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The declining cost of solar energy in China and the launch of cheaper batteies in the U.S. are going to make solar stocks soar by 2020 or 2021. Investors should buy solar stocks — including First Solar Inc (NASDAQ:FSLR), Daqo New Energy Corp (NYSE:DQ), SunPower Corporation (NASDAQ:SPWR), and JinkoSolar Holding Co Ltd (NYSE:JKS) — now,while they are very cheap, to take advantage of the coming boom.
Solar stocks have declined sharply in recent weeks, due to China’s decision to cut some subsidies for solar energy. But I believe that Beijing decided to cut its subsidies primarily because solar energy has become almost cheap enough to compete with other energy sources without such subsidies.
Solar Energy Costs Continue to Decline
During JinkoSolar’s June 26 conference call, the company reported that the subsidy cut will lower the cost of raw materials used to make solar panels in China. As a result, JinkoSolar reported, solar energy will achieve “grid parity” in many places in the country in the second half of 2019. According to The Climate Reality Project, grid parity is defined as “when a clean energy form (think renewable sources like solar and wind) costs the same or less as a conventional energy form from the grid (think dirty sources like coal, oil, and natural gas).”
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Of course, when that point is reached in China, which has already embraced solar energy in a major way to combat its horrible pollution problem, solar installations in the country should jump exponentially. The increased demand should keep prices at least stable as technological advances enable the cost of producing solar energy to drop further.
Technology to Spur Solar Energy Gains
Speaking of technological advances, the CEO of giant utility NextEra Energy Inc (NYSE:NEE), Jim Robo, recently said that advances in battery technology will meaningfully lower the cost of power “within a few years.” The cheaper batteries will become a “disruptive force” in the sector, making wind and solar cheaper “than the operating costs of existing coal and nuclear,” Bloomberg quoted Robo as saying. Perhaps not coincidentally, NextEra has agreed to buy a large amount of solar modules from JinkoSolar, starting in the fourth quarter of this year.
When wind and solar become cheaper than coal and nuclear energy in the U.S., and utilities here don’t have to worry about not having wind and solar energy sources during certain times of the day, U.S. utilities will begin switching to renewable energy on a huge scale. That transformation, of course, will provide a huge windfall for solar energy companies, driving solar stocks much higher.