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A Tiny Arctic Village in Alaska Is Trying to Revive Its Polar Bear Tourism Industry

Leaders want a local permit system to reopen the season, saying tourism could bring millions while limiting bear and visitor conflicts.

  • Kaktovik leaders are negotiating with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to restart polar bear tourism in the Arctic village, potentially resuming operations by 2027 while addressing past visitor impacts.
  • Known as "last chance tourism," the spectacle once drew over 1,000 annual visitors to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge before federal officials halted boat tours in 2021 amid reports that overcrowding disrupted bear behavior.
  • Charles Lampe, president of the Kaktovik Inupiat Corp, noted the village's bear patrol previously killed three or four bears annually during tourism peaks, compared to one per year before, and emphasized the industry "can't be run like it was before."
  • Sherry Rupert, CEO of the American Indigenous Tourism Association, suggests marketing Kaktovik as a two- or three-day educational experience where visitors "want them to come and be educated and walk away with a greater understanding of our people and our way of life and our culture."
  • The USFWS stated it is working with Kaktovik to ensure future opportunities prioritize visitor safety, resource protection, and community input, balancing economic revival with preservation of local subsistence practices and wildlife health.
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A tiny Arctic village in Alaska is trying to revive its polar bear tourism industry

A small Indigenous village in Alaska wants to reclaim its status as a top spot for polar bear tourism.

·United States
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Winnipeg Free Press broke the news in Winnipeg, Canada on Thursday, April 23, 2026.
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