(By Oil & Gas 360) – Greenland has been called the next frontier in oil and gas for decades. What’s changing now is that the conversation is shifting from possibility to relevance.
As global supply becomes more fragmented and geopolitical risk reshapes energy flows, previously overlooked regions are coming back into focus. Greenland sits squarely in that category, remote, complex, but increasingly hard to ignore in a world searching for new sources of supply.
The resource case is real. Recent assessments suggest the Jameson Land Basin alone could hold more than 13 billion barrels of prospective oil, placing it among the most significant undeveloped basins globally.
More broadly, the East Greenland Rift system has long been viewed as a major hydrocarbon province, with geological similarities to producing regions across the North Atlantic.
What makes this different from past cycles is timing.
Three forces are pulling Greenland back into the conversation. Global supply uncertainty is forcing companies and governments to look beyond traditional producing regions. Arctic accessibility is improving, extending operational windows and making development more technically feasible. And geopolitics is elevating the value of resources located in stable, Western-aligned jurisdictions.
That combination is drawing capital and attention back to a basin that has remained largely untouched. There are early signs of momentum.
New exploration companies are forming, historical seismic data is being reinterpreted, and drilling campaigns are being planned, with initial wells expected to begin in the next phase of development.
That shift, from concept to potential execution, is what turns a frontier into a real investment story.
But the challenges are substantial. There is little to no existing infrastructure, meaning everything from logistics to export capacity would need to be built.
Operating conditions remain harsh, with remote geography and extreme weather driving costs higher. And despite decades of interest, Greenland has yet to deliver a commercial discovery, leaving exploration risk firmly in place.
Policy also remains a factor. Environmental concerns and political sensitivity around Arctic development continue to shape how, and whether, projects move forward at scale.
That’s why Greenland is not a near-term supply solution.
It is a long-duration option. And that may be exactly where its value lies.
In today’s market, energy security is increasingly tied to diversification, access, and control over supply chains. Greenland offers potential exposure to all three, even if production timelines remain uncertain.
The point is not that Greenland will suddenly become a major producer.
It’s that in a world where supply is being reshaped by risk and access, the number of credible new frontiers is shrinking.
Greenland is one of the few still left.
Whether it becomes the next major basin, or remains an expensive question mark, will depend on one thing: Not just what’s in the ground, but whether it can be brought to market.
About Oil & Gas 360
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Disclaimer
This opinion article is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment, legal, or financial advice. The views expressed are based on publicly available information and market conditions at the time of publication and are subject to change without notice.





