Greenland Energy Company (NASDAQ: GLND) has released an updated investor presentation outlining a fully funded plan to drill the Jameson Land Basin in East Greenland, one of the world’s largest undeveloped Arctic hydrocarbon positions. The Houston-based exploration company has secured $70 million in fresh capital and aims to advance exploration of the 2.1-million-acre basin, which is covered by three exclusive exploration and exploitation licenses.
The centerpiece of Greenland Energy’s investment thesis is the Jameson Land Basin itself. According to the company, an independent engineering estimate places the basin’s gross unrisked resources at 13 billion barrels, though this estimate is based on undiscovered accumulations with no certainty of discovery or commercial viability. The company notes that the basin has never produced a commercial discovery despite decades of study dating back to the 1970s, and a 2008 USGS report indicated less than a 10% chance of containing a technically recoverable hydrocarbon accumulation.
The earn-in structure is a key feature of Greenland Energy’s model. The company has outlined a clearly defined earn-in agreement that allows it to acquire working interests in the licenses by meeting specific drilling milestones. With a 2026 drilling window fast approaching, management believes the near-term drilling catalysts are achievable within the current calendar year.
However, the company faces substantial risks. Exploration and geological risks include the inherent uncertainty in prospective resource estimates, geological complexity from limited seismic data coverage, pervasive igneous intrusions, faulting patterns, and significant Tertiary uplift creating thermal maturity uncertainty. Operational and environmental risks include challenges of operating in a remote Arctic location with extreme climate, harsh weather, limited daylight, no existing infrastructure, and seasonal access windows. Estimated well costs are $40 million for the first well and $20 million for subsequent wells.
Regulatory and political risks are also significant. In 2021, Greenland imposed a drilling moratorium, though the company’s licenses are grandfathered. Geopolitical tensions, including U.S. interest in acquiring Greenland and Greenland’s internal independence movements, could affect operations. Drilling requires Environmental Impact Assessment approval and Field Activities Application approval from Greenlandic authorities, and failure to meet drilling milestones could result in forfeiture of the company’s right to earn working interests.
Financial and capital risks include significant capital requirements beyond current resources, commodity price volatility, a long development timeline, and going concern uncertainty. Global energy transition risk also looms, as demand for oil may decline due to electric vehicle adoption and renewable energy policies.
Greenland Energy’s presentation is available in the company’s newsroom at ibn.fm/GLND. Forward-looking statements in the presentation are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties detailed in the company’s Prospectus filed with the SEC on April 29, 2026.
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