List of Clean Energy and Alternative Energy Mutual Funds

11
78630
Spread the love

Alternative energy and clean energy mutual funds are open-ended funds that invest primarily (at least 50% of the portfolio) in the securities of clean energy and alternative energy companies.  Closed-end funds are included in the list of alternative energy and clean energy ETFs.

This list was last updated on 2/20/2021.

The Mutual Fund Store
By Dwight Burdette [CC BY 3.0], from Wikimedia Commons
Allianz RCM Global EcoTrendsSM Fund (ADGLECO.TT)
Calvert Global Energy Solutions Fund Class A (CGAEX)Class C (CGACX)
Calvert Green Bond Fund (CGAFX)
Ecofin Global Renewables Infrastructure Fund (ECOIX)
Erste WWF Stock Environment CZK (AT0000A044X2.VI)
Eventide Multi-Asset Income (ETNMX)
Fidelity Select Environment and Alternative Energy Portfolio (FSLEX)
Firsthand Alternative Energy (ALTEX)
Gabelli ESG Fund Class AAA (SRIGX); class C (SRICX)
Guinness Atkinson Alternative Energy Fund (GAAEX)
New Alternatives FD Inc (NALFX)
Shelton Green Alpha Fund (NEXTX)
Triodos Renewables Europe Fund

If you know of any mutual fund that is not listed here and should be, please let us know by leaving a comment. Also for stocks in the list that you think should be removed.

11 COMMENTS

  1. I am looking in a fund that will invest in only FUSION ENERGY. It only going to be 10 to 30 years before it’s profected. If you think Tech is big just wait. Solar and wind will be gone, Coal will stay in the ground.

    • This list focuses on funds that have the majority of their holdings in Clean/Alternative energy focused stocks. Green Century funds include stocks from all sectors, with a focus on environmental leaders in each. For example, here are the top five holdings of the Green Century Balanced fund:

      Alphabet, Inc., Class A 2.99%
      MasterCard, Inc., Class A 2.11%
      Microsoft Corporation 1.95%
      Cigna Corporation 1.81%
      Apple, Inc. 1.60%

      So the fund may be green, but it has little to do with energy, be that energy green, alternative, clean, or otherwise.

    • Have not looked at them yet, but there do seem to be a lot of new investment platforms that promise to be green and have many similarities to mutual funds… I’ve been thinking about a comparison article on all of the ones I can find. Perhaps we need a new category for these sorts of financial platforms.

      • I did a bit more homework on Swell. It appears they’re a sort of “robo-broker” service, buying and selling stocks for the account-holder in accordance with the decisions of a mutual-fund-style advisor. Reviews say that as that kind of service goes, Swell is very good at the SRI game, but is kind of expensive and offers very little human interaction.

  2. Winslow Green Solutions should be removed from the list, as they have gone out of business.

    In fact, they did so in 2010, so I’m not sure how they made it onto the list in the first place.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.