CleanTech Bites

Cleantech stocks stay ahead of pack, despite average October

Published by

The Australian CleanTech Index fell from 55.94 to 55.55 over the month of October recording a 0.7 per cent loss. This compared to the ASX200 loss of 2.2 per cent and the ASX Small Ordinaries Index loss of 4.8 per cent. The Australian CleanTech 20 fell by 0.8 per cent for the month.

The CleanTech Index also continues to outperform the wider market over each of the longer periods reported in the table below. The 12-month performance continues to lead the ASX200 by over 20 per cent.

The best performing sub-index for the month was the Australian Waste Index with a 4.9% gain, led by the 7.7% gain from the ever volatile Sims Metal Management. The Australian Efficiency & Storage Index also had a good performance recording a 1.8% gain for the month. The weakest sub-index through October was the Australian Water Index recording a loss of 2.5 per cent.

The market capitalisation of the 64 stocks in the Australian CleanTech Index is A$27.2 billion, slightly down from last month’s new high. The month’s performance included 8 companies with gains of more than 10%. The greatest percentage gains were recorded by Kalina Power (KPO), Traffic Technologies (TTI) and Carnegie Wave Energy (CWE). The greatest market capitalisation gain was recorded by Orocobre (ORE).

These gains were partially offset by 6 companies recording losses of more than 10% led by Australian Vanadium (AVL), CleanTeQ (CLQ) and Energy Action (EAX). The greatest market capitalisation loss was recorded by Meridian Energy (MEZ).

John O’Brien is managing director of  Australian CleanTech www.auscleantech.com.au

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Higher fixed network tariffs could erase the benefits of the Cheaper Home Batteries rebate

New analysis finds that raising fixed network charges could snatch back the savings promised to…

25 February 2026

Australia’s biggest renewable grid “stress test” facility gets a $3 million upgrade

Australia's largest independent renewable energy and grid integration testing facility, used to simulate and stress test real-world conditions,…

25 February 2026

Minutes vs megawatt-hours: What changes when weather forecasting becomes a form of infrastructure?

When a growing share of electricity generation depends on sunlight, the ability to predict earlier…

24 February 2026

Gas the “stealthy price setter” of Australia’s high electricity bills, as batteries continue to bite

New report pinpoints gas as the main driver of rising electricity prices over the past…

24 February 2026

New battery made “exclusively” for homes launches onto red-hot Australian market

A new battery brand "dedicated exclusively to the home" has launched onto the rebate-charged Australian…

24 February 2026

Local developer pitches gigawatt-hour big battery to help Perth quit coal

A WA developer is pitching a new $500 million battery along the backbone network between…

24 February 2026