Author

Yereth Rosen came to Alaska in 1987 to work for the Anchorage Times. She has been reporting on Alaska news ever since, covering stories ranging from oil spills to sled-dog races. She has reported for Reuters, for the Alaska Dispatch News, for Arctic Today and for other organizations. She covers environmental issues, energy, climate change, natural resources, economic and business news, health, science and Arctic concerns -- subjects with a lot of overlap. In her free time, she likes to ski and watch her son's hockey games.
Red fox is first documented Alaska mammal infected with current strain of avian influenza
By: Yereth Rosen - June 1, 2022
A dead red fox on the Aleutian Island of Unalaska was found to be infected with the highly pathogenic avian influenza virus that has spread around the world and into populations of domestic poultry and wild birds. The fox was the first Alaska mammal found infected with the current influenza strain. The infection was confirmed […]
Nonpartisan solutions promoted for energy and climate problems, but not everyone is on board
By: Yereth Rosen - May 31, 2022
Former Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter, one of the main speakers at the Alaska Renewable Energy Conference and the founder of the Center for the New Energy Economy, pleads for nonpartisan consensus to achieve the energy transition needed to tackle climate change. "If we don’t think of this in a bipartisan way, if we think of how do we talk to other sides of the aisle about that, we’re not going to get there,” he said.
Alaska Peninsula oil lease sale continues long streak without bids
By: Yereth Rosen - May 30, 2022
For the eighth consecutive year, oil companies have passed up an opportunity to acquire oil exploration rights on state lands in the Alaska Peninsula. No bids were received in an annual lease sale held by the Alaska Division of Oil and Gas that offered 5 million acres on the peninsula, which extends from the southwestern […]
Cook Inlet basin energy future lies beyond fossil fuels, conference speakers say
By: Yereth Rosen - May 27, 2022
The 1950s discovery of oil on the Kenai Peninsula is credited with helping secure Alaska’s statehood. By the 1960s, the Kenai Chamber of Commerce had adopted a catchy nickname for the city: “The Oil Capital of Alaska.” In 1969, Cook Inlet began supplying liquefied natural gas to Toyko-based utilities, making it the nation’s first source […]
Utilities in Alaska’s Railbelt announce $200 million transmission upgrade project
By: Yereth Rosen - May 25, 2022
Utilities in Alaska’s most heavily populated core announced on Wednesday that they are investing more than $200 million to upgrade transmission lines, a program that officials said can help prepare for a shift to increased use of renewable energy. The utilities serve customers in a 700-mile grid that extends from Fairbanks in the north to […]
EPA moves to prevent Pebble mine development in Bristol Bay watershed
By: Yereth Rosen - May 25, 2022
The Biden administration has officially revived an Obama-era plan that would put the Bristol Bay watershed off-limits to the proposed Pebble Mine or any similar project. The Environmental Protection Agency on Wednesday announced its intention to invoke a rarely used provision of the Clean Water Act to prevent the issuance of any wetlands-fill permit for […]
Governor signs bill intended to encourage nuclear microreactors in Alaska
By: Yereth Rosen - May 25, 2022
Gov. Mike Dunleavy on Tuesday signed a bill aimed at easing the construction of small nuclear reactors, using a signing ceremony on the first day of the Alaska Sustainable Energy Conference to highlight what he characterized as a promising technology to power remote parts of the state. Microreactors are compact nuclear reactors that can generate […]
With new agreement, Port of Alaska and Sandia lab to evaluate renewable energy for microgrid
By: Yereth Rosen - May 24, 2022
A partnership between the state’s biggest port and one of the nation’s top engineering labs seeks to establish a large microgrid to ensure a dependable supply of electricity. The Port of Alaska, located in Anchorage, and Sandia National Laboratories, a major U.S. Department of Energy contractor, have signed a “historic” memorandum of understanding to move […]
Bill to combat Alaska’s invasive species falls short in Legislature
By: Yereth Rosen - May 24, 2022
Invasive species, according to wide consensus in Alaska, pose big threats to native fish, plants, terrestrial animals and even people’s safety and thus merit some vigorous preventive and response actions. Nevertheless, a seemingly popular bill that would have set up a system to coordinate those actions died without final passage in the Alaska Legislature. The […]
ConocoPhillips starts production at new Alpine satellite field
By: Yereth Rosen - May 21, 2022
ConocoPhillips Alaska Inc. announced Friday that it has started oil production at its Fiord West Kuparuk reservoir, a satellite of its Alpine field. The start of oil flow followed the drilling of a well that ConocoPhillips said set an extended-reach record. The well was drilled about a month ago by Doyon 26, the largest mobile […]
Avian influenza’s arrival in Alaska signals danger for other parts of the world
By: Yereth Rosen - May 20, 2022
When Larry Pouliot went on a morning walk in Sitka National Historical Park on May 9, he spotted a lethargic, unresponsive bald eagle perched in a tree, its eyes bloodshot and its neck drooping. “I realized he was not doing great,” said Pouliot, who got video footage and photos of the ailing bird. He called […]
Biden administration’s pause on Ambler road project gets court approval
By: Yereth Rosen - May 18, 2022
A federal judge has granted the Biden administration permission to reconsider a controversial Trump administration-approved road that would cut through the Brooks Range foothills. In an order issued Tuesday, U.S. District Court Judge Sharon Gleason approved the Department of the Interior’s plan to partially reevaluate the impacts of the proposed 211-mile Ambler Access Project while […]