-
The study found that oil and gas employment, spending, tax revenues and spinoff effects supported 16% of the state’s jobs in 2022.
-
Willow would be the first large project constructed in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska.
-
The 8.5 megawatt solar array is expected to power about 1,400 homes, and has already begun feeding energy into the Matanuska Energy Association grid.
-
The Journal reported that buyers in Japan and South Korea aren’t confident in the project, and don’t plan to make investments or sign contracts.
-
The Northern Journal's Nat Herz reports that renewable energy advocates say conservation, along with more power generated from solar and wind projects, could delay a shift to LNG by up to five years.
-
A federal report last year said nearly 17,000 tribal homes were without electricity, with most being in southwestern states and in Alaska.
-
The local Alaska Native corporation is seeking construction funds for the project, which is expected to fully replace costly diesel power.
-
U.N. Human Rights Commission appointees want to file a brief in lawsuit over Arctic drilling project.
-
Residents' electricity bills suddenly quadrupled this summer. The changes from state regulators should ease, but won't remove, the financial burden.
-
An ongoing effort to sell Seward’s city-run utility to a larger utility company is getting another chance on the ballot.
-
The well blowout led to a weeks-long release of natural gas and a brief evacuation at the company’s Alpine oil field.
-
Seward Electric Utility Manager Rob Montgomery said the situation at the utility is dire now that sale has been quashed.