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Warren Buffett Has Started The Biggest Energy Revolution
Solar power
DPA/PICTURE ALLIANCE VIA GETTY IMAGESDid you hear the news about a "breed" of stocks that made investors the richest in 2019?
It's not housing stocks, which enjoyed a record rally last year. It's not even everyone's beloved tech stocks like Netflix or Facebook.
This may sound like a joke if you've followed this sector for long, but the hands-down winner of 2019 was solar stocks. Invesco Solar ETF (TAN) ran up 51% in just a year, becoming last year's best-performing ETF.
This ETF holds a basket of stocks that build solar parks, make solar panels and other components, all to produce solar energy. But let me tell you, last year's 51% gain is just pennies compared to what's coming.
Last September, Warren Buffett struck a historic deal marking the beginning of the biggest disruption in energy since the First Industrial Revolution. (It's one of the few sectors I'm personally investing in).
I'll fill you in on it in a moment. But first let me give you a little background.
The Solar Dream That Never Came True, Until Now
PROMOTED
If you are reading this with skepticism, I get it. A decade ago, green energy advocates claimed solar energy would soon power the entire planet. They said the world didn't need fossil fuels anymore.
Governments around the world began plowing hundreds of billions of dollars into green energy. In 2008, Barack Obama signed a famous act pledging to invest a record $150 billion in solar and other green energy projects. It was one of America's largest corporate money grants ever.
This solar craze drove solar stocks to the moon. The largest solar stock, First Solar (FSLR), soared 1,000% in less than two years.
First Solar (FSLR)
RISKHEDGEBut the solar dream was way ahead of its time.
Back then, producing energy from solar cost at least 4X more than from fossil fuels. In 2009, it cost $360 to produce a megawatt-hour of electricity using solar. Natural gas cost just $70.
No amount of environmental enthusiasm or good intentions could make up for the simple fact that solar was uncompetitive. The high cost of solar power guaranteed it was not going to power the world anytime soon.
The avalanche of green dollars invested in solar went straight down the drain. And when investors realized solar was not ready for prime time, solar stocks cratered 90%+!
Now Solar Power Is Cheaper Than Fossil Fuels
Quietly, solar power has improved leaps and bounds since then. Today, solar panels sell at a fraction of what they cost back in the day. They've also grown ten-times more efficient.
In all, the price of solar energy has cratered by 84% since 2010, according to BloombergNEF. And for the first time in history, solar energy is cheaper than fossil fuel energy, as you can see below:
Average Cost of Energy in North America
RISKHEDGEIn most parts of the world today, solar is the cheapest source of new power generation. So why hasn't the world switched the plug to solar just yet?
Cheap Solar Power Is Not Enough
While solar is one of the cheapest and cleanest sources of energy, it has one big flaw. It depends on sunshine.
A solar farm can't produce enough electricity when it's cloudy or dark. It needs efficient battery storage, which presents another problem.
Not so long ago, you would have forked over $200 per megawatt-hour of electricity just to store solar power, according to MIT. That doesn't even include the cost of generating the electricity.
For perspective, that's almost 3X the price of power from natural gas.
MIT researchers estimated battery costs must sink to $20 per megawatt hour if we ever want to switch 100% to solar power. That's a 90% reduction from last year's prices.
Scientists expected this to happen sometime towards 2030. But it looks like Warren Buffett beat their forecast by 10 years.
The Historic Solar Farm That Will Produce the Cheapest Solar Power
Last September, Warren Buffett's NV Energy company signed a deal with Los Angeles' government to build America's biggest solar farm. Last month, the project was also green-lit by the Trump administration.
The farm will span 7,100 acres in the desert outside Las Vegas. It will be backed by the world's largest battery and power 6–7% of LA's electricity needs.
Stunning scale aside, the most jaw-dropping thing is the price of its electricity. The plant will produce energy at a cost of $20 per megawatt hour of electricity—plus $13 for storage.
In all, the plant's power will cost $33 per megawatt hour. That's half the estimated cost of power from a new natural gas plant!
And at $13 per megawatt hour, the storage cost is 35% below the MIT scientists' threshold for the world to go 100% solar. Mark Z. Jacobson, a Stanford professor and one of the most vocal green energy advocates, tweeted on the news: "Goodnight #naturalgas, goodnight #coal, goodnight #nuclear."
The Beginning of the Modern Era's Biggest Energy Revolution
Most developed countries have vowed to go 100% green in the coming decades. And yet green energy still powers just 26% of the world's energy supply, according to IEA.
Now that solar power has reached the historic inflection point in cost, I expect the beginning of a massive solar park buildout around the world.
The best news for investors, we are still in the early innings of this energy revolution. While the Invesco Solar ETF rallied 51% last year, it's still down 88% from its highs, as you can see here:
Invesco Solar ETF (TAN)
RISKHEDGEIn the grand scheme of things, it has barely budged. With so much room for growth, solar stocks could easily double, triple, quadruple, or better in the coming years.
Written with the assistance of Dainius Runkevičius
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