Ikata, Ehime

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Ikata
伊方町
Location of Ikata
Ikata's location in Ehime, Japan.
Location
Country Japan
Region Shikoku
Prefecture Ehime
District Nishiuwa
Physical characteristics
Area 94.37 km²
Population (as of November 30, 2006)
     Total 12,550
     Density 132.99/km²
Symbols
Tree Ubamegashi (Quercus phillyraeoides)
Flower Tsuwabuki (Farfugium japonicum)
Symbol of Ikata
Ikata's logo, symbolizing the Sadamisaki peninsula
Ikata City Hall
Mayor Kazuhiko Yamashita
Address 〒796-0301
1993-1, Minatoura, Ikata-chō, Nishiuwa-gun, Ehime
Phone number (0894) 38-0211
Official website: Ikata homepage


Ikata (伊方町 Ikata-chō?) is a town located in Nishiuwa District, Ehime, Japan.

On April 1, 2005 the former town of Ikata merged with the nearby towns of Seto and Misaki to form the new Ikata, which spans the Sadamisaki peninsula.

Contents

[edit] Geography

The Sadamisaki peninsula, Japan's longest peninsula, is extremely mountainous. The various neighborhoods of Ikata are found nestled among the foothills, connected only by winding coastal paths and a single highway, Route 197 (the Ikata leg of which is affectionately nicknamed "Melody Line").

Ikata is surrounded on three sides by ocean—the Iyo Sea (part of the Inland Sea) to the north, the Uwa Sea (Pacific Ocean) to the south, and the Hōyo Strait (separating Shikoku from Kyūshū) to the west.

[edit] Nearby Cities and Towns

[edit] Transportation

Route 197 runs down the peninsula, then continues over to Kyūshū by means of ferries that connect Ikata's Misaki Port with Saganoseki (Ōita, Ōita) and Beppu, Ōita. Bus service runs up and down the peninsula, to and from Yawatahama. There are no trains in Ikata.

[edit] Points of interest

Sadamisaki Lighthouse at sunset
Sadamisaki Lighthouse at sunset
  • Sadamisaki Lighthouse — This lighthouse stands at the tip of the peninsula, overlooking the Hōyo Strait. On clear days you can see across to Kyūshū. 1.8 km of hiking trails and a campground lay at its feet.
  • Seto Wind Hill Park — This park is located atop a mountain in the former Seto. From it you can see many of Ikata's numerous windmills, spinning above the Inland Sea to the north and the Pacific Ocean to the south. Haikus about the windmills, submitted for Ikata's Windmill Festival, are on display in the park.

[edit] Roadside Stations

Ikata has two Roadside Stations:

  • Ikata Kirara-kan
  • Seto Agriculture Park

[edit] Culture

[edit] Food

Ikata is known for its mikans and mikan juice. More than 20 different varieties of mikan are grown in Ikata. The Seto area also produces vegetables such as the bright-purple Kintarō potato. Misaki has a strong fishing tradition, catching lots of aji (鯵 horse mackerel) and saba (鯖 mackerel).

One Ikata specialty cuisine is jakoten (じゃこ天), a tempura-fried patty of pressed white fish meat and vegetables. Other variations include jakokatsu (じゃこカツ), which is the same but fried and breaded like tonkatsu, and jako-croquette (じゃこコロッケ) which is prepared like a croquette.

[edit] Language

Residents of Ikata speak the Iyo dialect of Japanese, which is similar in many respects to the Hiroshima dialect. One feature particular to the Nanyo (southern Ehime) region is the use of the particle ga (が) as a question marker.

Ex. "What are you doing?": Nani shiteru no? (何してるの? Standard Japanese) becomes Nani shiyoru ga? (何しよるが? Iyo-ben)

Ikata's largest town celebration in autumn, the Kinahaiya Ikata Festival, is another example of the Iyo dialect—kinahai ya (来なはいや) literally means "come on over" (kinasai yo 来なさいよ in standard Japanese).

[edit] Industry

Ikata's main industries are farming (largely citrus fruits such as mikans), fishing, and electrical power. Ikata produces a substantial fraction of Shikoku's electricity. There are two main power production methods currently in use.

[edit] Wind power

Windmills at the Seto Wind Hill Park
Windmills at the Seto Wind Hill Park

The former town of Seto erected eleven Mitsubishi MWT-1000 wind generators in January 2002. The "old" Ikata installed two Vestas V52-850kW generators in March 2005. Together they have an expected yearly energy output of 34,700 MWh. Ikata is investing heavily in wind power infrastructure, with 45 additional towers currently under construction. They plan to have a total of 60 generators within the next few years.

[edit] Nuclear power

Ikata Nuclear Power Plant
Ikata Nuclear Power Plant

The island of Shikoku has only one nuclear power plant, and this is located in Ikata town. The Ikata Nuclear Power Plant has two Mitisubishi 538 MWe Pressurized Water Reactor units with the 2 Reactor Coolant Loop design (similar to original Westinghouse design as Prairie Island, Kewaunee, and Point Beach plants) and one Mitsubishi Pressurized Water Reactor unit with the 3 Reactor Coolant Loop design (similar to the Westinghouse Surry, North Anna, and Robinson plants). Units 1 and 2 started up in February 1977 and August 1981. Unit 3 is a 3 loop PWR rated at 846 MWe that started up in June 1994.

[edit] International exchange

Ikata puts much effort into expanding the horizons of its residents through its annual international exchange program. Since 1995, Ikata middle school students have traveled to the town's American sister city, Red Wing, Minnesota, for home stays of one to two weeks. Students from Red Wing likewise come to Ikata to learn about life in rural Japan.

[edit] Sister cities

Ikata has two sister cities, both of which also have nuclear power plants:

[edit] Politics

Sign protesting the Ikata Nuclear Power Plant.  "(We are) absolutely opposed to the MOX fuel plan!!"
Sign protesting the Ikata Nuclear Power Plant. "(We are) absolutely opposed to the MOX fuel plan!!"

Ikata experienced significant political turbulence leading up to and immediately following the April 1, 2005 merger with Seto and Misaki.

To begin with, multiple potential merger plans were put forth, one of which was for all of the Nishiuwa District towns (Misaki, Seto, Old Ikata, and Honai) to merge together. However, when Honai announced that it would merge with the nearby city of Yawatahama, polls indicated that Misaki residents still preferred to merge with Honai and Yawatahama, rather than Seto and Old Ikata, despite their being discontiguous (a Misaki-Honai-Yawatahama merger would make Misaki an exclave). Ultimately this was found to be impractical, and the Misaki-Seto-Ikata merger was approved with some grumbling over the naming of the new town.

Following the merger a heated mayoral race was held, with 11 members of incumbent Kiyoyoshi Nakamoto's campaign arrested for electoral fraud. Challenger Yoshihisa Hatanaka ultimately won, only to be arrested in February of 2006 for corruption relating to government construction contracts. He resigned soon thereafter.

A second race was held, with Kazuhiko Yamashita defeating rival Kiyohiko Takakado by only 80 votes.[1]

There has been and still remains political resistance among some Ikata residents to the nuclear power plant. Most recently this has revolved around the now-approved plan to implement MOX fuel in Unit 3 of the Ikata plant.

[edit] Notable people from Ikata

  • Shūji Nakamura, inventor of the blue LED, hails from the former town of Seto.
  • Explorer Hyōichi Kōno successfully reached the North Pole in 1997.[2] He passed away in 2001 while attempting to walk from the North Pole back to his birthplace, the former town of Seto.
  • Nenten Tsubouchi is a haiku poet whose unique and quirky poems have been featured in elementary school textbooks in Japan.[3] He was born in the Kuchō neighborhood of Ikata.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Wikipedia Japan: 伊方町・行政
  2. ^ Women's Polar Team North Pole Expedition 2002
  3. ^ Ikata Town Homepage: Poets

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 33°26′18″N, 132°13′46″E

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