RE: Hydrogen20 Jan 2026 08:30
Wmsjames looks like you one who bought in yesterday, congrats on joining the journey. I take it you read all the RNS so up to date on all operations. Helium production and cash income is number one and coming to us very soon.
As for Hydrogen if we prove our case compellingly enough to a Tier 1 operator 40/50% will look peanuts as they may completely take us out or JV
For interest Re Helium
Helium-3 (³He) is a lighter isotope of helium with one neutron, while common helium (Helium-4, ⁴He) has two neutrons, differing in mass, nuclear spin, quantum properties (fermion vs. boson), abundance (³He is rare on Earth), and applications, with ³He crucial for specialized uses like neutron detection and fusion research due to its unique nuclear structure. Both are stable, but their distinct neutron counts lead to different behaviors, especially at extreme temperatures where they become superfluids.
Key Differences
Neutron Count:
Helium-4 (⁴He): 2 protons, 2 neutrons (atomic mass ~4).
Helium-3 (³He): 2 protons, 1 neutron (atomic mass ~3).
Abundance & Origin:
⁴He: Most common, found naturally on Earth.
³He: Very rare on Earth (escapes atmosphere) but abundant from the Sun's solar wind; formed from tritium decay.
What Bo said about Hydrogen
"These results confirm that Rudyard sits above a deep-Earth hydrogen engine powered by ultramafic rocks and mantle gases. The science is clear: this is the type of system that can generate clean hydrogen naturally, without carbon emissions or expensive reforming plants. If developed successfully, it could deliver hydrogen at a cost and purity level that could surpass anything achieved through conventional means. We see this as a milestone not only for Helix but for the entire clean-energy sector."