Greenland Energy Advances Jameson Land Basin Toward Exploration Drilling
June 25th, 2026 3:29 PM
By: Newsworthy Staff
Greenland Energy is preparing for an October 2026 exploration campaign in East Greenland's Jameson Land Basin, a frontier region with potential billions of barrels, aiming to contribute to energy security and Greenland's economic development.

Greenland Energy (NASDAQ: GLND) is advancing development of the Jameson Land Basin in East Greenland, an onshore petroleum basin that CEO Robert Price described as one of the world’s last largely undrilled frontier oil regions. In an interview with Energy, Oil & Gas Magazine, Price said the company holds rights to up to a 70% interest in the basin and is leveraging extensive seismic data originally collected by Atlantic Richfield Company during the 1970s and 1980s. Modern reprocessing of the historical data has helped refine potential drilling targets within a geological system the company believes shares characteristics with the North Sea.
Price said independent evaluations have suggested upside potential of up to 13 billion barrels across the basin, with the first drill location estimated to contain approximately 2.9 billion barrels. He added that project preparations are underway, including refurbishment and transport of a drilling rig, road construction and logistics planning led by Halliburton, with initial drilling targeted for October 2026. According to Price, the project could play an important role in future energy security while also contributing to Greenland’s long-term economic development. Drawing comparisons to the impact of resource development in Norway and Denmark, he said stakeholders increasingly view the basin’s potential hydrocarbon resources as a possible catalyst for infrastructure investment, public revenue generation and broader economic growth.
The Jameson Land Basin has been studied for decades, but no commercial discovery has ever been made. A 2008 USGS report estimated less than a 10% chance of containing a technically recoverable hydrocarbon accumulation. Greenland Energy faces significant operational and environmental risks, including harsh Arctic conditions, limited infrastructure, and a 2021 drilling moratorium in Greenland, though the company’s licenses are grandfathered. The company also faces financial risks, as it requires substantial capital beyond current resources to complete the drilling program. Despite these challenges, Greenland Energy is moving forward with its plans, aiming to tap into what it sees as a promising frontier for oil exploration.
Source Statement
This news article relied primarily on a press release disributed by NewMediaWire. You can read the source press release here,
