TOKYO – Visitors to Japan have cited the lack of rubbish bins in public areas, including at train stations, as the biggest inconvenience during their trip, a recent government survey showed.
According to the Japan Tourism Agency, the issue was cited by 21.9 per cent of more than 4,000 foreign visitors surveyed at five major airports in the country as their top concern.
The survey was conducted on respondents before leaving New Chitose, Narita, Haneda, Kansai and Fukuoka airports between December 2024 and January 2025.
While the figure improved by about 8 percentage points from the previous year, many of the respondents said that they had to take their rubbish back to their accommodation after failing to find garbage bins.
Japan used to have more rubbish bins in public spaces, but many were removed in recent years partly due to safety concerns after terror attacks in the country, such as the 1995 Tokyo subway sarin gas attack, and abroad, including the 2004 Madrid train bombings, according to experts.
But with the disappearance of most rubbish bins in public areas, littering in tourist spots has become a major public concern.
Mr Yohei Takemura, chief executive of Forcetec Inc, which installs solar-powered rubbish bins that can compress trash in public spaces, said popular tourist destinations like New York and Paris each have about 30,000 public garbage bins.
While rubbish cans installed and maintained by the public sector have vanished in Tokyo, there are trash cans set up and maintained by the private sector, Mr Takemura said.
On other inconveniences, 15.2 per cent reported communication issues, such as the inability of staff at restaurants and other facilities to speak English, while 13.1 per cent pointed to overcrowding in places such as tourist spots.
Respondents also raised the issue of immigration procedures, complaining over the long waiting time at airports. KYODO NEWS
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