Investors Won't Want to Miss This $10 Trillion Opportunity

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The world is rapidly transitioning toward a future powered by renewable energy. In the last five years alone, global enterprises have invested a stunning $1.5 trillion in building renewable power–generation facilities to help power the global economy while working to mute the impact of climate change. Those investments have added 1 million megawatts (MW) to the worldwide power supply.

However, despite that massive spending, solar and wind still only account for less than 10% of the world's power supply. Because of that, there's a monumental opportunity ahead for investors as companies continue to invest in building new renewable-power generation, with one estimate pegging that number at more than $10 trillion, to replace the current carbon-based power systems in the world's largest markets. The opportunity is even larger when factoring in demand growth and the electrification of transportation, which means that renewable-focused companies could generate lots of growth for their investors in the coming years.

A man celebrating after climbing to the top of a staircase made out of money overlooking the clouds with a brightly shining sun.
A man celebrating after climbing to the top of a staircase made out of money overlooking the clouds with a brightly shining sun.

Image source: Getty Images.

Generating returns from renewables

One company focused on capturing its share of this multitrillion-dollar market is Brookfield Renewable Partners (NYSE: BEP). Over the past five years, the company has spent $3.3 billion to build or buy 12,500 MW of renewable capacity around the world, including purchasing a large stake in TerraForm Power (NASDAQ: TERP). Its investments have included wind and solar as well as hydroelectric and other technologies such as energy storage.

Brookfield plans to continue expanding in its core markets by developing new projects as well as buying renewable power assets from others. On the development side, the company aims to build 1,000 MW of new capacity over the next several years, including wind farms in Europe, Colombia, and Brazil, small hydro facilities in Brazil, and distributed (rooftop) solar generation in North America and China. In addition to that, it expects to continue buying operating assets when it can find high-quality facilities for a good price. Overall, it plans to invest about $700 million per year in expanding its renewables business.

However, what's different about Brookfield's approach is that it's not investing so that it can build a renewable-power empire but to generate returns for its investors, with the company targeting investments that will earn annual returns in the 12% to 15% range. That high-return growth should give the company the power it needs to continue increasing its 6.6%-yielding distribution to investors at a 5% to 9% annual rate over the long term, which positions it to continue generating total annual returns of around 15% going forward.