As GEV Garners Attention Consider These 3 Renewable Energy Stocks Under $30

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By Alex Sirois Published

Quick Read

  • AI data center power demand is pulling renewable energy stocks higher as investors chase infrastructure picks-and-shovels of the energy transition.

  • The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 stocks and AXIA Energia wasn't one of them. Get them here FREE.

As GEV Garners Attention Consider These 3 Renewable Energy Stocks Under $30

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Shares of GE Vernova (NYSE:GEV | GEV Price Prediction) have rerated higher as AI data center power demand reignites investor appetite for the picks-and-shovels of the energy transition. That gravity is now pulling smaller renewable names along for the ride, and several still trade under $30, putting exposure within reach of retail investors who missed Vernova’s run.

With that in mind, here are three renewable energy stocks under $30 where the setup looks compelling right now.

Fluence Energy (NASDAQ:FLNC)

Fluence Energy (NASDAQ:FLNC) builds grid-scale battery energy storage systems and digital software for utilities and developers worldwide. Shares last changed hands at $12.19, down 38.37% year to date but still up 184.81% over the past year, so retail investors are looking at a volatile reset on a still-intact long-term story.

Q1 FY2026 revenue came in at $475.23 million, up 154.4% year over year and beating expectations by 2.13%, though GAAP diluted EPS of -$0.34 missed the -$0.17 consensus. The Wall Street price target sits at $15.24 across 4 Buy, 14 Hold, 2 Sell and 1 Strong Sell ratings, and forward earnings multiples land near 24x.

The bull case is built on demand. Backlog hit a record $5.50 billion and the pipeline expanded 30% to $30 billion since September 2025, while FY2026 revenue guidance of $3.20 billion to $3.60 billion implies roughly 50% growth at the midpoint. CEO Julian Nebreda pointed to “accelerating data center growth, utility demand and rising industrial loads” as the catalyst. The clear risk: gross margin collapsed to 4.9% from 11.4% on project cost overruns, and tariff and incentive uncertainty remains live. With backlog covering the midpoint of guidance, the operational fix matters more than the headline miss.

STEM (NYSE:STEM)

STEM (NYSE:STEM) is an AI-driven clean energy software platform whose PowerTrack suite optimizes solar, storage, and hybrid renewable assets. The stock trades at $10.76, up 21.86% in the past month after a sharp YTD drawdown, with a market cap of just ~$92 million. That makes it a true micro-cap turnaround story.

Q4 2025 revenue of $47.20 million beat expectations by 19.82%, and core software, services, and edge hardware revenue grew 62% year over year. Gross margin swung to 49% from -4% a year earlier, and FY2025 delivered $6.70 million in positive adjusted EBITDA versus a -$22.80 million loss the prior year. Analysts target $13.50 across 7 Hold ratings.

The bull case is the software pivot working. CEO Arun Narayanan called 2025 “a transformative year that fundamentally reshaped Stem into a software-centric, operationally disciplined organization”, and FY2026 adjusted EBITDA guidance of $10 million to $15 million implies roughly 85% growth at the midpoint. The risk is real: shareholders’ equity sits at -$249.06 million and a $30 million ATM offering brings dilution. For investors comfortable with micro-cap volatility, the software inflection is hard to ignore.

AXIA Energia (NYSE:AXIA)

AXIA Energia (NYSE:AXIA), formerly Eletrobras, is the largest clean energy company in the Southern Hemisphere, operating a renewable portfolio of hydroelectric, wind, and solar plants alongside a sprawling Brazilian transmission network. The rebrand from Eletrobras followed a strategic shift toward Net Zero 2030, anchored by a regulated transmission cash-flow base. The key risk is Brazilian macro: rising Selic rates lift debt-service costs, and below-average rainfall has pressured hydro output. Investors get scale, regulated cash flows, and a clean fuel mix at a low double-digit share price.

Low share prices alone are not a reason to buy or avoid a stock. Each of these names carries real execution, balance-sheet, and policy risk, and renewable incentives can cut both ways. Do your own work, weigh position sizing against your conviction, and treat the under-$30 tag as a screen only.

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About the Author Alex Sirois →

Alex Sirois is a financial writer with experience spanning both retail and institutional investing. He has written for InvestorPlace and held roles at BNY Mellon and Bernstein, giving him a perspective that bridges Main Street portfolios and Wall Street analysis.

Alex holds an MBA from George Washington University and has built his career across multiple industries, including e-commerce, education, and translation — a breadth of experience that informs how he breaks down complex financial topics for everyday investors. His writing is conversational, actionable, and grounded in long-term, buy-and-hold investing principles.

At 247 Wall St., Alex focuses on delivering analysis that is both accessible and useful, with a clear emphasis on helping readers make more informed decisions with their money.

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