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Toyosu Market “tuna king” steps back in 2021, with first auctioned fish sold to a new buyer

January 6, 2021 — Japan’s self-proclaimed “tuna king,” Kiyoshi Kimura, is neither the owner of the largest sushi chain in the country, nor its leading purchaser of tuna. He is, however, the one credited with always buying the “biggest and best tuna” available from the first wholesale auction each year at Tokyo’s Toyosu Market. Until this year, that is.

On 5 January, 2021, Kimura – who serves as president of Sushi Zanmai Co., Ltd. – abdicated his title amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, allowing the top tuna to go to Yukitaka Yamaguchi, president of intermediate wholesaler Yamayuki, which supplies many of the top artisanal sushi bars in Tokyo.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

‘Tuna King’ buys 608-pound fish for $1.8 million at Sunday auction in Japan

January 7, 2020 — One fish, two fish, red fish… million-dollar tuna fish.

Japanese businessman Kiyoshi Kimura, who has dubbed himself the “Tuna King,” purchased a 608-pound fish for $1.8 million at a Sunday auction.

The blue fin fetched the second-highest price in history at auction Sunday, Japanese Broadcasting Corporation NHK reported.

Caught in Aomori, a political region of Japan, the giant fish sold for 193 million yen — equivalent to nearly $1.8 million.

“Yes, this is expensive, isn’t it? I want our customers to eat very tasty ones this year, too,” Kimura said after the auction, as reported by Agence France-Presse.

Read the full story at the New York Daily News

Bluefin Tuna Sells for $632,000 at Tsukiji’s New Year Auction

January 5, 2016 — TOKYO — A sushi chain boss paid $632,000 for a 466-pound bluefin tuna at auction on Thursday.

The 74.2 million yen winning bid for the prized but imperiled species was the second highest ever after a record 155.4 million yen bid in 2013 at the annual New Year auction at the famed Tsukiji market.

Kiyomura Corp. owner Kiyoshi Kimura posed, beaming, with the gleaming, man-sized fish, which was caught off the coast of northern Japan’s Aomori prefecture.

His company, which runs the Sushi Zanmai chain, often wins the auction. This year’s purchase works out to $1,356 per pound.

Japanese are the biggest consumers of the torpedo-shaped bluefin tuna, and surging consumption of sushi has boosted demand, as experts warn the species could go extinct.

A report by the International Scientific Committee for Tuna and Tuna-like Species in the North Pacific Ocean last year put the population of bluefin tuna at 2.6 percent of its “unfished” size, down from an earlier assessment of 4.2 percent.

Read the full story at NBC News

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