日本自然保護協会 | |
Formation | 17 October 1951[1] |
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Purpose | Nature conservation |
Headquarters | 2F, Mitoyo Building, 1-16-10 Shinkawa, Chūō, Tōkyō, Japan |
Coordinates | 35°40′38″N 139°47′02″E / 35.677175°N 139.783791°E |
Membership | 24,142 (31 March 2016)[1] |
Key people | Kameyama Akira (亀山章) (Chairman)[1] |
Website | Official website |
The Nature Conservation Society of Japan (公益財団法人 日本自然保護協会, Kōeki zaidan hōjin Nihon shizen hogo kyōkai) (NACS-J) is a Japanese NGO founded in 1951.[1] It is a member organization of the International Union for Conservation of Nature, for which it acts as the Japanese coordinator.[2][3] The society developed out of the Oze Marsh Conservation Union (尾瀬保存期成同盟), formed in 1949 to challenge plans to build a hydroelectric power station in the Oze marshes; two years later, after organizing a petition to combat the issue of sulfur mining at Mount Meakan in Hokkaidō, the Union reformed as the country's first nature conservation organization.[4][5] More recent initiatives have included the development of a citizen-led satoyama monitoring system.[6]