RECENT ARTICLES
Pebble CEO Tom Collier resigns - Alaska Public Media
Sign inWelcome! Log into your accountPassword recoveryRecover your passwordA password will be e-mailed to you.Tom Collier has resigned as the CEO of Pebble Limited Partnership, according to a news release from Pebble’s parent company, Northern Dynasty Minerals.Northern Dynasty says Collier resigned because of his comments about Alaska’s elected leaders and federal regulators. The calls were secretly recorded by an environmental group who had men working undercover, posing as potential investors. RELATED:The group, called the Environmental Investigation Agency, released over an hour of...…Sign inWelcome! Log into your accountPassword recoveryRecover your passwordA password will be e-mailed to you.Tom Collier has resigned as the CEO of Pebble Limited Partnership, according to a news release from Pebble’s parent company, Northern Dynasty Minerals.Northern Dynasty says Collier resigned because of his comments about Alaska’s elected leaders and federal regulators. The calls were secretly recorded by an environmental group who had men working undercover, posing as potential investors. RELATED:The group, called the Environmental Investigation Agency, released over an hour of...WW…
In Bristol Bay a rising concern among tribes that fish processors' quarantine plans aren't enough - Alaska Public Media
Sign inWelcome! Log into your accountPassword recoveryRecover your passwordA password will be e-mailed to you.The Naknek Native Village Council is the latest Bristol Bay group to urge the governor to put extreme protective measures in place immediately or consider closing the world’s most valuable and productive salmon fishery.In a , the tribe echoed requests made this week by Dillingham’s city and tribal councils. “The Tribal Organizations of Naknek, King Salmon, and South Naknek, consider this pandemic to be of utmost importance. Our people, and our culture are at risk,” it wrote....…Sign inWelcome! Log into your accountPassword recoveryRecover your passwordA password will be e-mailed to you.The Naknek Native Village Council is the latest Bristol Bay group to urge the governor to put extreme protective measures in place immediately or consider closing the world’s most valuable and productive salmon fishery.In a , the tribe echoed requests made this week by Dillingham’s city and tribal councils. “The Tribal Organizations of Naknek, King Salmon, and South Naknek, consider this pandemic to be of utmost importance. Our people, and our culture are at risk,” it wrote....WW…
Big sockeye runs, struggling kings creates complicated balancing act for Bristol Bay managers - Alaska Public Media
Sign inWelcome! Log into your accountPassword recoveryRecover your passwordA password will be e-mailed to you.Fifty-one million sockeye are forecast to return to Bristol Bay this summer.If that holds, commercial fishermen will be able to harvest around 37 million reds. That’s 13% more than the average harvests of the past decade.But concerns remain about the numbers of chinook salmon in the Nushagak District on the west side of Bristol Bay — leaving biologists managing the fishery with a complicated balancing act.Faced with another huge sockeye run this summer, managers in the Nushagak...…Sign inWelcome! Log into your accountPassword recoveryRecover your passwordA password will be e-mailed to you.Fifty-one million sockeye are forecast to return to Bristol Bay this summer.If that holds, commercial fishermen will be able to harvest around 37 million reds. That’s 13% more than the average harvests of the past decade.But concerns remain about the numbers of chinook salmon in the Nushagak District on the west side of Bristol Bay — leaving biologists managing the fishery with a complicated balancing act.Faced with another huge sockeye run this summer, managers in the Nushagak...WW…
Struggling Southwest Alaska seafood processor hopes to come back stronger under new ownership - Alaska Public Media
Sign inWelcome! Log into your accountPassword recoveryRecover your passwordA password will be e-mailed to you.Peter Pan, the seafood processing company with an array of plants in Southwest Alaska, had been struggling to keep up with competitors.So when its owner, Japanese seafood giant Maruha Nichiro, initially announced its sale of Peter Pan to three buyers, it expected a loss of almost $28 million.The deal means the company is now vertically integrated, so all stages of production and marketing — usually operated separately — are now under one owner. It also places Peter Pan under...…Sign inWelcome! Log into your accountPassword recoveryRecover your passwordA password will be e-mailed to you.Peter Pan, the seafood processing company with an array of plants in Southwest Alaska, had been struggling to keep up with competitors.So when its owner, Japanese seafood giant Maruha Nichiro, initially announced its sale of Peter Pan to three buyers, it expected a loss of almost $28 million.The deal means the company is now vertically integrated, so all stages of production and marketing — usually operated separately — are now under one owner. It also places Peter Pan under...WW…
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