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What are the four major industrial zones in Japan?

Japan is the second largest industrial country in the world. The country is poor in resources and the original industrial level is not high. After World War II, it took advantage of the low wages of the labor force, improved its level through technical training, and combined with reasonable organization, absorbed and digested the technology of other countries, developed high-tech industries, and made remarkable achievements in facing the world. Because of the need to import raw materials and export products, its industrial zones all face the Pacific Ocean.

Jingbin industrial zone 1. It is located in Tokyo, the capital of Japan, and near Tokyo Bay. Kashima, east of Tokyo Bay, is the most concentrated area of industry, with steel, automobile, machinery and steel as the main industries.

2. Hanshin Industrial Zone. The region is centered on Osaka and Kobe, and the ports of Osaka and Kobe are the largest trading ports in Japan. From shipbuilding to vehicle manufacturing. Machinery, mainly steel.

3. Zhongjing Industrial Zone. The area is located between Nagoya and its nearby Tokyo and Kyoto. Relying on Nagoya Port, it is composed of textile, ceramics, automobile, machinery, steel, oil refining, chemical industry and other industries.