If you’re looking for the best solar ETFs, there’s only one to choose from: TAN. It’s the only ETF that is 100% focused on the solar industry.
But perhaps you’re looking to invest in solar and the rest of renewable energy. This landscape of ETFs is larger and offers you more options. There are funds that are focused just on renewable energy and funds that go even further, including other decarbonization technology like batteries and electric cars.
Check out the full list of ETFs that allow you to invest in the solar industry below (as of 09/25/20). If you’re looking for other ways to invest in solar, see our breakdown of the top six ways you can invest in renewable energy.
Disclaimer: We’re publishing all of the following purely for informational purposes and not a recommendation to buy or sell any individual stock, bond, or fund.
An ETF or Exchange Traded Fund is a collection of stocks and/or bonds that a fund manager selects. Unlike a mutual fund, ETFs are generally “passively” managed, meaning the fund managers infrequently buy or sell stocks within the fund. ETFs are a great option for long term, “buy and hold” investors as they generally have much lower fees than mutual funds and are more tax efficient.
If you’re looking to invest in more than just solar, here’s the three ETFs you can buy today that focus completely on renewable energy, including solar, wind, hydro, biomass, geothermal, biodiesel, and ethanol.
Do note that at Carbon Collective, we are wary about ethanol. The debate is still unclear on whether it is more carbon efficient overall than gasoline when you look at the fossil fuels used to grow corn.
If you want to invest even more broadly in renewable energy, checkout these ETFs. They include some of the technologies that are pushing the transition to a zero carbon economy. They will invest your savings not just in wind and solar, but in electric cars, batteries, LEDs, and fuel cells.
If you want to learn more about decarbonization, check out Dr. Saul Griffiths handbook for reaching carbon neutrality in the US.
If you want to invest directly in helping renewable energy companies deploy faster, checkout Yieldcos. They are holding companies that help renewable energy companies raise money to build solar, wind, and battery farms. Once built, they return part of their consistent profits as dividends to investors.
These are individual stocks, not ETFs, but they are worth looking at.
We started Carbon Collective because we couldn’t find anywhere to invest our retirement savings that made both ethical and financial sense in the age of climate change.
So we put together the world’s first series of climate-friendly, diversified, low-fee investment portfolios. We teamed up with a world-class online brokerage platform to automatically manage them.
Imagine an index fund in a world without fossil fuels. That’s how we construct our portfolios. We replace the high-carbon parts of the stock market (fossil fuels, dirty utilities, airlines, etc.) with the companies building solutions to climate change (renewable energy, circular economy, energy efficiency, etc.).
Check out their historical performance, carbon footprint, and fees compared to common standard and ethical portfolios.