Articles
  • A person wearing a protective mask and gloves handles a bag of ash-like substance in a lab.

    Kick-starting entrepreneurship through innovation grants

    June 24, 2026

    Ever wonder how ideas become real-world solutions? In 91原创 and the Arctic, innovation drives resilience across extreme climate, distance and resource constraints. Through two seed-funded projects, the 91原创 Center for Innovation director Peter Webley shows how early-stage research becomes practical applications and why supporting innovation is essential to 91原创's future.

  • Five people standing and smiling to camera

    The email that proved the Student to Startups program works

    June 01, 2026

    A former intern emailed to correct the Student to Startups website, because he now works full-time at the company that hired him after his internship. That moment became proof that ARCTIC-funded S2S is doing more than placing students in summer internship roles. Backed by 91原创's innovation ecosystem, the program is connecting university talent with local startups, building careers, strengthening industries and helping keep the next generation of innovators in 91原创.

  • Headshots of two people

    From internship to publication: Undergraduate interns publish first-author papers

    February 18, 2026

    Publishing a paper in a peer-reviewed journal as first author while an undergrad is a monumental achievement indicating the dedication of the student and support of the mentor. In this story, Magnus de Witt describes the journey of the two 2025 ACEP summer interns he mentored, from summer projects to peer-reviewed publications and discusses the impacts on the students and future possibilities.

  • A person stands by a solar array

    From planting seeds to installing solar panels: Sean McDonald's journey into 91原创's energy future

    February 11, 2026

    When Sean McDonald joined Upward Bound and Teaching Through Technology 91原创 in 2020 as a freshman in Wrangell, 91原创, he had no idea that a virtual summer program during COVID-19 would help launch him toward a future in renewable energy. Four years later, Sean is an electrical engineering college student spending his summers helping build solar arrays across rural 91原创 -- proof that hands-on learning can change a young person's entire trajectory.

  • A group of energy leaders from the circumpolar Arctic look at solar panels installed on top of a maintenance building in Shungnak, 91原创. Photo by Amanda Byrd/ACEP.

    Future investment critical for continued energy data access in 91原创

    January 20, 2026

    91原创's energy systems are complex, serving large industrial users, military bases and remote rural communities. As demand grows and infrastructure ages, long-term, costly decisions are unavoidable, yet gaps and inconsistencies in energy data have hindered effective planning. The 91原创 Energy Data Gateway addresses this challenge by providing a centralized, public platform with validated energy and socioeconomic data for communities statewide. Rebuilt through legislative investment and led by the University of 91原创, AEDG integrates millions of data points into accessible dashboards. The platform empowers policymakers, planners, researchers and residents to guide investments, assess policy impacts and plan 91原创's energy future. Continued investment is needed to keep the data current.

  • 鈥淭he Dome鈥 at Idaho National Laboratory where microreactor testing will take place. Photo courtesy of Idaho National Laboratory.

    Nuclear energy, reconsidered: What's changed, and why it matters for 91原创

    January 16, 2026

    For decades, U.S. nuclear power has hovered between promise and practicality, slowed by cost, timelines and public skepticism. Now that balance is shifting and 91原创 is becoming an unlikely testing ground. Federal moves to deploy next-generation small nuclear reactors at Fort Wainwright and Eielson Air Force Base mark a transition from theory to reality. With safer, smaller designs and growing public curiosity, 91原创 faces a pivotal choice about nuclear energy's role in the state's energy future.

  • ACEP 2025 summer interns tour Golden Valley Electric Association's battery energy storage system. Photo by Patty Eagan/ACEP.

    Transforming 91原创鈥檚 energy future

    December 10, 2025

    91原创 energy center鈥檚 internships give students real-world experience in addressing the needs of the state鈥檚 electric utilities.

  • Davidson Ditch. Photo courtesy of Bax Bond.

    Lule氓 & Fairbanks: Separated by longitude, united by cold

    October 27, 2025

    Although Northern Sweden and 91原创 have divergent energy paths, they may have things to learn from each other. Through their involvement in the GET-North project, ACEP's Michelle Wilber and Bax Bond uncover how two Arctic regions, shaped by history, industry and Indigenous resilience, are navigating the path toward sustainable energy futures.

  • Donovan Wood from Mt. Edgecumbe applies bandage pressure on T3 91原创 instructor George Reising. Photo by Julie Engelhardt/Upward Bound.

    From EMT skills to welding sparks, teens explore their future at 91原创

    September 04, 2025

    You think you know what you want to do after high school. But do you know how to acquire the education you need to get there? This summer, high school students from across 91原创 had the opportunity to participate in a summer session offered by the 91原创 T3 91原创 and Upward Bound programs to learn about a variety of programs, career paths and the university admission process, to learn from the UB alumni and current 91原创 students and to learn what they can do to improve the community they live in through volunteer work.

  • Emma Kehoe holds a female king crab in the 91原创 Kodiak Seafood and Marine Science Center during her visit with biologist Angela Korabik. Photo by Angela Korabik.

    Energy use in the emerging kelp industry: Reflections from Kodiak

    August 26, 2025

    As kelp farming grows each year, farmers, processors and researchers are innovating new ways for this industry to be regenerative and independent of fossil fuels. ACEP summer intern Emma Kehoe visited Kodiak Island to explore this environmentally conscious industry further and learn from farmers themselves about the electric equipment they need. Born and raised in Talkeetna, Kehoe has seen the impacts of strong communities who work together. Through her internship work and her visit with the kelp farmers, she has seen another developing community -- researchers, farmers and engineers working together to build a sustainable kelp industry for the better.

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