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Japanese sushi tycoon pays fin-tastic record of US$3.2 million for bluefin tuna

The self-styled “Tuna King” said he was surprised at the speed the price rose at the new year auction

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Kiyoshi Kimura displays the 243kg bluefin tuna he bought at his main restaurant in Tokyo on Monday. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse
A Japanese sushi entrepreneur paid a record US$3.2 million for a giant bluefin tuna on Monday at an annual prestigious new year auction in Tokyo’s main fish market, smashing the previous all-time high.

Dave Gershman at the Pew Charitable Trusts’ international fisheries team used news of the auction to highlight that stocks of Pacific bluefin tuna were improving after being “near collapse”.

The auction started when the bell rang, and the floor was filled with torpedo-shaped fish with their tails cut off so bidders could examine meat details such as colour, texture and fattiness while walking around the rows of tuna.

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The pricey fish was caught off the coast of Oma in northern Japan, a region widely regarded for producing some of the country’s finest tuna, and costs 2.1 million yen (US$13,300) per kilogram.

People gather to see a 243-kilogram bluefin tuna at the Sushizanmai sushi restaurant in Tokyo on Monday. Photo: AFP
People gather to see a 243-kilogram bluefin tuna at the Sushizanmai sushi restaurant in Tokyo on Monday. Photo: AFP

Self-styled “Tuna King” Kiyoshi Kimura’s sushi restaurant chain paid the top price for the 243kg (535lbs) fish that was caught off Japan’s northern coast.

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