Japan says time & cost of relocation of US base in Okinawa may double

25 Dec, 2019 15:24 / Updated 5 years ago

The relocation of a US Marine Corps base to a less-crowded area of the southern Japanese island of Okinawa will take more than twice as much money and time as previously estimated, Japan’s government said on Wednesday.

The Defense Ministry said the relocation of US Marine Corps Air Station Futenma from densely populated Ginowanto Henoko on Okinawa’s eastern coast will cost 930 billion yen ($8.5 billion) and take 12 years, pushing its completion into the 2030s. That adds more than a decade to the plan, which has already been delayed by more than 20 years because of local opposition and other reasons, AP reports.

Under an earlier plan agreed to by Tokyo and Washington in 2013, construction was to cost about 350 billion yen ($3.2 billion) and take five years, with completion expected about 2022. Most of the additional cost and time is required to stabilize and strengthen reclaimed land off the coast of Henoko that will be used for runways, the ministry said.

Many Okinawans oppose the relocation, saying the base should be entirely removed from Okinawa. Opponents also say the relocation plan should be scrapped for environmental reasons.