By Jeff Siegel
Is Warren Buffett sending mixed messages on green energy? That's what the folks over at Bloomberg Business have
suggested. But nothing could be further from the truth. After all,
Buffett's making a fortune in the alternative energy space.
Yet here's what was reported in Bloomberg this week:
Warren Buffett highlights how his Berkshire Hathaway Inc. utilities make massive investments in renewable energy. Meanwhile, in Nevada, the company is fighting a plan that would encourage more residents to use green power.
Berkshire’s NV Energy, the state’s dominant utility, opposes the proposal to increase a cap on the amount of energy that can be generated with solar panels by residents who sell power back to the grid in a practice known as net metering.
While the billionaire’s famed holding company has reaped tax credits from investing in wind farms and solar arrays, net metering is often seen by utilities as a threat. Buffett wants his managers to protect competitive advantages, said Jeff Matthews, an investor and author of books about Berkshire.
“It always comes down to money,” he said.
Well, Duh!
Of course it always comes down to money!
You think you'd see billion-dollar growth in the solar space
if it were only being facilitated by overzealous tree-huggers
and wealthy eccentrics?
Not a chance!
The rapid growth in renewables — particularly in solar and
wind — is the result of entrepreneurship, capitalism, and the
basic fundamentals of supply and demand. It blows my mind that folks are calling out Warren Buffett for
lobbying against a proposal to increase the net metering cap.
Buffett isn't in the alternative energy game because he likes to
hug trees. He's in the alternative energy game because he's an
incredibly smart investor.
Anyone who honestly believes there's no money to be made in the
renewable energy space should go find a typewriter company to
invest in. I've been screaming this from the rooftops for a decade
now, and many of those who have listened — and invested
accordingly — have made small fortunes.
Sipping Mai Tais in Kauai
Look, Buffett doesn't really have much skin in the residential
solar space. Most of his renewable energy scratch comes from
utility-scale development. So having to shell out more to
individual homeowners who send solar-generated electrons to the
grid isn't going to help Berkshire's NV Energy.
Of course, this actually illustrates a pretty interesting point. When you step back and look at the big picture of renewable
energy, it's really only the super wealthy that can even afford
investing in these giant utility-scale renewable energy projects.
And these deals are not for the risk-averse. You can, however, invest in the public companies that build or
invest in these projects. I'm talking about companies like First
Solar (NASDAQ: FSLR)
and SunPower (NASDAQ: SPWR),
not to mention the financiers and developers.
Some of my favorites here include:
- Brookfield Renewable Energy Partners (NYSE: BEP)
- Pattern Energy Group (NASDAQ: PEGI)
- Hannon Armstrong (NYSE: HASI)
The latter, by the way, is a company I told you about back in
2013, when it was trading around $11 a share. Today, it trades
around $20, plus it boasts a nice little 5% dividend.
While I'll be the first to admit that I am, without a doubt, an
unapologetic environmentalist, I sure as hell don't invest in
renewable energy companies unless they're going to make me money.
And HASI is among many that have helped me turn my passion for
sustainability into an opportunity to create significant wealth.
No, my swagger doesn't even come close to that of Warren
Buffett's. And truth be told, if I boasted just 0.5% of his net
worth, I'd be sitting in my hammock in Kauai right now, sipping a
Mai Tai and reading the newspaper.
But one thing's for certain...
Without the renewable energy space, many of my readers
would have much thinner wallets right now. So yes, even if you
couldn't care less about the toxicity of our air or the rapid
erosion of our once-healthy soil, make no mistake — investing
in renewable energy has more to do with profits than it has to do
with tree-hugging. And if you don't believe me, ask yourself why Warren Buffett owns
more than $15 billion worth of wind and solar assets. That's
billion — with a “B.”
http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2015/05/warren_buffett_closet_treehugging_bill ionaire.html