Newly formed Polar LNG aims to develop nearshore LNG project on Alaska’s North Slope

With a projected capacity of 7 million tpy at a cost of $8-9 billion, Polar LNG aims to utilize Arctic shipping routes for efficient export.
March 31, 2026
2 min read

Polar Train LNG LLC, a newly launched company aiming to build an LNG plant (Polar LNG) on Alaska's North Slope, has appointed Joel Riddle as president and chief executive officer.

"Alaska's North Slope holds one of the most significant undeveloped natural gas resources in the world," said Riddle, adding "Polar LNG is uniquely positioned to bring this resource online—delivering reliable energy for Alaska and a strategic supply for the United States… and provides trusted energy to our allies."

In a release Mar. 31, the company said it is advancing a nearshore project at Prudhoe Bay, citing “one of the shortest LNG shipping routes from North America to key Asian markets, approximately 3,600 miles to Japan compared to over 10,000 miles from the US Gulf Coast.”

The company is aiming for first LNG from the 7-million tonnes/year plant—to be developed nearshore with modular infrastructure—in 2029-2030 at a cost of $8–9 billion. According to Polar LNG, natural gas would be sourced from existing infrastructure at Prudhoe Bay and transported via a short pipeline to a nearshore plant. There, a modular gravity-based structure would process and liquefy the gas. LNG would then be loaded onto specialized ice-class carriers for year-round export.

The company is exploring potential repurposing of sanctioned equipment built for Russia’s Arctic LNG 2 project and is seeking permission from the US govenment to acquire parts impacted by the sanctions, according to reports.

Before joining Polar LNG, Riddle served as managing director and chief executive officer of Tamboran Resources Ltd.

About the Author

Mikaila Adams

Managing Editor, Content Strategist

Mikaila Adams has 20 years of experience as an editor, most of which has been centered on the oil and gas industry. She enjoyed 12 years focused on the business/finance side of the industry as an editor for Oil & Gas Journal's sister publication, Oil & Gas Financial Journal (OGFJ). After OGFJ ceased publication in 2017, she joined Oil & Gas Journal and was later named Managing Editor - News. Her role has expanded into content strategy. She holds a degree from Texas Tech University.

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