Japan will begin studying how to expand coral reefs near two islets at the
center of a territorial dispute with China, a Japanese official said Monday.
The islets known as
Okinotorishima or "remote bird island," in fact are just a rock. [file
photo] |
The islets known as Okinotorishima or "remote bird island," in
fact just a rock, are misused by Japan as a key to the
rights to an extensive Exclusive Economic Zone in the Philippine Sea. China
denounced Japan's claim.
The research will involve cultivating and transplanting coral eggs, said
Fisheries Agency official Ryutaro Yamamoto.
Yamamoto said researchers and officials were set to meet Tuesday to discuss
methods of building up the tiny, uninhabited Okinotorishima islets.
Japan has used cement embankments to fortify the rock outcroppings about
1,700 kilometers (1,060 miles) southwest of Tokyo, and uses them to extend its
exclusive economic zone far into the Pacific Ocean.
Beijing argues that they can only be classified as rocks _ not islands _ and
that Tokyo therefore cannot claim exclusive rights to the surrounding area, or
prevent China from exploiting nearby resources.
Yamamoto said the government has allocated 300 million yen (US$2.5 million;
euro2.07 million) in the current fiscal year as part of a three-year study on
ways to expand coral reefs that are said to be declining around the islets.
Japanese officials and experts meeting Tuesday would look into coral-growing
methods including collecting coral eggs, cultivating them in water tanks and
transplanting them _ with experiments expected to begin as early as May _
Yamamoto said.
He said scientists in Japan and Australia have been studying the method, but
there has been scant large-scale research on it.
Yamamoto said that the project is intended to help increase coral growth in
other areas as well as the Okinotorishima islets.
"The primary purpose of the project is to conduct research, as there are not
many technologies to grow corals. And it would be great if we could apply the
technology" to expand coral growth in other areas, such as the southern Japanese
island of Okinawa, he said.
"We also want to protect (the Okinotorishima islets), as they are Japan's
important territory," Yamamoto said.
The dispute with China over the outcroppings heated up in
2004.