Isahaya Bay Explained

Isahaya Bay
Location:Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan
Coordinates:32.9032°N 130.2144°W
Type:Bay
Basin Countries:Japan
Area:65km2
Depth:10m (30feet)
Max-Depth:10m (30feet)
Pushpin Map:Japan
Pushpin Label Position:left

Isahaya Bay (諫早湾, Isahaya-wan) is a bay within the Ariake Sea, located northwest of the Shimabara Peninsula in Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan. Its surface area is about 65km2, with a maximum depth of 10m (30feet).

In 1986, the governor of Isahaya began a 235 billion-yen reclamation project of a tidal flat by closing off part of the bay for agricultural purposes with it being completed in 2008. However, the reclamation project was met with a series of protests from local fishermen, who said that the closing of the bay had caused changes in currents along with mass pollution within the bay, which had affected their catches.[1]

Geography

Isahaya Bay is located within the Ariake Sea on the island of Kyushu, Japan. It covers an area of 65km2. and has a mean depth of 10m (30feet).

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2019-09-18 . Isahaya Bay reclamation dispute continues . 2022-11-25 . The Japan Times . en-US.