Ironically the Green Deal dreams that the elites proclaim will acchieve a booming of fossile fuels in the coming years, if not decades. Maybe not in Europe and/or the US - but everywhere else in the world. And maybe even in Europe, because renewables get demasked in their limited reach, and imminent needs dictate urgent alternatives.
In principle like the the crash-dive-the-boat-into-the-rocky-bottom!-show. It promises royal entertainment.
I just do not like that I am forced to be aboard while they deliberatelly wreck it.
I recently red something about California and how they must sometimes switch off electricity there - over the day, due to all their solar panels getting too hot on the day, and in the later afternoon and evening when the American sun shows its strange habit to drop below the horizon - which unfortunately coincides with that time of the 24 hour cycle when all the Tesla drivers have arrived home and plugged in their cars to charge them. The powergrid design seems to take this all a bit uncooperative.
In Germany they plan to have private wallmounts remote-controlled to not just switch off charging, but to suck car batteries empty when the grid outside runs dry. You get up in the morning, or even night, want to get to work, and find your car with an emty tank, so to speak.

They already have lovely terminology for such things. For example they speak of "spike demand smoothing".
If I would go into stocks again, oil and gas would be high on my shopping list. Renewables not so much at all. But the amrket in generla is way too overheated, and since long time. Unpredictable to make any assessments of paper values, imo, maybe with the exception of entertainment, military equipment and weapons, and general food corporations.