7 Folgen

Alaska is defined by its environment and its natural resources — the fish in its rivers, the oil and minerals buried underground. The Northern Journal podcast digs into those subjects, with interviews with those who know them best.

Northern Journal Nathaniel Herz

    • Nachrichten

Alaska is defined by its environment and its natural resources — the fish in its rivers, the oil and minerals buried underground. The Northern Journal podcast digs into those subjects, with interviews with those who know them best.

    Eklutna 2.0: A robust defense from the dam owners

    Eklutna 2.0: A robust defense from the dam owners

    Last month, we heard outrage from conservation advocate Brad Meiklejohn and tribal leader Aaron Leggett; those two guests thought utilities' new proposed plans to fix the Anchorage-area Eklutna hydroelectric project's harms to salmon were inadequate.
    Now, it's time to hear directly from those utilities, which own the project at scenic Eklutna Lake. Guests on this episode include two utility spokespersons, Julie Hasquet from Chugach Electric Association and Julie Estey from Matanuska Electric Association, along with their consultant on the Eklutna project, Samantha Owen. They offer a robust defense of the utilities' study and planning process, and they share more details about why certain ideas for habitat improvements were chosen and others dismissed.
    You'll get far more from this episode if you listen to the interview with Meiklejohn and Leggett first. Send your feedback and suggestions to nat [at] northernjournal [dot] com.

    • 1 Std. 4 Min.
    How the state is letting oil platforms "rust away" into the ocean near Anchorage

    How the state is letting oil platforms "rust away" into the ocean near Anchorage

    Alaska regulators first said it was time for the Spurr platform, offshore from Anchorage in Cook Inlet, to be removed in 1992. Then, they backed down, and 30 years later, it remains in the water, where it hasn't produced a single drop of oil since. 
    The history of Spurr and five other shuttered Cook Inlet platforms are featured in a new story from Nat. It's not a Northern Journal piece — it was produced with Alaska Public Media and APM Reports — but the powers that be signed off on a podcast episode that delves into the details. Curtis Gilbert, Nat's editor at APM Reports, guest hosts.

    • 44 Min.
    The Bering Sea whale hunters and the East Coast filmmaker

    The Bering Sea whale hunters and the East Coast filmmaker

    This episode features Pete Chelkowski, one of the two directors of One with the Whale — a new documentary that features the story of Chris Apassingok, a Yup'ik whale hunter from St. Lawrence Island in the Bering Sea. Apassingok was 16 when he caught a bowhead and was subsequently subjected to a campaign of attacks and death threats initiated by an animal rights activist.
    One with the Whale is a rousing story, a celebration of Indigenous subsistence culture and a rural Alaska coming of age tale. It also raises some interesting questions about storytelling and narrative and ownership. Chelkowski speaks to that and a lot more in this interview.
    You can watch One with the Whale for free on PBS, and this High Country News piece by Julia O'Malley also tells Apassingok's backstory.
    Send your feedback, criticism and guest suggestions to nat[at]northernjournal.com. If you want to support this podcast, you can purchase a paid subscription to Northern Journal at this site.

    • 55 Min.
    What the heck is happening with the Eklutna River?

    What the heck is happening with the Eklutna River?

    Eklutna Lake is a jewel of Anchorage recreation. It's also the source of some of the electricity used by city residents. A major policymaking process has been underway for the past several years to address the Eklutna hydroelectric project's effects on salmon, and it's now coming to its conclusion with intense controversy.
    This is a complicated story with many different stakeholders. But two people who have been among the most involved are Aaron Leggett, head of Eklutna's tribal government, and Brad Meiklejohn, a longtime environmental advocate whose conservation group led a project to remove a derelict dam near the Eklutna River's mouth. They are featured on this episode; we hope to hear from the utilities that own the hydroelectric project in the coming days.
    Feedback? Criticism? Ideas for a future episode? Email nat at northernjournal dot com.

    • 56 Min.
    "I cannot introduce my son to salmon": A conversation with a Yukon River salmon advocate

    "I cannot introduce my son to salmon": A conversation with a Yukon River salmon advocate

    Brooke Woods is a longtime Yukon River salmon advocate. She is Koyukon Athabascan and a tribal member of the community of Rampart, which is on the Yukon in Interior Alaska, about 80 miles northwest of Fairbanks.
    She joins the Northern Journal podcast to share a personal perspective on Yukon River salmon declines, and on management measures to address them. Bathsheba Demuth, the Brown University environmental historian who discussed the same issues on a previous episode, also joins us — if you haven't listened to her interview, it provides context that would be useful before listening to this one.
    We've invited representatives of the pollock trawl industry to appear on their own episode of the podcast, and hope that interview materializes soon. Questions, comments or feedback? Email nat [at] northernjournal dot com.

    • 1 Std. 14 Min.
    The wind doesn't always blow and the sun doesn't always shine. And?

    The wind doesn't always blow and the sun doesn't always shine. And?

    Researchers Paul Denholm and Marty Schwarz just published a new study that says urban Alaska could save a lot of money by using much more wind and solar power to generate its electricity. The interesting part: They don't ignore the fact that it would take a lot of effort to make sure the system still works when the wind stops blowing and the sun stops shining, as we all know can happen periodically. They join the Northern Journal podcast for a discussion about their findings.
    If you like this new show, please share it with others. You can subscribe to the Northern Journal newsletter here.

    • 45 Min.

Top‑Podcasts in Nachrichten

Inside Austria
DER STANDARD
Thema des Tages
DER STANDARD
Die Dunkelkammer – Der Investigativ-Podcast
Michael Nikbakhsh
Ö1 Journale
ORF Ö1
Der Professor und der Wolf
ORF Radio FM4
ZIB2-Podcast
ORF ZIB2

Das gefällt dir vielleicht auch

Hello Alaska
Pat Race & Matt Buxton
With All Due Respect?
Andrew Halcro
Talk of Alaska
Alaska Public Media
Alaska News Nightly - Alaska Public Media
Alaska Public Media
Crude Conversations
crudemag
The Ezra Klein Show
New York Times Opinion