Government response Prime Minister
Fumio Kishida announced the establishment of a special emergency center to gather and disseminate information on the earthquake and tsunami. He later announced the deployment of 2,000 personnel to the affected region, with 8,500 others on standby. About 20 aircraft were also dispatched to survey the damage. An additional 2,000 firefighters and 1,000 police officers were also deployed to assist in rescue operations. About 3,000 rescuers were sent to the Noto Peninsula alone. By 4 January, at least 150 people had been rescued, while at least 2,000 of the 10,000 evacuees from Wajima had received humanitarian aid.
Fumio Kishida led the
government response to the earthquake. The Japanese government announced that it would allocate 4 billion yen ($28 million) from reserve funds to use in disaster relief efforts and increased the number of personnel involved in the response to 6,300. Defence Minister Kihara added that
UH60JA helicopters were to be used in relief efforts, in their first major deployment since the
2023 Miyakojima helicopter crash in April. The Japanese government also announced that families whose houses were completely destroyed or severely damaged would receive aid amounting to 3 million yen ($20,000). Kishida later said that the government would allocate a total of 100 billion yen ($690 million) in reconstruction efforts and increase its reserve funds to $6.9 billion in the upcoming annual budget to ensure support for recovery efforts. Ishikawa, Niigata, Toyama and Fukui prefectures requested financial support for 47 municipalities under the Disaster Relief Act, under which the national government is expected to cover 50 to 90 percent of expenses for disaster response and rehabilitation. The
Japanese health ministry also instructed hospitals to offer health insurance coverage to patients affected by the quake, including those without insurance certificates and opened a telephone interpreting service in 23 languages to help medical workers handle foreign patients in the affected areas. Authorities in Ishikawa prefecture also opened an email help line to assist affected residents and tourists. By May, the number of displaced had fallen to 4,606, while about 3,780 households remained without water. As of December 2024, more than 200 people remained in shared emergency shelters. On 4 January, the Japan Coast Guard began searching its coast with an aircraft and patrol boat for people missing; presumably swept away by the tsunami. At least one person was declared missing from the tsunami. At least two people were rescued after the expiration of the 72-hour survival window in Wajima on 4 January. Large holes in roads and landslides made rescue efforts challenging four days after the earthquake. Snowy weather conditions also affected rescue efforts, with snowfall reaching in several areas and raising concerns of additional building collapses. Snowfall significantly affected rescuers' ability to deliver supplies to isolated villages and recover survivors. Power was also cut due to snow, disabling cell phones. By 3 January, about 31,800 people were living in shelters following the earthquake, with about 27,700 sheltering in 336 evacuation centers in Ishikawa prefecture alone. The government said it had secured about 6,500 public housing units for evacuees to resettle across the country. A month after the earthquake, around 14,000 people remained displaced due to the disaster and about 2,867 people continued to live in damaged homes. Local authorities announced plans to transfer students from schools in Wajima that had been converted to evacuation centers to schools in
Hakusan and Kanazawa, followed by around 140 junior high school students from Suzu and Noto. Fifty students from a high school in Wajima were transferred to
Kai, Yamanashi prefecture, with 600 others expected to arrive in April. Schools in some of the affected areas resumed on 15 January, along with garbage-collection services in Wajima. At least 44 schools in the affected areas remain closed but gradually reopened, with the remaining seven schools reopening in Wajima on 6 February. Applicants from Ishikawa Prefecture who were unable to take the
Common Test for University Admissions held on 13–14 January due to the earthquake were allowed to undertake makeup examinations scheduled later in the month. On 14 January, Kishida made his first visit to the disaster zone, where he held an aerial inspection over Ishikawa Prefecture and visited evacuation centers in Wajima and Suzu. On 25 January, the Japanese government unveiled a disaster recovery package in which residents were exempted from the cost of demolishing their homes and would receive around $20,000 to rebuild destroyed or severely damaged houses. It also called for the construction of wooden and conventional makeshift prefabricated dwellings. The government also pledged to shoulder up to 75 percent of costs in resuming operations at small and midsized businesses, with a limit of $10 million. It also pledged to support the replacement of affected agricultural machinery and fishing boats, as well as the recovery of traditional industries in the area such as
Wajima-nuri lacquerware. The government also said it was planning to shoulder half the hotel fees for tourists in the
Hokuriku Region with a limit of $135 per stay to promote tourism. The government said the package would be funded by the national budget's reserve funds in the 2023 and 2024 fiscal years.
Energy infrastructure Kansai Electric Power Company,
Tokyo Electric Power Company and
Hokuriku Electric Power Company said they were inspecting their nuclear power plants for abnormalities. Both the Kansai with the reactors at the latter's
Shika Nuclear Power Plant in Ishikawa Prefecture having been closed for inspections at the time of the earthquake. However, a cumulative oil spillage of 19,800 liters at two of the reactors was later revealed, partially impacting the plant's ability to receive power from external sources. Hokuriku Electric Power Company subsequently said that repairs at the facility would take more than six months. Eighteen of the Shika nuclear plant's 116 radiation monitoring posts were also rendered offline by the earthquake. Ground deformation, including subsidence, was also recorded in 80 locations inside the plant compound. but ordered Hokuriku Electric Power Company to conduct further study of the earthquake's impact on the Shika Nuclear Power Plant. Hokuriku Electric Power Company also shut down two generators at its Nanao Ota thermal power plant in Nanao. Concerns over the safety of the Shika nuclear power plant and nearby nuclear facilities led to residents living near the power plants to submit a petition to the on 2 February asking for a suspension in the screening process undertaken prior to reopening the Shika power plant until damage at the facility is fully examined and safety measures are implemented. Minor damage was recorded at the Shika Nuclear Power Plant following a 6.0 (5.8)
aftershock on 3 June 2024.
Transport Shinkansen services were suspended in central and eastern parts of Japan following the earthquake, stranding at least 1,400 passengers aboard four stalled trains between
Toyama and
Kanazawa for about 11 hours. Local train services were also halted for up to 24 hours following the earthquake, stranding about 1,000 passengers aboard express trains. Several major highways in the affected areas were also closed.
All Nippon Airways and
Japan Airlines cancelled flights to Toyama, Ishikawa, and Niigata prefectures for the rest of 1 January. By the morning of 3 January,
Japan Railways partially resumed services, The confirmed that Noto Airport would remain closed until 4 January. Following repairs, the airport reopened to aircraft on 11 January, while
All Nippon Airways resumed commercial services to and from the airport on 27 January, albeit in a limited capacity until the end of February. The Noto Railway resumed full operations on 6 April.
Humanitarian aid Due to blocked roads, humanitarian aid was sent to the peninsula using ships, while other isolated areas were accessed through helicopters. In light of the difficulties in providing aid,
Ishikawa Prefecture asked individuals to refrain from sending aid, instead limiting the call to corporations only. By 4 January, authorities had delivered about 240,000 meals, 500 packages of powdered milk, and 190,000 bottles of drinking water to the affected areas. On the evening of 2 January, a
runway collision occurred at
Haneda Airport in Tokyo between a
Japan Coast Guard DHC-8 aircraft carrying humanitarian aid to earthquake victims in Niigata and Japan Airlines Flight 516, an
A350-900 from
New Chitose Airport landing at Haneda, destroying both aircraft. All 379 people aboard the JAL plane were evacuated; however, 15 sustained injuries. The captain of the Coast Guard plane escaped with critical injuries, while the remaining five crew members were killed. Fundraising campaigns across the country collected a total amount of ¥10 billion ($67 million) for relief aid. Private organizations raised at least $8 million in crowdfunding drives for relief aid, while the Ishikawa prefectural government began accepting cash donations at its offices, including those in Tokyo and
Osaka, while announcing plans to open a bank account for further donations. By 24 January, the prefectural government said that it had received a total of at least ¥11 billion ($74.4 million) in donations, which was augmented by donations amounting to $8.1 million for the local
Japanese Red Cross Society (JRCS) and $2.4 million to the local
Central Community Chest of Japan (CCCJ) branch. The also established the Disaster Relief Volunteer & NPO Support Fund (VolSup) to support and their activities in providing help to victims. Apparel companies, including
Gunze,
Fast Retailing and Onward Holdings, donated at least 170,000 items for victims of the earthquake. About 110 hotels and inns volunteered to take in 3,000 people displaced by the earthquake.
JR Freight announced that it would carry humanitarian aid to the affected areas for free.
Nintendo announced that it will donate ¥50 million via the for disaster relief, with
The Pokémon Company also having donated the same amount earlier in the month.
KDDI offered 550
Starlink routers to shelters, government offices and medical teams operating in areas affected by the earthquake. In February 2024, the
Japan Sumo Association donated ¥10 million to Ishikawa Prefecture, plus ¥5 million collected from spectators at the
January tournament in Tokyo. Two months later, in April 2024, the association also organized its first tournament in 62 years with an additional ¥27 million raised during the event. The dispatched staff members and Emergency Medical Relief Teams to Ishikawa prefecture, focusing on hospitals, social welfare facilities, and evacuation centers. It also deployed Disaster Medical Coordination teams, nurses, and provided psychosocial support to affected people. The also installed a temporary water distribution system at evacuation centers in Nanao, which began supplying water on 22 January by purifying water from a swimming pool. The Taiwanese government announced ¥60 million in aid to support rescue operations and relief. A donation account was also created, while a fundraising campaign collected over NT$540 million ($17.2 million) from the private sector. United States Ambassador
Rahm Emanuel pledged an initial $100,000 in humanitarian aid to Japan and logistical support from the United States military. Japan said it only had plans to accept aid from the United States despite offers from other countries including Taiwan and China. In a statement from Chief Cabinet Secretary
Yoshimasa Hayashi, the country was "not accepting any personnel or material aid at the moment given the situation on the ground and the efforts that would be required to receive them." South Korea also said that it would provide $3 million in humanitarian aid. The Thai embassy in Tokyo sent 2,500 kilograms of food and other relief items to Ishikawa Prefecture.
Los Angeles Dodgers baseball player
Shohei Ohtani donated an undisclosed amount of aid to victims in the Noto peninsula. The Dodgers subsequently announced that it would donate an additional $1 million towards earthquake relief. The
Peace Boat Disaster Relief Volunteer Centre (PBV) and Peace Wing launched initiatives to support the affected regions, with providing food and material supplies, first-aid, and support for shelter operations and disaster relief volunteer centers, while Peace Wing dispatched an emergency support team, including doctors, nurses, rescue workers, and a disaster relief dog team, to provide search and rescue support, medical support, and emergency supplies. On January 4, 2024, the Yomiuri Light and Love Foundation donated ¥10 million to Ishikawa Prefecture from its Large-Scale Disaster Relief Fund, which was funded by proceeds from the sale of original merchandise for the "Yuzuru Hanyu Exhibition 2022," organized by the
Yomiuri Shimbun. In March 2024, it was also announced that a portion of the merchandise sales from the 2024 "
Yuzuru Hanyu Notte Stellata" ice show would be donated to support the earthquake victims through the
Japanese Red Cross Society. On June 30, 2024, professional figure skater
Yuzuru Hanyu and the Yomiuri Shimbun jointly donated an additional ¥2 million to the Yomiuri Light and Love Foundation to support victims of the Noto Peninsula earthquake. Subsequently, on September15, 2024,
Yuzuru Hanyu led a charity ice show performance titled "Challenge" in
Ishikawa Prefecture, accompanied by figure skaters
Satoko Miyahara,
Akiko Suzuki, and
Takahito Mura. The event was streamed live and on-demand via video streaming services, selling more than 10,000 tickets. The
¥53,662,728 ($367,758) proceeds from the event were donated to the Ishikawa Prefecture and Noto local government for the reconstruction of the areas affected by the earthquake. ==Aftermath==