I think this is relevant when forecasting the market dynamics of the green revolution. There won't be 9,000 different companies producing solar panels or even 90 different companies producing heat pumps. We are looking at much more consolidated markets. For every $1 spent on energy today there is some portion of profits trickling down to smaller players in the oil and gas industry but if the world successfully transitions away from oil & gas the same $1 spent on energy will be distributed amongst a smaller and more consolidated profit pool.
Some may debate the actual monetary savings or efficiency of green infrastructure but that's really beside the point. Whether it is through social influence, government subsidies, tax incentives, or building code requirements, the transition is going to happen.
This is not to sound like a conspiracy theory but it's evident there is a concerted effort among prominent investors for the world to make the transition. It is not so much a passing of the torch from the oil & gas industry to green solutions but more like a snatching of the torch from a green energy coalition.
I think it's possible investors are underestimating the sheer scale of this movement. We are still in the early innings of a multidecade secular trend of adoption. It took me until this very moment to appreciate that the energy companies of tomorrow may actually enjoy more favorable market dynamics than the energy companies of the past.
$Camber Energy (CEI.US)$ $Imperial Petroleum (IMPP.US)$