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Tokyo tourism group plans June study meeting for forest-based corporate training

17 hours ago
Tokyo tourism group plans June study meeting for forest-based corporate training

By AI, Created 5:07 AM UTC, June 04, 2026, /AGP/ – TOKYO Sustainable Tourism will hold a June 10 study meeting in Akiruno City to build corporate training programs in Mountainous Tokyo, with an autumn pilot tour planned next. The initiative ties Leave No Trace environmental education to local business development and a revenue loop that supports instructor training and children’s environmental learning.

Why it matters: - The project is trying to turn outdoor training into a regional development model, not just a one-off event. - Organizers want training revenue to help fund Leave No Trace instructor development and local environmental education for children. - The effort links tourism, corporate training, and conservation in the mountain areas west of central Tokyo.

What happened: - TOKYO Sustainable Tourism will hold a study meeting on Wednesday, June 10, 2026, from 13:00 to 17:00 at Flare Itsukaichi in Akiruno City, Tokyo. - The group says a networking reception is scheduled for 17:30 at Satoyama resort “Shizenjin Mura.” - TOKYO Sustainable Tourism is made up of Ome City, Akiruno City, Okutama Town and Leave No Trace Japan. - The study meeting is designed to develop concrete concepts for a corporate training pilot tour planned for autumn. - Local businesses, corporations and academic institutions will join the program development work.

The details: - The project grew out of long-running cleanup efforts in natural areas about one hour from central Tokyo, where abandoned barbecue waste and campfire scars have been persistent problems. - Local businesses had already spent years conducting river cleanups, but organizers concluded that reducing litter at the source would be more effective than repeatedly collecting waste. - Leave No Trace, or LNT, is an environmental ethics program used in more than 100 countries. - Ome City became the first municipality in Japan to sign a regional partnership agreement with Leave No Trace Japan in 2023. - The initiative later expanded to Akiruno City and Okutama Town, and a 2024 symposium brought together leaders from all three municipalities. - The study meeting will include a keynote on human resource development, a panel on corporate training in the era of sustainability management, and a workshop on program development using regional characteristics. - The workshop will split participants into groups focused on Ome, Akiruno and Okutama. - Participants will work with local outdoor guides and businesses to shape programs for the autumn pilot tour. - Cooperating organizations include Tama University, PERSOL TEMPSTAFF CO., LTD. and Tosei Electrobeam Co., Ltd. - Media interviews and on-site coverage opportunities will be arranged during the networking reception. - Media representatives who want to participate are asked to contact the project secretariat at Good Life Tama, Takagi. - More information is available on TOKYO Sustainable Tourism and Leave No Trace Environmental Ethics Program.

Between the lines: - The project is aiming for a circular local economy, where corporate training spending stays in the region and supports environmental education. - The emphasis on experiential learning suggests Tokyo’s mountain towns are being positioned as a practical setting for sustainability training. - The mix of municipal leaders, universities and private companies shows the program is being built as a public-private partnership rather than a tourism campaign alone.

What’s next: - Organizers will use the June study meeting to refine the autumn pilot tour. - Local businesses, corporations and academic partners are expected to turn the workshop output into specific training program concepts. - The project may later expand if the pilot tour shows demand for corporate training tied to conservation and regional experiences.

The bottom line: - TOKYO Sustainable Tourism is betting that environmental ethics can become a business model for mountain tourism, local education and regional revitalization at the same time.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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