Alaska
Canada West to East Kicks Off From Alaska Border » Explorersweb
Nicolas Roulx and Catherine Chagnon have set off on their monster six-month, 6,500km west-to-east journey through Canada. The duo’s entire trip will take place north of the 60th parallel.
Chagnon and Roulx had planned to set off by bicycle from near Beaver Creek on the Alaska-Yukon border on April 18 but left a few days later on April 21. By May 1, they had covered 900km along the Alaska Highway. As the pair transition to the dirt Nahanni Range Road, their 120km per day pace may slow. Camping as they go, they’ve had good weather and encountered some wildlife, but no grizzlies.
The full 6,500km route. The section in red highlights the cycling segment. Photo: Expedition AKOR
They will ride the dirt road for around a week before reaching the village of Tungsten. Here, they will meet friends Mathieu Beland and Guillaume Moreau. The foursome will then begin the meaty 2,800km canoe section of their expedition on the Nahanni River.
Will it be warm enough to paddle?
It will be interesting to see how much paddling they manage on the lakes and rivers of the Northwest Territories. Much of the route could still be frozen, though Roulx told ExplorersWeb they did not expect it to be a major problem before setting off.
“It’s an El Nino year, so it should be a little warmer,” Roulx explained.
These opening few weeks are a vital warm-up for Roulx. He suffered a nasty accident not long after his 2021 Canada north-to-south expedition. He broke his leg while bouldering and has endured a long road to recovery. So far Roulx’s knee is holding up well, though he does report “suffering from some knee pain, but nothing serious or abnormal.”
Alaska
Alaska Sports Scoreboard: Jan. 17, 2026
High School
Hockey
Tuesday
West Valley 3, Lathrop 2
Wasilla 5, Palmer 1
Kenai Central 4, Homer 3
Eagle River 4, Service 3
Wednesday
Dimond 6, Service 2
Chugiak 5, Eagle River 0
Thursday
Wasilla 3, Soldotna 2
West Valley 3, Dimond 0
Juneau-Douglas 4, Delta 2
Friday
Juneau-Douglas 11, Delta 1
Palmer 11, Kenai Central 3
Saturday
Houston 3, Kenai Central 2
South 4, West Valley 2
• • •
Basketball
Girls
Monday
West 52, South 13
Bartlett 70, Eagle River 12
Tuesday
Dimond 53, South 31
North Pole 56, West Valley 20
Service 80, Eagle River 18
West 68, Chugiak 41
Colony 74, Palmer 17
Monroe Catholic 58, Hutchison 15
Redington 28, Susitna Valley 26
Wednesday
Soldotna 55, Bethel 18
Hoonah 54, Skagway 19
Thursday
Tok 54, Galena 53
Hoonah 52, Skagway 22
Fort Yukon 58, Birchwood Christian 12
Minto 68, Nunamiut 20
Lathrop 68, East 44
Nikiski 54, Bethel 50
Nome-Beltz 46, Cordova 38
Wasilla 60, Mt. Edgecumbe 21
Friday
Chief Ivan Blunka 52, Manokotak 39
Delta 59, Minto 35
Fort Yukon 62, Cook Inlet Academy 19
Mt. Edgecumbe 43, Ketchikan 32
Wasilla 64, Sitka 28
Tri-Valley 46, Susitna Valley 28
Cordova 62, Akiachak 17
Chief Ivan Blunka 52, Tanalian 49
Unalakleet 68, Alakanuk 26
Wrangell 42, Petersburg 28
Saturday
Nome-Beltz 70, Akiachak 24
Walter Northway 49, Birchwood Christian 19
Susitna Valley 45, Cook Inlet Academy 29
Boys
Sunday
Buckland 94, Shungnak 55
Monday
Hydaburg 60, SISD 28
Kake 62, Yakutat 17
Bartlett 65, Eagle River 34
Tuesday
Kake 53, Yakutat 17
Hydaburg 47, SISD 38
Redington 51, Susitna Valley 40
Colony 60, Palmer 41
Wasilla 61, Grace Christian 48
West Valley 44, North Pole 22
West 83, Chugiak 41
Dimond 59, South 45
East 85, Bartlett 28
Service 85, Eagle River 23
Wednesday
Kenai Central 60, Bethel 54
Skagway 71, Hoonah 34
Thursday
North Pole 71, Galena 47
King Cove 96, Koliganek 20
Skagway 61, Hoonah 15
Nunamiut 82, Tok 75
South 74, Susitna Valley 47
Bethel 75, Homer 50
Barrow 58, Monroe Catholic 44
Walter Northway 93, Birchwood Christian 43
Lathrop 70, Service 62
Grace Christian 63, Soldotna 41
Wasilla 74, Bartlett 53
West 81, Eagle River 27
Colony 80, Juneau-Douglas 60
Sand Point 36, Dillingham 34
Nome-Beltz 76, Valdez 43
Friday
Tok 55, Glennallen 50
King Cove 96, Togiak 30
Birchwood Christian 62, Nenana 49
Minto 55, North Pole 48
Delta 85, Nunamiut 29
Cook Inlet Academy 63, Gambell 52
Manokotak 56, Bristol Bay 48
Chief Ivan Blunka 59, Tanalian 56
Akiachak 64, Cordova 40
Unalakleet 97, Alakanuk 28
South 66, Barrow 50
Saturday
Juneau-Douglas 74, Bartlett 41
Galena 67, Glennallen 49
Bristol Bay 58, Manokotak 44
Chief Ivan Blunka 64, Tanalian 62
Birchwood Christian 61, Fort Yukon 54
East 84, Juneau-Douglas 70
Nome-Beltz 59, Lathrop 56
North Pole 90, Nunamiut 44
Redington 60, Akiachak 41
Colony 84, Bartlett 25
Soldotna 38, Mountain City Christian Academy 37
Unalakleet 73, Alakanuk 30
• • •
Cross-country skiing
Wednesday
West Skiathlon
Boys A
1. Service (Freedom Bennett/Jack Leveque), 17:10.7; 2. South (Kevin Downs/Vebjorn Flagstad), 17:11; 3. South (Braxton Thornley/Ethan Elliott), 17:30.
Girls A
1. South (Maya Tirpack/Alise Elliott), 19:39.3; 2. South (Elin Lunoe/Solvej Lunoe), 19:41.4; 3. Service (Talia Smith/Faith Harlamert), 20:04.1.
• • •
College
Hockey
Friday
UAA 1, UAF 0 (SO)
Saturday
UAA vs. UAF (Late)
• • •
Women’s basketball
Thursday
UAA 79, Simon Fraser 72
Western Washington 72, UAF 47
Saturday
Simon Fraser 109, UAF 46
Western Washington 81, UAA 65
• • •
Men’s basketball
Saturday
UAF 91, UAA 76
• • •
NAHL
Friday
Anchorage Wolverines 2, Fairbanks Ice Dogs 1 (SO)
Saturday
Anchorage Wolverines vs. Fairbanks Ice Dogs (Late)
Alaska
Rifle Breaks Multiple School Records in Win vs. Alaska and Nebraska
LEXINGTON, Ky. – The University of Kentucky rifle team started its 2026 season off in a massive way Saturday, setting school records in smallbore and aggregate team scores en route to an impressive victory over Nebraska and Alaska at the Tanana Valley Sportsman’s Association range in Fairbanks, Alaska.
The Wildcats posted a NCAA-record tying and school-record breaking team score of 4759, which is the highest team mark in the nation this season. Nebraska finished second with a 4746 while Alaska was third at 4730.
UK’s high aggregate came after a 2368 in smallbore, which was a school record and also is tied for the second-highest smallbore team score in the nation this season.
Kentucky will return to action Sunday morning when it faces the same two squads in a tri-match at UAF. The match will take place inside the E.F. Horton Rifle Range. Two relays will be held with each relay starting with smallbore and then concluding with air rifle. The first relay is scheduled to start at Noon ET.
Live targets and a NCAA scorecard will be available all weekend long at UKathletics.com.
“Happy with the performance today overall,” UK head coach Harry Mullins said. “We have been working really, really hard in training camp and to see some things start to carry over into the range was really nice. I thought Sofia, Braden Liz and Elisa really set the tone on the first relay with some great performances. Braden and Sofia both set range records, which was awesome and Liz set a new career best in air rifle. Sam, Martin and Brandon competed well and finished the job on the second relay. We have to have a short memory and get back to work tomorrow against the same teams in a different facility, which will be a major challenge.”
Kentucky shined in smallbore at the match Saturday, earning a school-record smallbore team score of 2368. That score crushed UK’s previous record of 2361, which was scored earlier this season. The high mark ties the second-highest smallbore team score in the nation this season. The 2368 was also a Tanana Valley Sportsman’s Association range record team score.
Junior Braden Peiser led Kentucky in smallbore, earning a career-best 597-49x behind a perfect 200-20x prone score. Peiser added a 198 in kneeling and 199 in standing for his high overall score, which was also a TVSA range record.
Senior Sofia Ceccarello scored a 591 in smallbore with a 195 kneeling, 199 prone and 197 standing with 32 centers, while sophomore Sam Adkins posted a 593 with 39 centers, earning a 198 kneeling and prone and 197 standing. Freshman Elizabeth Probst scored a 587 with 33 centers, earning a 194 in kneeling, 198 in prone and 195 in standing, while fellow freshman Elisa Boozer scored a 585 with 28 centers. Boozer posted a 197 in kneeling and prone and 191 in standing. Seniors Martin Voss and Brandon Evans also scored 585s. Voss had a 195 in kneeling, 200 in prone and 190 in standing with 41 centers, while Evans scored a 190 in kneeling, 198 in prone and 197 standing with 33 centers.
In air rifle, Kentucky was paced by Probst, who scored a career-best 599 with 53 centers. She was followed by Peiser, who scored a 598 with 55 centers. Three UK athletes had 597s led by Adkins, who posted 54 centers, while Ceccarello had 53 and Boozer had 52. Voss scored a 592 with 42 centers, while Evans rounded out the squad with a 588 and 40 centers.
Only two Wildcats posted over a 1190 aggregate score with Peiser scoring a 1195 with 104 centers, while Adkins set a new career high aggregate with a 1190 and 93 centers. Ceccarello finished with a 1188 aggregate, while Probst scored a 1186. Voss had a 1177 with Boozer scoring a 1182 and Evans a 1173.
Alaska
Hilcorp affiliate applies with federal regulators to bring LNG imports to Alaska
A Hilcorp affiliate last week filed paperwork with federal regulators to build what could become the first facility in Alaska to import liquefied natural gas to meet energy needs across much of the state.
Trans-Foreland Pipeline Company seeks to expand plans for a smaller import project that had originally received approval from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission but had yet not been built, according to the Jan. 9 application.
The project would convert the Kenai LNG Terminal in Nikiski into an import facility to process deliveries of liquefied natural gas, or LNG, that will arrive by tanker.
The facility had long operated as an LNG export facility for decades, starting in 1969, until it was idled in 2015.
The reversal in use highlights the shift in the Cook Inlet basin, where gas production has long dropped.
The basin was once the state’s dominant source of oil and gas, with enough gas to meet local needs and support LNG shipments to Japan.
But Hilcorp, the top gas producer in the region, told utilities in 2022 that it cannot guarantee gas supply after contracts end, including for Chugach Electric in 2028 and Enstar in 2033.
Harvest Midstream, a Hilcorp affiliate, acquired the Kenai LNG facility and Trans-Foreland from its previous owner, Marathon Petroleum, last year. The federal agency had originally authorized Trans-Foreland to build an import facility in 2020. The new filing seeks to expand those plans.
An official with Harvest Midstream declined to provide comment Friday.
Today, production in Cook Inlet still largely meets the demand for gas in the region, the filing says.
Gas from storage reservoirs also supplement produced gas on cold winter days when demand rises.
[Southcentral Alaska utilities say cold snap hasn’t strained winter gas supply, despite longer-term challenges]
But declining production is forecast to cause a “supply deficit” starting next year, the filing says.
The application seeks approval by July 31 in order to beat that shortfall.
The project “is narrowly tailored to address the forecasted needs of the southcentral Alaska region” and “will enhance natural gas supply reliability and security for the Southcentral region,” the filing says.
The facility could deliver up to 20 billion cubic feet of gas annually, meeting a chunk of total demand in the region.
But the supply shortfall is expected to keep growing, to a deficit of 40 billion cubic feet by the early 2030s, the filing says.
The application does not say how that deficit may be closed.
Larry Persily, an oil and gas analyst and former Alaska deputy commissioner of revenue, said the Trans-Foreland facility could seek federal approval for expansion after it gets off the ground.
“They certainly could get the authorization for 20 (billion cubic feet) and then go back to FERC in four, five, six years and say, ‘Hey, we need to increase it,’” he said. “It’s not a number that’s hard wired for all eternity. It’s just a function of how much equipment they put there.”
It’s possible another LNG import facility could be built, also in Nikiski.
Enstar, the natural gas company for Southcentral Alaska, has teamed up with Glenfarne to study the construction of what could be a second LNG import facility in Alaska.
That project would not come online until at least 2029.
The project has not yet filed for approval from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Persily said.
[Southcentral Alaska utilities move to expand gas storage, an insurance policy for severe cold and a bank for imports]
Persily said it’s increasingly likely that LNG imports may be a necessary part of the state’s future, though it’s possible more gas could be produced than expected in Cook Inlet, heading off the shortage.
Also, Glenfarne is working with the state and other companies to develop a $44 billion Alaska LNG project that could deliver natural gas to Southcentral Alaska in a first phase, if it can be built.
But the project, which proposed starting up in 2029, remains iffy.
A final investment decision on Alaska LNG has not been made, though it was expected late last year for the project’s first phase. Similar gas projects in Alaska, saddled with a costly 800-mile pipeline like Alaska LNG, have failed for decades.
Tim Fitzpatrick, a spokesperson for Glenfarne, said in an email that front-end engineering and design for phase one of Alaska LNG was completed on schedule.
He said that “we are moving forward toward FID,” or a final investment decision.
If gas imports do begin, Persily said, it’s possible that the increased price of imported gas could be a “manageable” problem.
LNG supply has grown worldwide while Cook Inlet prices for gas are high and have been rising, he said.
Chugach Electric Association, a potential customer for gas from the Trans-Foreland facility, estimated in 2024 that ratepayer bills would rise about 10% when LNG is imported in 2028.
“The fact that the global market seems to be entering an era of plentiful supply, at least through the early 2030s, bodes well for us,” Persily said.
And companies are pursuing additional gas storage, which can also stabilize prices, he said.
“They don’t have to buy LNG for next week’s cold spell,” he said. “You can buy it when the market is cheap and put in storage.”
[Utilities say Alaska needs an LNG import terminal. Here’s how consumers could end up paying for not one, but two.]
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