Osaka Takes Lead in Japan

Osaka has jumped out in front of Tokyo in the race to secure a casino license in Japan’s nascent gaming market. With the national parliament set to debate a bill to legalize the industry, the city has identified a site on Odaiba Bay (l.) as its preferred location and says its ready to entertain proposals.

The Japanese city of Osaka has identified land on Osaka Bay for a resort casino, joining more than a dozen jurisdictions around the country maneuvering for position as potential hosts of a market that could be worth US billion-plus over the next decade.

Osaka Gov. Ichiro Matsui, a member of the right-leaning, pro-casino Japan Restoration Party, told Reuters that officials will meet next week to review and approve the 170-hectare site in Yumeshima.

“It’s about time that as a city we narrow down the candidate sites,” he said as Japan’s parliament, the Diet, prepares to debate a bill that would start the legalization process.

A cross-party coalition of lawmakers led by leaders of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party expect debate to begin later this month or early in May on an initial authorization measure that was introduced in December with the aim to secure passage before the Diet adjourns in June. This would be followed by a second bill in 2015 to guide the bidding process and establish a licensing and regulatory regime.

“Initially, casinos should be created in three or so locations and the number should gradually increase if their operations prove successful,” a key member of the coalition said.

Osaka, along with Tokyo, is expected to be in the forefront of the process, and Matsui said, “We have reached the point where we need to start accepting proposals.”

In Tokyo, the Odaiba area along Tokyo Bay is believed to be the preferred location, but officials have yet to formally name a site, and Gov. Yoichi Masuzoe has not yet spoken publicly on the issue. Advocates there want to have a resort up and running in time for the 2020 Summer Olympics.

Both cities have attracted intense interest from an A-list of global operators.

The English-language Japan Times, meanwhile, says some nine other locales are making preparations to host casinos, and national daily Asahi Shimbun reports that six of them—Hokkaido, the prefectures of Chiba, Nagasaki and Okinawa and the cities of Yokohama and Chiba—have already budgeted casino-related studies this year.