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Framing this as "mine versus salmon," however, overlooks the project's larger potential effect: It could stimulate industrial growth on a scale that would permanently transform the Bristol Bay region.
Hard times in the salmon industry, combined with high rural energy prices, have produced new local support for oil drilling in the Bristol Bay region, home to the world's largest runs of wild salmon.
It's one of the first signs that salmon processors are responding to a concentration of ownership in Alaska's Bristol Bay. An email from OBI executive vice president Chris Pugmire to salmon ...
SEATTLE - Seafood lovers get a chance to try wild-caught sockeye salmon at 50 participating Seattle restaurants as part of Bristol Bay Salmon Week. From Nov. 18-23, Seattle-area restaurants will ...
Lake Clark protects the headwaters of the Kvichak and Nushagak Rivers that flow into Bristol Bay, home to the world’s largest wild sockeye salmon run. Wild salmon sustain the traditional lifeways of ...
It was an inopportune time for the 400-foot vessel with the capacity to hold up to 2.3 million pounds of fresh salmon and ...
A Bristol Bay sockeye salmon "mob" gathers in August 2004 in the Wood River, which flows into the Nushagak River just north ...
ANCHORAGE, Alaska— A coalition of conservation organizations filed a motion today to intervene in a lawsuit to defend the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s decision that protects Bristol Bay from ...