Alaska
The Alaska Experiment That Could Reshape How Cruise Lines Navigate Wildlife
This sponsored content was created in collaboration with a Skift partner.
Every summer, travelers from around the world head to Alaska to experience its glacier-carved fjords and abundant wildlife. Spotting whales in their natural habitat is a bucket-list moment for many.
Cruising has become one of the most popular ways to explore Alaska’s coastline, where vast distances, limited road access, and remote communities make much of the region difficult to reach by land. Alaska cruise passenger volumes have rebounded 33% from their pre-pandemic peak, with over one million travelers now passing through the region each season. International guests account for 68% of that market.
As more travelers add Alaska to their bucket lists, cruise lines are focusing on how tourism and wildlife can coexist in one of the world’s most remarkable marine environments. Many sailings take place during the summer months, a period that overlaps almost exactly with the feeding and migration period for humpbacks, orcas, and fin whales.
That overlap is prompting cruise lines to invest in better data, training, and operational practices that support responsible navigation in wildlife-rich waters.
Integrating Research Into Cruise Operations
According to a recent study, protecting just 2.5% of the world’s oceans could protect nearly 90% of large whales. In response, MSC Cruises is investing in a science-led approach to navigating wildlife-rich waters during its inaugural Alaska season in summer 2026.
The cruise line is partnering with marine conservation organization ORCA to place a dedicated Marine Mammal Observer (MMO) onboard the upgraded MSC Poesia during the peak whale season this summer. The initiative was announced at Cruise Lines International Association’s (CLIA) Pacific Northwest Symposium last month.
“Instead of waiting to react to regulatory changes or industry pressure, we’re choosing to lead,” said Linden Coppell, vice president of sustainability and ESG at MSC Cruises. “That means investing in marine conservation as a core part of our operating model and setting a higher standard from the outset.”
ORCA’s MMO will work directly with the ship’s bridge officers responsible for navigation and speed decisions to help identify whales in real time, support whale-avoidance training, and collect new data on how whales respond to vessel presence and activity.
The initiative builds on years of collaboration between ORCA and the shipping sector. The organization has trained thousands of seafarers from over 40 shipping companies in whale protection. MSC Cruises alone has had nearly 700 crew members undergo ORCA whale-avoidance training worldwide.
Building an Evidence Base at Sea
Over the course of the season, ORCA’s observer will assemble a detailed record of life at sea alongside a moving cruise ship. The team will track the ship’s route against whale sightings, measure proximity, document behaviors, and identify emerging patterns.
“Our goal is to build the most complete picture possible and an evidence-based understanding of how whales and vessels interact, so bridge teams can make informed navigation decisions that reduce the potential for disturbance,” said Steve Jones, chief operating officer at ORCA.
Findings from the season will be shared with the scientific community and used to further inform the whale avoidance training ORCA provides to deck crew across the cruise and shipping industries, including MSC Cruises.
In addition to crew training, the data has wider implications for marine planning and conservation policy. ORCA’s data feeds into international conservation initiatives, including the IUCN’s Important Marine Mammal Areas (IMMAs) program, which informs regulatory and policy discussions about protections for marine mammals globally.
In other regions, such as the Southern Ocean, ORCA’s research has supported the creation of geofenced areas and refined speed guidance in high-density whale habitats, including the Antarctic Peninsula and South Georgia. Alaska represents another important habitat that could benefit from industry action to protect whales.
Raising the Bar in Wildlife-Rich Destinations
Alaska attracts travelers for its glaciers and wildlife, many of whom share a deep affinity for the outdoors and marine ecosystems. Survey research into whale-watching tourism shows that a large segment of travelers value responsible tourism that protects the landscapes and wildlife that make the destination so unique.
“From an operational perspective, safety and environmental protection always come first. The MMO’s primary role is to support bridge teams and inform navigation decisions,” Coppell said. “However, we also see a powerful opportunity to engage guests in a meaningful way.”
During each itinerary, the MMO will host onboard educational sessions and talks outlining the research underway, where guests will learn about whale behavior, marine biodiversity, and how responsible cruise operations work in practice. Passengers will also be introduced to ORCA’s citizen science initiatives, inviting travelers to contribute to long-term data collection efforts.
“Alaska is the ideal place to demonstrate that environmental responsibility and memorable travel experiences can go hand in hand. The goal is not to stage conservation, but to embed it into how we operate, and share that story with our guests,” Coppell said.
ORCA will also review the whale-watching tours MSC Cruises offers to guests while in port, identify operators that follow best practices, and provide feedback throughout the season.
A Test Case for the Future of Cruise Operations
If the data collected onboard MSC Poesia leads to measurable refinements in training and navigation protocols, the model could be applied in other wildlife-rich regions.
Jones sees a growing appetite from cruise lines to deepen that kind of collaboration. “It’s a really exciting time to be working with cruise brands because of the engagement we’re seeing from companies like MSC Cruises,” he said. “In the next five to 10 years, we’ll see even more interest from brands that want to be responsible corporate citizens and play their part in leaving a positive legacy in the natural environment.”
For MSC Cruises, Alaska is both a new market and part of the company’s North America expansion, with a second Alaska season already on sale for 2027. At the same time, it’s testing how marine science can be integrated into day-to-day decision-making on the bridge.
“Alaska is a living laboratory for understanding how vessels and marine mammals share space,” Coppell said. “What we learn here will inform our operations in Alaska and help shape best practices all around the world.”
If that approach gains traction, Alaska could provide an early glimpse of how the next phase of cruise operations could take shape.
To learn more about MSC Cruises, visit msccruisesusa.com. To learn more about ORCA, visit orca.org.uk.
This content was created collaboratively by MSC Cruises and Skift’s branded content studio, SkiftX.
Alaska
A frozen ground under Alaska’s tundra looks like ordinary soil from above, but scientists have put a $43 trillion price tag on what happens when it thaws
Stand on the tundra in Alaska and it looks like nothing special.
A vast, flat plain of amber grass, shallow ponds, and dark soil stretching to the horizon.
No obvious drama, no visible crisis.
But a few feet below your boots, something has been building for millennia, and scientists have finally put a dollar figure on what happens when it wakes up.
The ground beneath the Arctic has been keeping a secret for millions of years
Permafrost is frozen ground, soil and rock locked in ice for thousands of years across Alaska, Canada, Siberia, and the high Arctic.
It covers roughly a quarter of the land in the Northern Hemisphere.
Most Americans have never thought about it for a single second.
Permafrost contains about 1,700 gigatons of carbon in the form of frozen organic matter, accumulated over countless millennia of dead plants and animals that never fully decomposed.
That is roughly twice the carbon currently in the entire atmosphere above us.
Think of it as a freezer the size of a continent, stocked with centuries of biological material that simply never had the chance to rot.
For as long as the ground stayed frozen, that carbon stayed locked away, harmless and invisible.
Something is going wrong with the world’s largest freezer
The Arctic is warming roughly four times faster than the global average.
As the ground softens, the organic matter inside it begins to rot.
Permafrost releases both carbon dioxide and methane as it thaws, through rotting organic matter, collapsing terrain, and waterlogged soils where methane-producing microbes thrive.
That methane detail matters more than most people realize.
Methane is over 80 times more effective than carbon dioxide at trapping heat over a 20-year period.
Wildfires are accelerating the process further, scorching the insulating layer of moss and peat that once kept the frozen ground shielded from summer heat.
And once those gases escape, there is no putting them back.
The tundra is already changing in ways you can see from the ground
Across Alaska, roads are buckling and tilting where the ground beneath them has shifted.
Strange new lakes are appearing on the tundra, formed as the frozen ground collapses inward.
Scientists call these thermokarst lakes, and they are spreading.
In some Alaskan villages, houses are sinking and cracking as if the earth beneath them is slowly giving way.
Wooden boardwalks that once crossed stable ground now lean at odd angles, and in a handful of communities, entire buildings have been condemned.
This is not a future warning, it is already happening across the far north.
A study on permafrost and the remaining carbon budget found that including permafrost thaw in climate models meaningfully reduces the allowable carbon budget for avoiding dangerous warming targets.
Scientists ran the numbers and the total came out to $43 trillion
Greenhouse gas emissions from thawing Arctic permafrost could result in an additional $43 trillion in economic impacts by the end of the twenty-second century, according to research from the University of Cambridge and the National Snow and Ice Data Center.
That figure is not the cost of fixing permafrost.
It is the added damage thawing permafrost would layer on top of every other climate cost humans are already calculating.
To put it in scale: the University of Cambridge researchers note that the $43 trillion comes on top of more than $300 trillion in climate-change costs already projected by existing models, meaning permafrost alone could add roughly 13 percent to the total bill.
The NOAA summary of the research makes clear that most existing climate models do not yet fully account for this feedback loop.
A more recent analysis by Woodwell Climate Research Center sharpens that picture further, finding that abrupt thaw and Arctic wildfires together shrink the remaining carbon budget faster than gradual models predict.
The frozen ground was never just scenery, it was a climate vault, and it is now unlocking.
There is still time to slow the key that is turning in the lock
The picture is serious, but it is not hopeless.
Thawing is projected to affect 50 percent of near-surface permafrost at 1.5 to 2 degrees of warming, and up to 90 percent at 3 to 5 degrees.
That gap between those two numbers is the reason every fraction of a degree still matters enormously.
Scientists studying how the 2023 heat record overshot predictions are applying the same urgency to permafrost feedback, working to get these carbon costs into the models governments actually use.
Research teams are experimenting with methods to actively protect permafrost, from restoring grasslands that insulate the frozen layer to tracking thaw rates using satellites.
In places like Juneau, where a glacier burst open for the third summer in a row, residents are already living inside the feedback loops science is still racing to measure.
The ordinary-looking ground beneath the Arctic tundra turned out to be one of the most consequential things on Earth.
And the price of ignoring it was frozen in plain sight all along.
Alaska
A sympathetic shooter and botched prosecution: How did Lovely Lois get away with murder in 1960s Anchorage?
Part of a continuing weekly series on Alaska history by local historian David Reamer. Have a question about Anchorage or Alaska history or an idea for a future article? Go to the form at the bottom of this story.
We begin with a reminder. There was once a well-known musher named Charlie Cannon, certifiably Alaska-famous in his time. He even had a brief affair with the national spotlight when he drove a dog sled in President Dwight Eisenhower’s 1953 inaugural parade. With his bearded, weather-bitten face haloed by a parka, he was every bit the archetype outsiders expected of an Alaska sourdough, in pictures that ran in newspapers across the country. When he returned north, “nearly half” of Seward turned out to welcome him.
He split time at his Anchorage and Lake Louise homes with this vivacious wife, Ruth. In 1955, Ruth Cannon disappeared from their Lake Louise cabin. Charlie waited two months to inform the authorities, conveniently prompted by the arrival of Ruth’s mother. After weeks of investigation, Charlie broke down. He failed a lie detector test twice, then confessed to shooting Ruth in the back of her head. He burned her body in a pyre over two days and scattered the ashes on the still-frozen lake.
A few more weeks passed, then Charlie accompanied several officers back to Lake Louise, where he calmly reenacted the murder. He showed them the new 12-foot-high smokehouse directly over the fire site, built to obscure the evidence. The lake had long since melted, meaning no ashes to collect. The Anchorage Daily Times quoted one officer saying, “He did his job well.” There were no other theories or suspects. However, when a grand jury convened that December, they deliberated for only 45 minutes before declining to indict him. Charlie Cannon was released from jail as a free man. He never faced a trial and resumed his life as a prominent Alaska musher.
[He reenacted his wife’s killing in 1955 and confessed — but a grand jury refused to indict him]
[The enigmatic life and mysterious death of Matanuska Valley schoolteacher Zelda King]
Alaska has a long, ugly history of intimate partner violence. Per the 2020 Alaska Victimization Survey conducted by the University of Alaska Anchorage Justice Center, 57.7% of female respondents reported experience with intimate partner violence, sexual assaults or both. Charlie Cannon is far from the only man to get away with killing his partner.
This context raises larger questions of public safety and gendered iniquities, inquiries that lack acceptable answers. But there is a simpler, more easily resolved question. What would it take for a woman to get away with murder in Alaska? So, for the ladies, I offer the tale of the Lovely Lois.
Lois Elaine Harris was a young immigrant to Alaska by way of Pennsylvania. She was an exotic entertainer, a stripper, a topless go-go dancer and many other things besides. Whatever ambitions, attributes and hobbies she possessed, her occupation would define her public reputation. Lovely Lois was her stage name, and she was a standout, consistent presence in late 1960s Anchorage, making a circuit of all the finer nightclubs like the Embers, Club Penguin, Club Oasis, Personality Lounge, Pink Garter, and Bonfire Lounge. All of these are interesting places where the walls were liberally painted with colorful backstories. And before everyone asks all at once, I’m sorry, but no, I do not have a picture of her at work. Please stop asking.
There were more popular entertainers of her ilk on the Anchorage scene. The stars of that sky featured the notoriously flexible Miss Wiggles and the more monumental Big Bertha. Miss Wiggles could strip down to a G-string and pasties while upside down, on her head upon a chair, usually in accompaniment to some hot jazz. She married local bail bondsman Fred Adkerson. Her real name was Velma, but everyone called her Wiggles, even her pastor and now her headstone at the downtown cemetery.
Big Bertha was advertised as a 275- to 300-pound go-go dancer. She was such an area celebrity that the local papers covered her marriage, though they still referred to her as Big Bertha. The Lovely Lois wasn’t in the class of these luminaries, but she was a big enough deal to be an advertised feature, even performing with Miss Wiggles. Lois had skills and a certain appeal, is what I’m saying.
And the 23-year-old Lovely Lois was married to a 48-year-old mechanic named Bill Harris. As perhaps suggested by the age gap, their relationship possessed some structural concerns. The couple was prone to frequent, heated arguments. Lois would later claim that Bill physically abused her.
Their friend circle — his friend circle — included several drug dealers and hardcore narcotic addicts that offered limited social assistance. One of their closer confidantes was James Abner Holt, whose arms were riddled with collapsed veins from needle use. On Nov. 30, 1967, Holt was murdered in Fairview. The assailant fired four bullets through a pillow to muffle the sound. That case was never solved.
About two months later, on Feb. 1, 1968, Lois and Bill were arguing in their trailer home in back of Bill’s garage, off the Seward Highway and a little way south of Fairview. They had been married for only six weeks, but Lois was young, vulnerable and in a dangerous world, a long and winding road from home. The decisions of her past, many of them picked among poorer alternatives, dimmed and limited her future. This was before no-fault divorces. In many ways, she was trapped.
That afternoon, she decided that enough was enough. She took their automatic pistol and fired two shots into Bill, who tumbled through the door and collapsed outside, still alive but leaking, so to speak. His dog, at least, was loyal, standing guard over the bloody site. When the state troopers arrived, Lois was inside the trailer. The first trooper through the door asked her what happened, and she bluntly stated, “I shot him.”

Bill was declared dead upon arrival at Providence. Lois was tossed into the city jail with a $100,000 bond. Though she had swum in deep, dark waters previously, this was her first legal offense, the first with charges at least.
There she sat for four months. The prosecutors initially sought a first-degree murder conviction, and though she admitted to shooting Bill directly after the incident, she pleaded innocent. The evidence was clear, but as the trial approached, the district attorney’s office was open to a deal. They lowered the charges to manslaughter, murder in the third degree, and Lois changed her plea to guilty.
The district attorney’s office worried that a jury would be sympathetic to Lois’ case. Given the preestablished fact that Mr. Harris married a stripper 25 years his junior, it will come as no shock to learn that this was not his first marriage. Prepare yourself, Lois was not even his first wife to shoot him, although she was the first to actually cross the finish line. It is easy to imagine a jury choosing not to throw the book at a young woman led astray by an older, nasty man.
And when it came to sentencing, wouldn’t you know it, Superior Court Judge Ralph Moody was also in a generous mood. He announced in court that Lois’ background, young age and her positive attitude were weighed against the passionate moment when she murdered her husband. Instead of 10 years in jail, he sentenced her to only four months, time served in other words, plus five years’ probation.
There were the usual stipulations — she couldn’t own a gun during the probationary period — but she was also required to move back to Pennsylvania to live with her father, and either attend school or find some form of acceptable employment. Stripping was out, as were stripping derivatives such as being an exotic entertainer or topless go-go dancer.
The magnanimous Judge Moody told her, “Even though this is your first offense, I’m certainly not indicating that if I go along with probation in this case that the next time someone kills someone in this situation — because it’s their first offense — they’re not going to serve time.”
He continued, more so his words would be recorded and shared, “Because I think if we ever set a policy like that — if we give someone a free murder — we’re setting a bad policy from the standpoint that you get a free chance to murder someone and then get probation. This court is not setting any policy, and I want to make it clear now — the fact that if someone comes in under a first offense for shooting someone, whether in the heat of passion or otherwise, he may not expect to get a suspended sentence of probation.”
Again, those are his exact words, given a likewise explicit attempt to seem exceedingly generous. Surely, that’s all it was. The judge and district attorney’s office were your run-of-the-mill Alaska officials, innately understanding and sympathetic to the plight of women in rough, old Alaska. If all went well, Lois would be a free and clear woman at only 28 years old.
Except, it was all a front. The words and kindness, the supposed generosity, they were a weak attempt at a cover-up. The real story was that the troopers had screwed up the case from the very beginning.
In 1966, less than two years earlier, the Supreme Court issued a ruling in Miranda v. Arizona, establishing the need to inform suspects of their constitutional rights before interrogating them. This, of course, changed policing and popular culture forever. Thanks to television shows and movies, you’ve all heard the Miranda warning more times than you could count.
Recall the description of the immediate aftermath from the shooting. A trooper drove up, entered the trailer, and started talking to Lois, who freely admitted to the shooting. This information was the basis of her original first-degree murder charge. However, the officer had not informed the soon-to-be widow of her rights, most importantly here, the right to not instantly admit to a felony.
In addition, the autopsy had been exceedingly sloppy. Rather than the usual hours required for a first-degree murder case, Bill Harris’ autopsy was completed in a mere 10 minutes. The doctor even left bullets in the body. No one in the justice system wanted to see that autopsy presented as evidence in a major trial that further possessed significant public appeal. The Alaska press was going to show up for the trial of a stripper who killed her husband regardless of how the investigation was handled. The details, therefore, would get out, and the embarrassment would be public.
Unsurprisingly, there was some public furor about the sentence. As many saw it, the Lovely Lois had done well in the exchange: a murder for four months at a city jail — not even a prison — and not having to strip at any Anchorage nightclubs. The local papers mocked Judge Moody for his “no free murder” declaration. In the Daily Times, publisher Bob Atwood wrote sarcastically, “Well, thank heaven. We now have it as an official policy of the Superior Court that a person killing another person for the first time cannot automatically expect to receive a suspended sentence.” Given the circumstances, Atwood had wondered what the court’s policy was on letting murderers escape justice. As he concluded, “And now we know.”
In full, she shot her husband, admitted to the same and eventually pleaded guilty. Her only time inside was time served before sentencing. She got away with it. How did the Lovely Lois escape the repercussions of her actions? Everyone around her had to fail at their jobs and then attempt to whitewash their failures with false, self-aggrandizing altruism.
The Harris murder fell within something of a boom in wives killing husbands. In 1959, Regina Bowker killed her husband in their Spenard trailer home, an area that’s now Northwood Park. In 1960, Wilma O’Neal killed her husband, Joe, at their Spenard trailer home. In 1965, Margaret Sims killed her husband, Raymond, at their Spenard trailer home. There are more besides, and yes, there is also something of a theme. A Spenard Divorce was a local idiom for a while because of these murders.
Each of these cases occurred with sympathetic contexts. Each woman said their husbands abused them. One of the men beat their children. Another threatened to commit the wife to an asylum, something possible then. One of them was still married to another woman. They were all trapped in vicious realities. Yet each was sentenced to 15 to 20 years in prison. Unlike Cannon, no grand juries declined to indict such a noble local celebrity. Unlike Lois Harris, an entire system of men did not abandon protocol. Instead, these other women paid dearly for their crimes, punishments that yet did not seem like justice.
• • •
Key sources:
“Anchorage Area Woman Charged with Murder.” Anchorage Daily News. February 2, 1968, 2.
“Entertainer Jailed in Husband’s Death.” Anchorage Daily Times. February 2, 1968, 2.
“Harris Funeral Slated Tuesday at Chapel Here.” Anchorage Daily Times. February 5, 1968, 2.
“A Policy on First-Offense Killings.” Anchorage Daily Times. June 27, 1968, 4.
Radloff, Judy. “State Witness Relates Sleziak’s Behavior.” Anchorage Daily News. November 28, 1967, 2.
Webster, Dave. “LSD Less Prevalent Here Than Use of Hard Narcotics.” Anchorage Daily Times. February 15, 1968, 1, 2.
Webster, Dave. “’Lovely Lois’ Will Go East, Out of Jail.” Anchorage Daily Times. June 26, 1968, 3.
Alaska
The Dan Sullivan saga in the Alaska Senate race is under investigation, sources say
State and federal prosecutors in Alaska are investigating whether the campaign for a U.S. Senate candidate who has the same name as the Republican incumbent could be part of a conspiracy to confuse voters, two people with knowledge of the investigations told NBC News.
Dan J. Sullivan, a former teacher, announced his campaign in May and recently registered as a Republican. He has said he’s mounting a legitimate effort to unseat the other Sullivan, Dan S. Sullivan, who has been in office since 2015.
But Sen. Dan S. Sullivan and Republicans have alleged that the newcomer launched the campaign in an attempt to confuse voters and that he’s working with the Democratic challenger Mary Peltola.
Just this week, the Alaska Supreme Court ruled that Dan J. Sullivan can stay on the state’s August primary ballot. The state’s elections division had initially disqualified the challenger from the ballot, with Elections Director Carol Beecher alleging that the challenger filed to run “with a purpose to confuse or mislead” voters.
Now, NBC News has learned, the FBI, the Alaska attorney general and the U.S. attorney’s office in Alaska are all investigating whether two or more people conspired to create the Sullivan challenger’s campaign with the intention to confuse voters, hurt the incumbent and boost votes for Peltola.
It is possible that both the Sullivans and Peltola could all be on the November ballot, since the top four vote-getters in the Aug. 18 primary advance to the general election, regardless of party affiliation. The general election contest is then decided by ranked-choice voting.
Alaska’s Senate race will be key to the fight for Senate control in November’s midterm elections, with Democrats looking to net four seats to take control of the chamber. And Democrats have held up Peltola as a strong recruit, saying Alaska is a prime pickup opportunity, even though President Donald Trump won the state by 13 points in 2024.
One of the people familiar with the investigations said the Alaska attorney general’s office began its investigation into whether any state laws were violated before federal investigators began their probe. The federal investigation is looking for possible wire fraud or a conspiracy to deprive Alaska voters of a free and fair elections process, which could be a civil rights violation, the people said.
Sam Curtis, a spokesperson for the Alaska attorney general’s office, declined to comment on whether such an investigation exists.
“The Department of Law generally will neither confirm or deny the existence of a criminal investigation,” Curtis said in a statement. “That said, the Alaska Attorney General’s Office is not an investigating agency. Any allegations of criminal conduct is referred to federal, state, or local law enforcement.”
The people familiar with the investigation said it wasn’t clear yet who could face potential charges in either state or federal investigations, or whether that might affect the upcoming election.
U.S. Attorney Michael Hyman was appointed by the Trump administration, and acting Alaska Attorney General Cori Mills was appointed by Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy.
In a statement, Harry Child, a spokesperson for Peltola, denied her campaign had anything to do with the rival Dan Sullivan.
“Our campaign has no involvement with either Sullivan campaign. Mary is focused on lowering costs for Alaskans, and our campaign will be connecting with Alaskans across the state to ensure their voices are heard on Election Day,” Child told NBC News.
Sen. Sullivan’s campaign declined to comment, while the challenger Sullivan’s campaign did not respond to a request for comment.
In a recent interview with The Associated Press, Sullivan, the political newcomer, denied any coordination or contact with the Peltola campaign, the state Democratic Party or any national Democratic strategists.
Spokespeople with the U.S. attorney’s office in Alaska did not respond to requests for comment.
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