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“The Sun Has Won” — and it’s not even close 😎
The exponential growth of solar

Good evening, Folks.
Happy Father’s Day to all you dads out there. I cooked myself a nice steak to celebrate 🥩 and I enjoyed every second of it!
Now to get ready for this week… here’s what’s on my mind.
You’ll never guess why solar power was invented by AT&T back in the mid-‘50s.
It was with wildly modest intentions: Powering payphones in remote areas.
The first demonstration of a scrappy, cobbled-together “solar panel” generated just enough power to slowly spin a tiny toy Ferris wheel.
No one (not even AT&T) understood the exponential growth potential of this new technology.
But last year, solar panels produced 3x the amount of energy used by the entire U.S. back when that Ferris wheel was spinning.
Because solar has a superpower that no other major source of energy has.
Energy sources like coal or natural gas have a fixed cost of extraction.
So even as the amount drilled for or mined rises by orders of magnitude, their prices stay roughly the same — over centuries.
But solar cells are manufactured, not extracted.
That means solar becomes much cheaper with every successive cell manufactured — and 70 billion solar cells were manufactured last year.
So, from 1985–2025, while coal was going nowhere, the price of solar fell off a cliff. The graph below shows the last 45 years of cumulative GW of production vs. price, on a log scale.
Nothing but solar is capable of this kind of ongoing price decrease.
Which is why, within a decade, solar will be the single biggest source of electrical power on planet Earth.
And that switch is happening much, much faster than even the “experts” have predicted.
Which means there’s still a big investment opportunity at play.
Everyone Is Wrong About Solar
For the last quarter-century, some of the most reputable organizations in the world have wildly underestimated solar power growth predictions.
For example, the International Energy Agency (IEA) publishes predictions about solar’s growth in its annual World Energy Outlook report.
In its 2009 report, the IEA predicted that by 2029, installed solar capacity would increase 10x, to 244 GW.
It hit that milestone in just six years — and has nearly 10x’d AGAIN from there.
For much of the 2010s, solar deployment beat the IEA’s five-year forecasts by 200%+.
They constantly revise their forecast upward to try to keep pace with reality.
In 2021, they said 2023 would bring 218GW of installation.
In 2022, they said 257GW. In 2023, they said 406GW.
BNEF, a Bloomberg subsidiary, tried the same. Here’s how it added to its 2023 forecast, eventually landing on a little over 400GW:
Reality?
447GW deployed — more than twice their original predictions.
It made exactly the same mistake in 2024.
The only people who have come close to correct are solar die-hards like Greenpeace, which made a very bold prediction in 2009: nearly 1TW of global solar capacity by 2030.
The world is already at 2TW… in 2025.
The trouble with these predictions is that no one has learned the lesson from the last 70 years of solar. The experts are still assuming linear growth.
But solar is growing exponentially.
To humans, exponential growth looks like absolutely nothing. Then overnight, it takes over the world.
From that first Ferris wheel, through the ‘80s and ‘90s and early ’00s, it looked like solar was barely moving.
And now that’s changing:
“Solar is on track to fundamentally re-define the way the world supplies energy in the 21st century.” – Wood McKenzie
All at once — this year— solar is becoming the global standard for electricity generation.
Growth at the Speed of Light
To understand where solar is actually headed, take past reality and work forward from there.
Here’s how rapidly solar deployment has grown — for the past two decades:
In 2004, it took one year to install 1 GW of solar power.
In 2010, it took one month.
In 2016, it took one week.
In 2024, it took about 12 hours.
That’s the equivalent of 3.4 football fields of solar installed every minute.
Here’s what that looks like over the past 15 years. Note that the y-axis in the chart below is logarithmic — and solar is breaking out above that trendline.
At the current growth rate, solar capacity is doubling about every three years — or growing 10x every decade.
According to ISES, solar power will surpass nuclear generation in 2026, wind in 2027, dams in 2028, gas in 2030, and coal in 2032.
And in just 25 years, solar capacity will exceed 75TW — or 6x the world’s current electricity generating capacity.
That will make solar humankind’s largest source of primary energy — not just electricity.
Which means we’re closer to AT&T’s Ferris wheel in terms of total solar deployment than we are to what’s coming.
“Almost all the demand for solar panels still lies in the future.” – The Economist
Exponential growth is difficult to see at first — until suddenly, it looks like it was inevitable.
It’s not often the future is this easy to predict.
Fortunately, it’s also not difficult to profit from an exponentially growing technology.
You just have to recognize the opportunity.
I’ve already done some of the legwork for you…
Identifying a company that is capitalizing on the massive solar growth in the United States.
Tomorrow, I’ll show you how it’s on the verge of hitting its “Netflix Moment.”
To Your Success,

P.S. The best way to get all the details right away when I have a new trade coming up is to make sure you are a member of my MOBILE ALERTS list.
All you need to do is whip out your phone and text the word:
“RAGE” to 1- (888) 487-1534 📲
Then, you can be near the first in line when I have a hot new idea that drops (like tomorrow!)
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