by top restaurant chains in Japan in more than 24,000 different locations.

First Ascent was founded in 2012 with Tomoyuki Hattori as its representative director. The company employs machine learning and Internet of Things (IoT) in consulting and website and application development. Past projects include the baby monitoring phone applications Papatto Childcare, CryAnalyzer, and ainenne. Papatto Childcare is designed to “help raise your child” with daily record-keeping and analysis, and won the 8th Kids Design Award in 2019. CryAnalyzer runs an algorithm that can analyze a baby’s crying sounds to determine its emotions, and is integrated into Papatto Childcare. Finally, ainenne is an alarm clock application that utilizes sound and light to work in line with babies’ biological clocks, and won the CES Innovation Award in 2021.

mui Lab was established in 2017 by Nobuyasu Hirobe, Kaz Oki, and Mark Nomura. Their flagship product, mui, is an interactive smart home control hub integrated into a panel of wood. mui can send and receive messages, check the news and weather, and control other smart devices (lighting, thermostats, etc.). mui Lab continues to explore “calm technology” with software and hardware design drawing inspiration from nature and traditional Japanese aesthetic motifs.

nextEDGE Technology is a software engineering company founded in 2004. It released the aeroTAP touchless device and 3D sensor in 2016. The aeroTAP lists various different applications, such as sanitary touchless interfaces in hospitals, accessibility in computer usage, and convenience for store checkout counters. The aeroTAP does not require exclusive software for operation and therefore is easily applicable to both business and personal use.

Nature was founded by Haruumi Shiode in 2014 and employs IoT products for clean energy. The Nature Remo 3 is a smart home control center that connects any home appliance that uses infrared remote controllers to a smartphone/smart speaker regardless of the manufacturer, model, or production year. Multiple appliances can be controlled simultaneously and can be automated via triggers such as day and time, GPS location, temperature, humidity, motion, and light. It also comes in a “mini” model that is smaller in size and does not detect motion or light, but is otherwise identical.

Nekoriko, established as a joint venture company in 2018 by Chubu Electric Power and Internet Initiative Japan Inc. focuses on IoT services in households. Nekoriko’s flagship product is the Bocco emo, a friendly-looking robot able to watch over distant family members with LTE communication. Previously only for rental, families can now purchase the Bocco emo unit so they can use the device for long periods of time and personalize it to their liking.

Crossdoor, founded 2010 by Takuro Ichido, creates several energy-efficient IoT household controllers. The Crossdoor square is a smart remote control that can be installed into a wall and can work with both a LAN connection and a LAN cable plugged into a Power over Ethernet supply. Crossdoor also has several wireless options available that work with a parent unit so users can employ a stationary unit with mobile subunits for different rooms in their household.

Photosynth, established in 2014, is the parent to the Akerun home security series. The Akerun Pro is an electromagnetic smart lock that can simply be stuck onto a door with no tools or further installation required. This can be controlled with the stationary Akerun Controller, or users can utilize the Akerun Access Control System which allows them to use smartphones, ID cards, or transportation cards as a key.

Groove X, founded in 2015, was originally created to aid other startups in their financing department. Their flagship product, Lovot, was unveiled in 2018 and is a home robot that employs Emotional Robotics to provide comfort. Lovot lists 10 CPU cores, 20 MCUs, and 50 sensors to create “behavior that is very much like a living being.”

Bitkey, established in 2018, provides various smart lock, smart access, and security solutions for homes and buildings. With the implementation of CyberLink’s FaceMe facial recognition technology, Bitkey enables contactless facial recognition to identify individuals and secure entry for homes and offices, as well as admission tickets at concert venues. At this stage, the technology has been deployed in an apartment building in the Koto Ward, Tokyo. Residents can use their faces as keys to safely enter the house, eliminating the need for security cards or traditional keys.

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ispace Unveils Larger Lunar Lander

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — The Japanese space industry startup ispace has unveiled its “Series 2” lunar lander, which will have the capacity to carry bigger payloads to the Moon.

Standing at approximately 3.5 meters tall and 4.2 meters wide, including its legs, the Series 2 is larger in both size and customer payload design capacity than ispace’s first-generation lander model, Series 1, which the company is developing for its first and second missions.

That means that the Series 2 will not be utilized until the first half of 2024 at the earliest.

The Series 2 is designed to deliver payloads to both lunar orbit and the lunar surface. The lander has a payload design capacity to deliver up to 500 kilograms to the lunar surface. For missions where payloads are exclusively for lunar orbit, capacity can be up to 2,000 kilograms.

The Series 2 also aims to be one of the first commercial lunar landers capable of surviving the lunar night, and it is designed to have the ability to land on either the near side or far side of the Moon, including the polar regions.

The lander’s guidance, navigation, and control includes precision landing technologies said to be capable of ensuring extraordinary accuracy during descent, including hazard avoidance.

Takeshi Hakamada, Founder and CEO, ispace, commented, “As we look to the near future, Series 2 will enable us to not only increase our capabilities, but also to provide greater access and opportunities for our customers. Series 2 is a positive step toward realizing a diverse and sustainable cislunar ecosystem.”

Kursten O’Neill, the ispace US lander program director, added, “I couldn’t be prouder of our team for what we have accomplished with this lander… this vehicle will truly be a game changer. Due to its ability to adapt to a wide range of customers, after its debut for our third mission, we expect the Series 2 lander to service the market for several years and several missions to come.”

ispace is said to be well along in its preparations for its first lunar mission, using the Series 1 lander, which is supposed to take place sometime next year.

ispace is a Japanese lunar exploration startup that now employs over 150 staff in Japan, Europe, and the United States. The company has raised a total cumulative funding of approximately US$195 million.

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Australian Green Ammonia for Japan

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — Earlier this month Japanese shipping company Mitsui OSK Lines (MOL) announced that it is launching a joint study with Australian company Origin Energy to investigate the possibility of importing green ammonia from Australia.

Green ammonia is an energy source which produces no carbon dioxide in either production or combustion, and can also be used to transport hydrogen energy. As the Japanese government pushes a carbon-zero goal for 2050, companies like MOL and Origin have been incentivized to develop green energy solutions such as green ammonia as an alternative to fossil fuels.

An Origin executive asserted that Australia’s closeness to Asian markets and its renewable resources have made the country “the box seat to develop a world-leading hydrogen sector, exporting low emissions energy all over the world to meet demand for clean energy.”

The companies expect their study to be completed by the end of the year.

Last month, multiple Japanese companies, including the state-owned Japan Oil, Gas and Metals National Corporation (JOGMEC), entered into an agreement with Australian company Woodside Petroleum to study the creation of a blue and green ammonia supply chain from Australia to Japan.

According to the Japanese government’s 2050 decarbonization strategy, released last December, it is foreseen that 10% of all power generation in the country will be produced by hydrogen and ammonia within thirty years.

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Nagasaki Signs Agreement with Casinos Austria

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — The agreement has been formalized that will see Nagasaki Prefecture tie up with Casinos Austria International in a joint application to the central government to receive one of the three available licenses to open an Integrated Resort (IR) including a casino.

Nagasaki Governor Hodo Nakamura commented, “Nagasaki Prefecture has entered into a master agreement with Casinos Austria International Japan to develop and operate the Kyushu-Nagasaki IR. The operator’s business proposal is backed by a business track record in Europe and other international markets and aims to realize a traditional and luxurious integrated resort of the world’s highest standard in harmony with the landscape of Huis Ten Bosch. We will now proceed with the area development plan to be submitted for approval before April 28 of next year.”

He added, “We will work to realize the Kyushu-Nagasaki IR with the highest regard for strict measures to mitigate public concerns such as gambling addiction. The Kyushu-Nagasaki IR will vitalize the local economy and tourism industry affected by Covid, and also contribute to the development of the Kyushu region and furthermore our country.”

Should it be licensed by the central government, the plan calls for the construction of an IR on a 31 hectare plot of land next to the Huis Ten Bosch theme park in Sasebo city.

The theme of the development is “a fusion of Eastern and Western cultures achieving a true Japanese-Western mix.” Its most prominent feature is the high-rise Crystal Tower Hotel within which a Hyatt hotel, one of the projects partners, will evidently be located.

The plan calls for a total of seven accommodation facilities, including a new luxury inn and the renovation of the existing Hotel Europe.

In addition, the master design includes an international conference hall with a maximum of 6,000 seats and an exhibition hall with a total area of 20,000 square meters, all equipped with cutting edge technologies. Beyond that, there are to be multiple indoor and outdoor facilities, including the Palace Huis Ten Bosch Museum, a concert hall, a medical mall, and something called the Japan House, Japan Square, and Japan Street at which “a wide variety of programs” can be featured. These apparently include programs related to kabuki, anime, and various games.

Finally, covering about 3% of the total area of the IR will be the casino, which we are told will be built “with an Austrian design.”

The total construction cost for the facility is estimated to be at about ¥350 billion (US$3.2 billion) and, presuming that the Covid pandemic is overcome by the second half of this decade, the annual number of visitors from both Japan and abroad is anticipated to be about 8.4 million people.

“Based in Nagasaki, we will realize a ‘tourism industrial revolution’ and aim to become a world city where Kyushu, Japan, Asia, and the world all merge,” proclaims one of the documents of the prefectural government.

The decision to quickly sign the master agreement with Casinos Austria, however, does not sit well with the two rival consortiums which have alleged improper behavior on the part of the prefectural government.

Koji Ishikawa, acting as an attorney on behalf of the Oshidori International Development consortium, told the local media that the allegations are “problems related to our trustworthiness and honor” (apparently referring to the Japanese people in general) and he added that “the investigations to confirm the relationship with antisocial forces have not been conducted based on facts.”

A senior executive within the Niki Chyau Fwu (Parkview) consortium, responding to an interview request from Akihabara News, responded by saying, “we still do not think the process was properly done, but too bad.”

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Transoceanic Apricot Cable

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — Google and Facebook are jointly investing in and constructing a subsea cable that will run from Japan to Southeast Asia to provide high-speed network connections.

The fiberoptic cable system, called Apricot, will connect Japan, Taiwan, Guam, the Philippines, Indonesia, and Singapore, at a length of nearly 12,000 kilometers.

For Facebook, Apricot will improve the reliability of its platform with fast load times and strong connections for calls.

Google, on the other hand, will benefit from low latency and higher bandwidth capacity for data centers, improving Google cloud computing.

Apricot will meet the growing demand for data in Japan and Southeast Asia, including 4G, 5G, and wired broadband connections. It will also be compatible with existing cable systems such as the Echo and Bifrost cables.

This development comes as a natural continuation of Japan’s progression in technology, with researchers at the National Institute of Information and Communications Technology achieving a record internet speed of 319 terabits per second (tbps) in July 2021.

This new record almost doubles the previous record of 178 tbps from a collaborative effort by researchers in Japan and from the United Kingdom at University College London.

Apricot is expected to be completed and put into use in 2024, with an initial design capacity of 190 tbps.

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Japan Seen Still on Track to “IR 2.0”

Despite setbacks linked to heavy regulation, the pandemic, and electoral politics, some experts within the gambling industry still believe that Integrated Resorts (IR) including casinos will have a bright future in Japan.

In an exclusive interview with Akihabara News, Brendan Bussmann, director of government affairs at Global Market Advisors, who has been tracking Japan’s IR policies for about seventeen years, predicted that the current policies will roll forward.

“I think right now things will continue the course that they are,” he states. “I think the process right now stays on track.”

Nevertheless, he can also foresee scenarios related to the Covid pandemic or national elections that could change that verdict.

Bussmann acknowledges that the electoral defeat of the IR plans in Yokohama was a significant blow, first of all because the city had long been regarded as a prime candidate for IR development, and also because it seems to leave eastern Japan without any IRs that can serve as a hub for future tourism.

“Tokyo could still raise its hand,” he ventures, but that would need to occur very soon because the application timeline is now quite challenging.

Bussmann’s view is that the electoral defeat in Yokohama relates to a failure to effectively educate public opinion about the benefits and the true nature of IRs. Too many people, he thinks, imagine Hollywood movies like Casino which portray a bygone era of the gambling industry in Las Vegas.

He does foresee possible difficulties for the Japanese IRs, but these relate mainly to the tightly-restrictive regulatory structure such as the 3% limit of the casino floor area in relation to the full IR facility. He predicts that in some of the western Japan IRs “there’s going to be more demand than supply in that casino floor.”

He also notes that the taxation system may cause difficulties, with not only due to the high 30% tax rate on the IR profits, but also because of a series of other taxes calculated in a manner that is still not entirely transparent.

On the whole, however, Bussmann remains an enthusiastic advocate for the IR business model, which he believes will have a bright future even in the post-Covid era. He calls it “IR 2.0.”

“There will be a next version of IRs and they will be good, strong facilities,” he predicts. “I still think IRs are a great vehicle to drive tourism, to drive investment, drive job creation in the Japanese market.”

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Demon Slayer: Master of the Mansion

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — In the twenty-second episode of Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba, Tanjiro faces a trial in front of the Hashira at the Demon Slayer Corps headquarters for traveling with his demon sister, Nezuko.

Tanjiro finds himself explaining his situation to the nine Hashira who stand before him. They tell him that he has violated the Demon Slayer Corps’ rules for traveling with a demon, even if it is his sister.

Sanemi Shinazugawa, the wind Hashira, does not believe him for a second. He picks up the box Nezuko was resting in and stabs it, injuring Nezuko.

In a fit of rage, despite being tied up, Tanjiro charges at the Hashira. Their interaction was cut short by Giyu Tomioka, who tells them the master is coming soon. In the split second Sanemi was distracted, Tanjiro headbutts him to the ground. Everyone seems impressed by Tanjiro’s dedication to his sister.

The master of the demon slayers arrives. He is blind man with scars across his forehead. Tanjiro wonders if it is an injury or an illness.

The master states that he is aware that Tanjiro is traveling with a demon and has approved the situation. He requests that the rest of the Hashira accept the situation as well, to which there are mixed reactions.

The master then gets his assistant to read out a letter from Sakonji Urokudaki, a former water Hashira and Tanjiro’s trainer. The letter details Nezuko’s situation and how she has never and will never harm a human, and he swears his life on it.

The master then reveals to the Hashira that Tanjiro is the only demon slayer to have come face to face with Muzan Kibutsuji, and that Kibutsuji has a personal vendetta against the boy.

It is the closest that anyone has gotten to the top demon, and he predicts that Tanjiro will be a valuable member.

Sanemi refuses to accept the situation. He lists all the demon slayers and humans that have been killed by demons, and asserts that Nezuko is nothing but another demon. He stabs the box twice and then cuts his own hand to let it bleed. He then lets Nezuko out to show everyone that she will attack him because she is a demon.

The episode ends with Nezuko salivating through the muzzle and standing face-to-face with Sanemi, who is taunting her with his blood.

Previous Articles

Demon Slayer: Cruelty

Demon Slayer: Trainer Sakonji Urokodaki

Demon Slayer: Sabito and Makomo

Demon Slayer: Final Selection

Demon Slayer: My Own Steel

Demon Slayer: Swordsman Accompanying Demon

Demon Slayer: Muzan Kibutsuji

Demon Slayer: Smell of Enchanting Blood

Demon Slayer: Temari and Arrow Demon

Demon Slayer: Together Forever

Demon Slayer: Tsuzumi Mansion

Demon Slayer: The Boar Bares Its Fangs

Demon Slayer: More Important Than Life

Demon Slayer: House with Wisteria Crest

Demon Slayer: Mount Natagumo

Demon Slayer: Let Someone Go First

Demon Slayer: Master a Single Thing

Demon Slayer: A Forged Bond

Demon Slayer: Hinokami

Demon Slayer: Pretend Family

Demon Slayer: Against Corps Rules

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Wakayama Signs IR Agreement with Clairvest

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — The partnership between Wakayama Prefecture and a business consortium led by the Clairvest Group aiming to build an Integrated Resort (IR) including a casino at the Marina City site is now a done deal.

This is also the first basic agreement across the nation to be signed between a local government and a casino operator, a key first step on the road to opening the first Japanese IRs in the latter half of this decade.

The next step, should there be no major changes in the national policy, will be for Wakayama and the Clairvest consortium to compile a joint application to the central government, which must be submitted between this October and the deadline of April 28, 2022. Government decisions on licensing are expected to be made in the months following the deadline, perhaps around next summer.

Clairvest Group is a Toronto-based based investment firm known for casino holdings in Latin America and elsewhere, and has been one of the early movers in Japan market. It’s local subsidiary is Clairvest Neem Ventures, and the consortium it leads also includes the French casino operator Groupe Partouche and AMSE Resorts Japan.

The Clairvest consortium’s proposal is to construct a US$4.3 billion luxury casino resort at Marina City, featuring hotels, exhibition areas, a casino, and all of the other attributes required under the terms of the 2018 IR Implementation Act and subsequent Cabinet decisions.

If it is licensed, the plans call for the Wakayama resort to be built on a 560,000 square meter plot of land, intended to host about 13 million visitors a year. It would potentially become the first casino resort to open its doors in Japan around autumn 2027.

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Probity Accusations Abound in Japan IR Race

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — Multiple new accusations of unethical and potentially illegal behavior have emerged in recent days and weeks, intensifying public skepticism about the legalization of casino gambling within the Integrated Resorts (IR) framework.

It should be noted that the recent accusations come on top of the most serious case to date—in December 2019 it emerged that a Chinese sports lottery firm based in Shenzhen, then named 500 Dot Com, had bribed multiple Japanese politicians in pursuit of an IR license in Okinawa or Hokkaido. Most notably, this led to the arrest of former Senior Vice-Minister at the Cabinet Office Tsukasa Akimoto, who headed for over a year the national government’s IR policy development.

None of the new probity accusations yet rise to that level, but they may serve to reinforce the “dirty image” of the casino industry in the minds of many Japanese.

One of the new accusations has already been covered by Akihabara News. CEO Alex Yemenidjian of Oshidori International Development, one of the aggrieved competitors in the Nagasaki IR race, was subjected to anonymous email accusations regarding his connections to the legal marijuana industry in Nevada and other vague inferences of wrongdoing.

In their answers to our inquiry, Oshidori contended that it knows “for a fact” that the Nagasaki Prefectural Government was behind this smear campaign.

Journalist Muhammad Cohen broke a rather similar story for ICE365 about other anonymous emails circulating that target accusations of “glaring probity risks” against former Las Vegas Sands President and Chief Operating Officer William Weidner, who has been involved as an adviser and a prospective participant in the Clairvest consortium in Wakayama Prefecture.

Like the accusations against Yemenidjian, these accusations appear be rather vague and more of a smear than anything that contains hard evidence of wrongdoing. Weidner himself described them to Cohen as “sophisticated but unsubstantiated name calling.”

While the credibility of such anonymous email accusations is certainly open to question, this kind of drama will certainly darken the already dark image that many Japanese hold when it comes to inviting foreign corporations to come to Japan and establish casino resorts.

A final accusation that is now breaking is much more specific.

Shukan Bunshun, one of the Japanese weekly magazines famous for triggering politician resignations, is now pointing its dreaded finger at Yokohama Vice-Mayor Toshihide Hirahara, who has been leading the city’s IR development project.

The accusation against Hirahara is that he was treated to entertainment at high-class restaurants by a certain businessperson on four occasions in 2016 at a total cost of ¥610,000 (US$5,600). During one of these meals, Hirahara allegedly passed along confidential information to his host regarding some of the regulatory measures on IR floor area ratios then being set by the government.

Shukan Bunshun further hints that there are ties between these events and Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga and some of his aides.

Yokohama, of course, is already on its way out of the Japan IR race after the election last Sunday of Takeharu Yamanaka as the new mayor, but the political impact of a fresh corruption scandal touching the prime minister and his inner circle would certainly be serious.

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Japan Easing Up on Drone Laws

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — According to the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport, and Tourism (MLIT), drones which are tethered to a wire or string will no longer require permission or approval to fly during nighttime and in densely populated areas.

The Civil Aeronautics Act previously banned flying drones near airports and in the flightpath of planes.

In April 2015, Yasuo Yamamoto flew a drone carrying sand that contained traces of radiation onto the roof of the prime minister’s office in an act of protest against nuclear power.

The incident was followed by Yamamoto’s arrest as well as revisions to the Civil Aeronautics Act in December 2015, banning flights by drones weighing over 200 grams in urban areas, altitudes of 150 meters or more, and near airports. This meant that drones were banned in all of the 23 central wards of Tokyo.

In June 2020, the act was revised in June to make it mandatory for those who possess drones for flight purposes to register with the national government. A punishment of imprisonment for up to one year, or a fine of up to ¥500,000 (about US$4,650) was listed for those who fly unregistered drones.

Now, with the struggle between technological advancements and security beginning to tilt more towards the side of technology, the act is being revised once again to allow more freedom with drone usage.

Official permission will no longer be required in cases where drones are tethered by wires or strings of thirty meters or less. By limiting the range of the drones in this way, and with reasonable monitoring the airspace against the entry of third parties, officials will soon allow flights even in urban areas, at nighttime, and beyond visual range.

The amendment of relevant parts of the Civil Aeronautics Act will be amended and applied in October.

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Japan Robot Week in Aichi

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — Japan Robot Week in Aichi is set to be held from September 9-12 as one of the few technology exhibitions to go forward since the Covid pandemic began.

“With the evolution of robot technology through AI and IoT,” the basic mission statement reads, “the playing field for robots is rapidly expanding from manufacturing sites and into daily life. We are aiming for an exhibition that brings together the latest robot-related technologies that highlights the scenes of the main activities and promotes opportunities to create new robot businesses.”

While it is not clear exactly how many companies and organizations will offer exhibitions or presentations, one of the most enthusiastic participants is the ASK Corporation, which has advertised that it will put on display its HaptX Gloves DK2, a glove-type tactile device for virtual reality and robotics.

The venue for the exhibition is itself of some interest, the Aichi Sky Expo.

Opened only in September 2019, not long before the onset of the global pandemic, its attractive facilities sit next to Chubu Centrair International Airport, an artificial island that is part of Tokoname city. It is Japan’s newest convention center as well being at present its 4th largest.

The Aichi prefectural government studied the possibility of siting an Integrated Resort (IR) including a casino at the same location, though it never actually moved forward with a bid.

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Wakayama, Osaka Reaffirm IR Intentions

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — The governors of Wakayama and Osaka prefectures have reaffirmed their intentions to build Integrated Resorts (IR) including casinos in the wake of the Yokohama mayoral elections.

The decisive defeat of Yokohama IR champion Fumiko Hayashi’s mayoral election bid has sent shockwaves through the Asian casino industry, reigniting doubts about the national policy now that there are no longer any local government candidates in eastern Japan.

All three of the remaining candidate sites are packed in the more conservative western half of the country—Osaka, Wakayama, and Nagasaki. These three prefectural governments are expected to apply for the three IR licenses that, according to the current schedule, the national government plans to issue in the second half of next year.

Wakayama Governor Yoshinobu Nisaka has been the most outspoken in his response to the Yokohama election results, declaring, “There may be more people who believe that IRs are not good, but it’s a great opportunity for investment.”

Nisaka went on to suggest that Wakayama, unlike Yokohama, really needs something like an IR for its future economic prosperity. “If this were a prosperous region, I wouldn’t be promoting it,” the governor stated, “but when I think about the development of Wakayama Prefecture, we need it to arrest our decline.”

For his part, Osaka Governor Hirofumi Yoshimura played down the political events in Yokohama, even suggesting that the coronavirus issue may have been more central to the mayoral election than the IR issue.

“I do not believe that the Yokohama mayoral election will have a major impact on Osaka’s IR project,” Yoshimura said. “Many people are worried about addiction issues and I would like to tackle that topic. There are a lot of positives too, so I would like us to proceed with proper explanations.”

Nagasaki Governor Hodo Nakamura has not given any public response to the Yokohama elections, but there is every reason to expect that his stance is basically the same as the other pro-IR governors.

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Waldorf Astoria Hotels in Osaka and Tokyo

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — Last October it was announced that the first luxury brand Waldorf Astoria hotel in Japan would open in Nihonbashi, Tokyo, in 2026, but now it has emerged that Osaka will beat the capital city to the punch, planning to open its own Waldorf Astoria in 2024.

The Waldorf Astoria is the top luxury brand of Hilton Worldwide Holdings, which includes other brands within the group, such as Conrad Hotels & Resorts.

In the announcement last October, it was learned that a Waldorf Astoria had partnered with Mitsui Fudosan to construct what was then described as its “inaugural” facility in Japan on the 39th through 47th stories of a mixed-use tower that Mitsui is building at Nihonbashi 1-Chome.

The Waldorf Astoria Tokyo Nihonbashi is expected to feature a total of 197 guest rooms, three restaurants, and Peacock Alley, the lounge and bar synonymous with the Waldorf Astoria brand. Guests are also to have access to an indoor pool and a spa and fitness center.

The new information is that Osaka will be scooping this development by opening its own Waldorf Astoria in a 39-story high-rise under construction in the Umekita Second Zone, an urban redevelopment project on the north side of JR Osaka Station. This hotel is expected to have about 250 guest rooms.

The rush to open the Osaka luxury hotel relates to the 2025 World Expo which is planned to be held on Yumeshima island in Osaka Bay. The calculation is that the global pandemic will have subsided by that time and that people from all of the world, including the wealthy, will pour into Osaka for a six-month period to witness the exhibitions.

Founded in New York in 1893, the Waldorf Astoria has expanded to more than thirty locations around the world.

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JAXA Has No Fear of Phobos

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) offered some details last week about its planned mission to Phobos, one of the moons of Mars, which it hopes to launch in 2024.

This is the first step in the Martian Moons eXploration (MMX) mission, which is a project to explore the two moons of Mars, Phobos and Deimos.

The Japanese explorer will be tasked with collecting about 10 grams of soil from the surface of Phobos and to bring it back to Earth in 2029, where it will be studied for clues about any possible history of life on the red planet (some of the surface soil is thought likely to have arrived via ancient Martian sandstorms).

While the United States currently has its Perseverance rover on the surface of Mars and China has its Zhurong rover, both of them are not scheduled to deliver soil samples back to Earth until the early 2030s. It is plausible, therefore, that the first evidence of ancient life of Mars could be discovered by Japan first.

“We think that the Martian moon, Phobos, is loaded with material lifted from Mars during meteorite impacts. By collecting this Phobos sample, MMX will help investigate traces of Martian life and the new era of Martian habitability exploration in the 2020s will begin,” the mission managers tweeted earlier this month.

The mission website adds, “exploration of the Martian moons will help improve technology for future planet and satellite exploration. For example, advancement in the technology required to make round-trips between the Earth and Mars, the advanced sampling techniques that will be employed on the Martian moon surface, and in the optimal communication technology using the deep space network ground stations.”

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Mayoral Election Slams the Door on Yokohama IR

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — Voters have decisively rejected plans to build an Integrated Resort (IR) including a casino at Yamashita Pier by electing opposition-supported university professor Takeharu Yamanaka as mayor by an unexpectedly wide margin.

In a field of eight candidates, Yamanaka gained 33.6% of the vote, well ahead of Hachiro Okonogi, the experienced politician backed by the prime minister, who gained 21.6% of the vote.

Performing much weaker still was incumbent three-term Mayor Fumiko Hayashi, who emerged with only 13.1%, nearly falling to fourth place.

Analysts agree that Yamanaka’s uncompromising anti-casino stance was one of the keys to his impressive victory. While Okonogi also said that he would cancel the Yamashita Pier IR bid due to its unpopularity, he left a lot of ambiguity about his precise plans for the future, and this may have weighed against him in some voters’ minds. Meanwhile, Hayashi’s openly pro-IR stance and the disingenuous way that she had conducted it doomed her reelection bid.

Other major factors contributing to Yamanaka’s victory were his keen focus on Covid pandemic control and possibly the desire on the part of some voters to send a message of protest to Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, whose electoral district is in Yokohama city.

Upon his victory, Yamanaka did address the IR issue, saying, “We will issue a formal statement soon making it clear that Yokohama will not make a hosting bid.”

Thus it is believed just a matter of time before Yokohama formally withdraws its existing IR plans. Hotel and entertainment facilities may still be built at Yamashita Pier, but a casino will not be included.

Genting Singapore and Melco Resorts & Entertainment led the two business consortiums that were still in the running in Yokohama as of election day.

The departure of Yokohama will leave only three candidate locations in the race for the three available IR licenses—Osaka, Wakayama, and Nagasaki—all of them in western Japan.

None of these other bids are in a particularly good place at the moment either, with Osaka and Wakayama both having selected their operator consortiums from only a single applicant (MGM Resorts in Osaka’s case and Clairvest in Wakayama), and the Nagasaki bid was recently hit by a series of dramatic allegations of misdeeds.

Japan’s entire IR development scheme, though formally approved and written into law, has suffered one major blow after another since 2019.

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Accusations Fly at Nagasaki IR Operator Selection

By Michael Penn

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — The Nagasaki Prefectural Government is facing a remarkable set of accusations over how it conducted its Request for Proposal (RFP) selection process to build an Integrated Resort (IR) including a casino at the Huis Ten Bosch theme park.

The first public rumblings emerged on August 6 when Oshidori International Development fired off a strongly worded press release to some media outlets claiming that “the restrictive and unreasonable rules imposed by Nagasaki Prefecture make it impossible for Oshidori to conduct business in a prudent and efficient manner.” It added, “Oshidori has encountered several incidents that make it question whether there have been serious ethical irregularities in the RFP process, and it is only interested in participating in a process that has the highest integrity, and that is professional, transparent, and based on merit.”

While the title of the press release was “Oshidori International Development withdraws from participation in the RFP process for Nagasaki IR,” the firm has not, in fact, left the Nagasaki IR race.

Several days later, Casinos Austria International was granted the priority rights to negotiate a basic agreement with the prefecture. According to the information released by the authorities, Casinos Austria’s bid scored 697 points under its evaluation system, trailed by Oshidori with 683 points and the Niki Chyau Fwu (Parkview) Group with 667 points.

In response to questions posed to it by Akihabara News, however, Oshidori has now stepped up its accusations against the Nagasaki Prefectural Government. It has three basic complaints.

First, the company states that it received requests from the prefecture beginning in May to halt all public marketing activities.

For a while, Oshidori had been the most active operator consortium in the local public sphere, forming an official partnership agreement with V-Varen Nagasaki, a Japanese J2 League football club, in February, and also setting up the Kyushu Oshidori Children’s Foundation to highlight its potential social contributions. The firm says that the prefecture wanted such efforts to win over the local public to immediately end.

Oshidori comments, “There is no basis in Japanese law or in the RFP rules for denying such marketing activities. Clearly, the prefecture didn’t want anyone to have a competitive advantage over Casinos Austria.”

Their second charge is that, “using the pretext of a fabricated background investigation, the prefecture requested that we withdraw before the presentation in front of the judges.”

Again, Oshidori believes that the process was fixed, stating, “clearly the prefecture didn’t want the judges to see our presentation. Could it be because they knew that both our proposed design and our experience are significantly superior to that of Casinos Austria, and the decision was already made to select Casinos Austria before any of the presentations were seen by the judges?”

Their third charge is even more explosive.

Many journalists who cover Japan’s IR race, including the author of this article, have been receiving “tips” by email inviting us to investigate alleged ethical problems about Oshidori’s bid. In our case, the first tip arrived on July 7 and the most recent on August 2, all of them from different sources.

The first set of accusations were aimed directly at Alex Yemenidjian, the CEO of Oshidori, inviting publication of reports on his links to the (perfectly legal) marijuana business in Nevada.

The latter emails, unlike the first set, appeared to be written by an anonymous Japanese person, with the simple message, “This is who wants to operate IR in Japan!”

Attached to the email were an extremely complex flowchart and some Hong Kong legal documents. There did not seem to be any specific and central accusation, but the general implication was that various people involved with the company have been involved in various legal actions and have been accused of misconduct in the past.

When we asked them about this matter, Oshidori’s response was unequivocal: “We know for a fact that the prefecture was behind the smear campaign, all designed to weaken the Oshidori proposal and organization in favor of Casinos Austria.”

While it might be possible to view Oshidori’s red hot accusations against the prefectural government in the light of its disappointment about losing out on a multi-billion dollar business opportunity, the fact is that similarly dramatic accusations are also flowing from the consortium that the prefecture has ranked in third place, the Niki Chyau Fwu consortium.

In response to our inquiries, a high-level source within the Niki Chyau Fwu consortium told us point blank, “We were threatened… They were saying that if you do not withdraw, we will disclose the integrity report.”

This consortium of Taiwanese and Japanese firms was the last to enter the Nagasaki IR race, announcing their bid only in January of this year. However, it has only now become understood that one of the world’s largest casino operators was hiding within this consortium—Melco Resorts & Entertainment.

While declining to specifically name Melco in our interview, our consortium source stated, “Our casino operator is a Tier One operator, so it has a great amount of experience all over the world.”

According to their account, the Niki Chyau Fwu consortium, and especially the Melco leadership, has been stunned and mystified by the prefecture’s behavior.

Melco had only been persuaded to complete in the Nagasaki process because of personal appeals to do so from Nagasaki Vice-Governor Ken Hirata, and at first the situation appeared to be a happy one.

But, our source continues, “because of the very bad treatment by Nagasaki Prefecture, [Melco] was so shocked. The attitude of Nagasaki Prefecture really damaged their pride… They felt like, ‘What the hell?’ you know. ‘We have to be treated like this? How can we cooperate with this kind of prefecture?’ They were so upset.”

The Niki Chyau Fwu consortium is still scratching its head trying to figure out why, after the vice-governor himself had practically begged them to enter the Nagasaki RFP process, the official attitudes then changed so radically.

“We feel that something is happening behind [the scenes],” the source continues. “Is the Nagasaki government corrupted? We really do now know.”

However, the Niki Chyau Fwu consortium did conduct its own deep research on its business rivals, and it suspects that high-level political intervention is at the root of the matter. Its internal research even hints at possible Japanese organized crime links to a senior executive at Casinos Austria.

Casinos Austria did briefly respond to our inquiries about the selection controversy, but only to say that since they now possess the priority rights to negotiate with the prefecture, they will make no public statements at this juncture—though they might be more open to talk after the basic agreement has been negotiated and signed.

The Integrated Resort Promotion Division of the Nagasaki Prefectural Government also provided some answers to Akihabara News inquiries.

It categorically rejected one of the key accusations being leveled against them: “The prefecture did not ask any of the applicants to withdraw their applications during the RFP procedure.”

It added that “all of the participants were surveyed according to the same rigorous standards.” Each consortium was scored based on five broad categories: the attractiveness of their concepts; their facility development plans; their past financial and operational results; countermeasures to deal with items of concern; and expected returns to the region.

Casinos Austria was “highly evaluated for its efforts to address concerns,” and it was primarily on this basis that it outperformed its two rival consortiums.

There seems to be no dispute between the prefectural authorities and its accusers on one key fact—it was mainly on the basis of the integrity surveys that Casinos Austria was given the top ranking (although Oshidori and the Niki Chyau Fwu group fiercely contend that the integrity surveys were conducted in an unfair manner).

Where the matter stands at present is that Casinos Austria is the priority rights holder for negotiations with the prefecture, and there is no current indication from the officials that they plan to alter their course. As it told Akihabara News, “In the future, we will give necessary explanations to the Diet and to the government regarding the integrity of the preferential negotiation rights holder.”

For their part, both Oshidori and the Niki Chyau Fwu group say that they haven’t given up the fight.

In Oshidori’s words, “we have tried to discuss these issues with Nagasaki Prefecture, but they have not been able to listen to us. For the time being, we have already made a request for information disclosure to the Nagasaki Prefectural Government.”

Our source within the Niki Chyau Fwu consortium states that their group has sent a letter to the Nagasaki Prefectural Government requesting that the selection process be conducted a second time.

“We would like to be treated properly and fairly and transparently. It was really terrible the way that they treated our very important casino operator when we had a discussion with the IR section.”

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Confirming O-RAN Interoperability

Akihabara News (Tokyo) — NEC Corporation and Fujitsu have been tapped to develop new technologies for interoperability testing between 5G base station equipment employing O-RAN specifications, in the next step meant to open up radio access networks to a wider variety of possible vendors.

Open Radio Access Network (O-RAN) aims to compete with the radio access networks operated by a handful of international mobile industry giants (Huawei, Nokia, and Ericsson) by not relying on the proprietary technology of a single firm throughout the network, but instead based on a set of agreed standards, specifications, and interfaces by which multiple vendors may provide base station equipment.

One of the key challenges, however, is to create confidence that the equipment provided by a plethora of different vendors will actually be interoperable once they are assembled within a given network.

The New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO) has asked NEC and Fujitsu to address this challenge as part of its Post 5G Infrastructure Enhancement R&D Project.

These two firms are tasked with building an environment and developing technologies to assess and verify interoperability between different vendors’ equipment, including the establishment of a verification process and developing tools that can be used in common.

NEC and Fujitsu have already launched these activities at their respective facilities in the United Kingdom and in the United States. Specifically, NEC is conducting trials at its Open RAN laboratory in London, while Fujitsu is doing so at its laboratory hosted at Fujitsu Network Communications, a Fujitsu group company based in Richardson, Texas.

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