Young Animator Training Project


The Young Animator Training Project is an annual project launched in 2010, and funded by the Japanese government's Agency for Cultural Affairs in order to support training animators. The project culminates in a series of anime shorts produced by various animation studios each year called:
The project was launched by Japanese Animation Creators Association in 2010. The animation labor group received 214.5 million yen from the Japanese government's Agency for Cultural Affairs, and it distributed most of those funds to studios to train young animators on-the-job during the year. One of the reasons for the support of the Agency for Cultural Affairs is the concern that more of the Japanese animation process is being outsourced overseas—thus leading to a decline in opportunities to teach animation techniques within Japan. In 2011 the Agency once again provided funding for JAniCA to select more young training projects under the same budgets.
In April 2014, JAniCA announced that they are no longer running the initiative. Later it was announced that The Association of Japanese Animations will run the project.

Animations

The following animations were created out of the funding provided by the Young Animator Training Project. Animation studios bid for funding, and each year, four studios are selected to produce short films. All short films air in theaters each year in March.

Project A

The following shorts were produced in 2010.
The following shorts were produced in 2011.
The following shorts were produced in 2012.
Aruvu Rezuru replaced an intended short, TV Kazoku Channel Jacker, that was to be produced by Pierrot.

Anime Mirai 2014

The following shorts were produced in 2013.
The following shorts were produced in 2014.
The following shorts were produced in 2015. This is the first year after The Association of Japanese Animations took over this project and renamed it to Anime Tamago.
The following shorts were produced in 2016.
The following shorts were produced in 2017.
The following shorts were produced in 2018.
The following shorts have been announced for production in 2019.