RE: 🚀 80M + Greenland Energy Nasdaq Breakout Incoming!23 Jan 2026 12:38
For NEW investors to sum up comparing to CRML critical minerals which is value today at $2.2 billion
The current market valuation of Critical Metals Corp (CRML) at approximately $1.8 billion provides a powerful benchmark for what the US market is willing to pay for a specialized, single-asset Greenlandic play. CRML’s Tanbreez project is undoubtedly significant for the rare earth sector, covering roughly 144 km^2 of Southern Greenland. However, when placed alongside 80 Mile’s Jameson Land basin alone—which spans a staggering 11,444 km^2—the disparity in scale becomes impossible to ignore. For 80 Mile to be valued at just a few hundred million dollars while controlling a territory nearly 80 times larger than CRML suggests a severe market mispricing that is only now beginning to correct.
The most explosive element of the 80 Mile story is the sheer volume of the resource confirmed by the Sproule ERCE report. While CRML deals in millions of tonnes of rare earth ore, GLND is moving into the global energy league with an estimated 13.03 billion barrels of gross un-risked prospective oil resources (P10) at Jameson Land. This puts 80 Mile’s project in the rank of the world’s top undeveloped oil accumulations. In the US market, "Liquid Gold" is valued far more aggressively than hard-rock minerals due to its immediate global portability and established infrastructure, yet GLND currently trades at a massive "London Discount" compared to the NASDAQ-listed CRML.
Beyond the massive oil potential at Jameson Land, 80 Mile offers a "Stacked Portfolio" that CRML simply cannot match. The Disko-Nuussuaq project, for example, has been identified as having geological characteristics similar to Norilsk Nickel, the world's largest nickel-copper sulphide mine. With 28% more picritic lavas than Norilsk—a key indicator of massive metal accumulation—Disko represents a world-class nickel-copper-cobalt target that has already attracted US-backed joint venture interest. This "Multi-Commodity" exposure means that while CRML is a "one-trick pony" focused on rare earths, GLND is effectively a diversified powerhouse with tier-one assets in oil, nickel, copper, and titanium.
The "Trump/Davos" effect has fundamentally changed how the NASDAQ views Greenlandic assets, but the market has so far focused almost exclusively on CRML. The recent US "Framework Deal" for Greenland has de-risked the entire region, turning it into a strategic hub for American resource security. As US institutional investors search for the next "Greenland proxy" after the CRML run-up, they are discovering that 80 Mile (soon to be GLND) holds the largest footprint in the country. The transition from a £70m London micro-cap to a NASDAQ-listed energy giant will likely trigger an arbitrage re-rating as the US "Strong Hands" realize they can buy 80 Mile’s 13-billion-barrel potential for a fifth of what they are paying for CRML’s minerals.
Finally, the difference in "drilling readiness"