What Is RNRG? Global X Renewable Energy Producers ETF

Last updated July 2026

Short answer

RNRG is a Global X fund that holds companies generating power from renewable sources: wind, solar, hydroelectric, geothermal, and biofuels. It tracks the Indxx Renewable Energy Producers Index and is heavily weighted toward international utilities and independent power producers such as Orsted, EDP Renovaveis, and Brookfield Renewable. It charges 0.65% and is small, near $30 million in assets. It suits investors wanting focused, global clean-power exposure rather than a broad solar or clean-energy-tech ETF.

Ticker
RNRG
Issuer
Global X ETFs (Mirae Asset)
Tracks
Indxx Renewable Energy Producers Index
Expense ratio
0.65%
AUM
~$30 million
YTD return
See chart
Dividend yield
~2.5%
Inception
May 2015

RNRG is issued by Global X ETFs (Mirae Asset) and tracks Indxx Renewable Energy Producers Index. It charges a 0.65% expense ratio, holds approximately ~$30 million in assets under management, yields about ~2.5%, and launched in May 2015.

Stats as of mid-2026. Live prices and current performance show inside Walnut once you connect a broker.

What is RNRG?

RNRG is the Global X Renewable Energy Producers ETF, a fund built around companies that generate electricity from renewable sources such as wind, solar, hydroelectric, geothermal, and biofuels. It tracks the Indxx Renewable Energy Producers Index and holds roughly 35 stocks, most of them international utilities and independent power producers.

The defining feature of RNRG is that it invests in the operators of renewable power, not the makers of solar panels or wind turbines. That gives it a utility-like character, with steadier income and a heavy tilt toward companies based in Europe, Latin America, and Oceania.

RNRG holdings

Approximate weights as of mid-2026; refresh quarterly from Global X ETFs (Mirae Asset)'s fund page. Each ticker links to its individual stock guide in Walnut.

RankTickerCompany% of RNRG
1ENLTEnlight Renewable Energy Ltd~7%
2ORSTEDOrsted A/S~6%
3EDPREDP Renovaveis SA~6%
4AXIA3Axia Energia SA~6%
5MELMeridian Energy Ltd~6%
6VERVerbund AG~6%
7BEPBrookfield Renewable Partners~5%
8EGIE3Engie Brasil Energia SA~5%
9MCYMercury NZ Ltd~5%
10CENContact Energy Ltd~4%

RNRG's top positions include Enlight Renewable Energy, Orsted, EDP Renovaveis, Brookfield Renewable Partners, and several New Zealand and Brazilian power companies such as Meridian Energy, Mercury NZ, Contact Energy, and Engie Brasil. The portfolio is spread across a few dozen names with no single stock dominating.

Sector-wise the fund is overwhelmingly utilities, and geographically it is heavily international. This concentration is by design: the largest listed renewable generators are mostly outside the United States, so the index naturally reaches around the world.

RNRG vs ICLN and TAN

Broad clean-energy funds like iShares Global Clean Energy (ICLN) and solar-focused funds like Invesco Solar (TAN) include equipment and technology makers, which can be volatile and growth-driven. RNRG instead owns the utilities and power producers that operate renewable plants, giving it a steadier, income-oriented profile.

The trade-off is that RNRG captures less of a clean-tech boom, since it excludes the panel and turbine manufacturers that drive those rallies. Investors who want the operating side of renewables, closer to a global utility fund, may prefer RNRG; those chasing clean-tech growth may prefer ICLN or TAN.

Performance and outlook

RNRG's returns track global renewable-power producers, so it tends to move with utility valuations, interest rates, and electricity prices in its home markets. It has generally shown lower volatility than pure solar or clean-tech ETFs, but its heavy international and utility exposure ties it to rate cycles and currency swings.

The long-term outlook depends on continued growth in renewable generation and supportive policy across Europe, Latin America, and Oceania. Because the fund is small and specialized, it can trade thinly, so investors should size positions accordingly.

Is RNRG a good fit?

RNRG may fit investors who want targeted, global exposure to companies that actually produce clean electricity, with utility-like income and lower volatility than clean-tech funds. It is typically used as a satellite position within a broader portfolio rather than a core holding.

Walnut is not an investment adviser, and this is not a recommendation. Whether RNRG suits you depends on your goals, risk tolerance, and existing energy and international exposure. Consider its 0.65% fee, small size, and utility tilt before adding it.

How to buy RNRG

RNRG trades on the Nasdaq and can be purchased through any major broker, including Robinhood, Fidelity, Schwab, and Public. Because the fund is small, using limit orders can help you get a fair price. Brokers offering fractional shares let you invest a set dollar amount.

If you use Walnut to build and track thematic baskets, you can connect your existing brokerage so RNRG sits alongside the rest of your portfolio in one view. Walnut keeps trade execution at your broker and provides tracking and analysis on top.

The bottom line on RNRG

RNRG is a niche, globally diversified bet on companies that actually produce renewable electricity, tilted toward utilities rather than solar-panel makers. At 0.65% it is priced like a thematic fund, and its small size means thinner trading. Most investors treat it as a satellite clean-energy position, not a core holding.

More on RNRG

Whether RNRG is worth buying today depends more on your time horizon and what you already hold than on any single call. We walk through valuation, concentration, and what would have to be true for it to outperform from here in is RNRG a buy?

RNRG yields ~2.5% as of mid-2026, paid by passing through the dividends of its underlying holdings. For the payout schedule, history, and how the distributions are taxed, see RNRG dividend: yield and schedule.

Build a portfolio around RNRG with Walnut

Use RNRG as your core holding, then let Walnut's AI propose thematic satellites: AI infrastructure, dividend growth, clean energy, whatever you believe in. Connect your broker, build the basket in conversation, track it as one unit.

FAQ

What is RNRG?

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RNRG is the Global X Renewable Energy Producers ETF. It holds companies that generate electricity from renewable sources, including wind, solar, hydroelectric, geothermal, and biofuels. The fund tracks the Indxx Renewable Energy Producers Index and leans heavily toward international utilities and independent power producers rather than equipment manufacturers.

Who issues RNRG and what does the ticker stand for?

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RNRG is issued by Global X ETFs, part of Mirae Asset. The ticker is a play on renewable energy. The fund was previously known as the Global X YieldCo and Renewable Energy Income ETF before it was renamed to focus on renewable energy producers.

How is RNRG different from ICLN or TAN?

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ICLN is a broad clean-energy fund and TAN focuses on solar, both including hardware and technology makers. RNRG instead targets the utilities and power producers that own and operate renewable plants. That makes RNRG behave more like a global utility fund, often steadier and higher-yielding than pure clean-tech ETFs.

What is inside RNRG?

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RNRG holds around 35 stocks, mostly international utilities and independent power producers. Top positions include Enlight Renewable Energy, Orsted, EDP Renovaveis, Brookfield Renewable, and several New Zealand and Brazilian power companies. The fund is heavily weighted toward the utilities sector and holds many non-US names.

What is the expense ratio of RNRG?

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RNRG charges an expense ratio of about 0.65% per year, or roughly $65 on a $10,000 investment. That is typical for a thematic, internationally focused ETF and higher than a broad index fund. The fee reflects the specialized, global nature of the holdings.

Does RNRG pay a dividend?

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Yes. Because RNRG holds many utility and power-producer stocks, it generates income and distributes it to shareholders. The recent 30-day SEC yield has been around 2.5%. Utilities are traditionally income-oriented, so the fund's yield tends to be higher than a growth-focused clean-tech ETF.

How do I buy RNRG?

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RNRG trades like any stock and can be bought through Robinhood, Fidelity, Schwab, or Public. Brokers offering fractional shares let you invest a set dollar amount. If you track thematic baskets in Walnut, you can connect your existing broker so RNRG appears alongside your other holdings in one place.

How large is RNRG?

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RNRG is small, holding roughly $30 million in assets as of mid-2026. Small funds can have wider bid-ask spreads and thinner trading volume, so use limit orders. Its modest size reflects the niche nature of renewable-power-producer investing compared with broader clean-energy funds.

Is RNRG a good investment?

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Whether RNRG fits you depends on your goals, risk tolerance, and view on renewable power; Walnut is not an investment adviser and this is not advice. RNRG offers focused, global exposure to companies that actually generate clean electricity, with utility-like income. Weigh its 0.65% fee and small size against broader clean-energy alternatives.

When was RNRG created?

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RNRG launched in May 2015. It originally focused on YieldCos and renewable-income companies before being repositioned toward renewable energy producers more broadly. Its multi-year history spans the growth of global wind and solar generation and several shifts in clean-energy sentiment.

Why is RNRG so heavily international?

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Many of the world's largest listed renewable-power producers are based outside the United States, in Europe, Latin America, and Oceania. Companies like Orsted (Denmark), EDP Renovaveis (Portugal), and various New Zealand and Brazilian utilities dominate the pure renewable-generation space, so a producer-focused index naturally skews global.

Is RNRG a clean-energy or a utility fund?

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It is effectively both. RNRG targets renewable energy specifically, but because it holds the producers rather than the technology makers, it looks and behaves much like a global utility fund. That gives it steadier income and often lower volatility than solar or clean-tech ETFs, while keeping a clear renewable focus.

What are the main risks of RNRG?

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RNRG carries sector concentration in utilities, heavy international exposure including currency risk, and sensitivity to interest rates, which affect utility valuations. Its small asset base can mean less liquidity. Renewable policy changes and power-price swings in its many home markets can also move the fund meaningfully.

How do I compare RNRG to similar ETFs?

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Put a few fields side by side: the expense ratio (fees compound over decades), the index or strategy it tracks, the top holdings and how much they overlap with what you already own, the dividend yield, and the AUM, liquidity, and bid-ask spread that affect trading costs. For index funds, tracking error (how closely it follows its index) and tax efficiency matter too. RNRG's figures are above; the full method is in Walnut's guide on how to compare ETFs.

Related ETFs

Walnut is informational, not investment advice. Holdings weights and fund statistics on this page are approximations stamped to mid-2026; verify current figures against Global X ETFs (Mirae Asset)'s fund page or your broker before investing.

    What Is RNRG? Global X Renewable Energy Producers ETF (Holdings, Cost, Performance), Walnut