RE: What’s so unique about 80M's Jameson Land Licences?16 Feb 2025 07:46
It's also onshore and a brand newly issued 10 exploration and 30+30 year exploitation licence with very competitive fiscal terms, very very important distinctions. One of your favourite topics, Disko, apparently has a few surface stains etc and they tried to licence it out a few years back by the looks of things but no one applied for it, apart from that, there is nothing else onshore, its all out amongst the "burgies".
Whats odd and quiet revealing, much like male pattern baldness (I've heard shammies are great for getting the twinkle like sparkle if you can afford that) is the fact you are trying trying to say that due to Greenlands potentially burgeoning oil industry that Jameson will get swamped and will become redundant The difference between on and offshore in this part of the world would be significant I would assume. Especially on the east. There is no east coast greenlandic oil industry without Jameson being assessed first if Jameson is dry then the north most likely will be also. Jameson is the gateway to the KUMAS areas, which is as you would know is the half of the north sea that went with Greenland rather than Scotland Norway
This is personal for you clearly, it really bends you out of shape which is kind of entertaining in a schadenfreude kind of way. Whats even more odd is you think sitting in here writing 2-3 of these things a day is going to change the outcome or influence things, but what even more odd is the fact you are trying to paint a positive like this where 80M has the only oil exploration and exploitation licence over 10,000sqkm of north sea basin with potentially up to what appears to be 90 billion barrels of oil according to ARCO as such an overwhelming positive that it is actually a negative for 80M. We call that "Jumping the shark".
Quite apt really.