Unseasonable weather has blighted agriculture across Japan, as well as sales of summer clothes

This article is more than 1 year old

This article is more than 1 year old

Tokyo’s cloudiest few weeks in nearly 60 years has cast a shadow over the capital’s vegetable markets, forcing up the prices of some by 70%.

Japan has been hit by unseasonably cloudy weather and cool temperatures, Tokyo enjoying fewer than three hours of sunshine a day for 20 days through to Tuesday, the longest stretch recorded since Japan’s Meteorological Agency started collecting data in 1961.

The lack of sunshine and low temperatures has been affecting agriculture across much of the Japanese archipelago. Cucumber prices have shot up by 70%, while other vegetables have also posted double-digit hikes at Tokyo’s central wholesale market, according to the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries.

But not all vegetables are feeling the burn. The prices of onions, white radishes and carrots have all dropped because the northern island of Hokkaido, where the majority of them are grown, enjoyed more normal levels of sunshine.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Japan’s consumers are feeling the pinch as a result of sluggish vegetable fields. Photograph: Alexander Spatari/Getty Images

The cause of the cooler, rainy weather is an anticyclone in the Sea of Okhotsk, off the eastern seaboard of Russia, that has been pushing cold and humid air south across Japan.

Japan is hit by a rainy season between late June and early July that has usually finished by now, followed by about two months of intense heat and humidity. The unusual weather pattern has also affected sales of summer clothes.

A heatwave in July last year killed dozens and hospitalised thousands across Japan, with the highest temperature ever recorded in the nation of 41.1C logged in Saitama, north of Tokyo.

Organisers and athletes will be hoping for another cooler summer next year, when the Tokyo Olympics 2020 will run from 24 July to 9 August.

The Japan Meteorological Agency is predicting another week of cloudy days, but expects temperatures will be back to seasonal norms by the end of July.

• This article was amended on 19 July 2019. An earlier version said Tokyo’s 20 days with fewer than three hours of sunshine a day were the lowest recorded by Japan’s Meterological Agency. In fact that was that was the longest stretch recorded by the agency. This has been corrected.