Green Rain Energy Holdings (OTCID: GREH) Interviewing PCAOB Registered Auditors

Five Strategic Pillars for Investing in Green Rain Energy (OTC: GREH)

Stacked bar chart of U.S. utility-scale electric generating capacity additions from 2000 to 2025, measured in gigawatts. Early 2000s show high natural gas growth, while the 2010s see steady increases in wind and solar. Since 2020, solar and battery storage dominate capacity additions, with 2025 projected to reach the highest total in 25 years.

1. Solar Isn’t Just Growing—It’s Dominating the U.S. Energy Build-Out

Solar has moved beyond being a niche renewable option. It’s now the backbone of U.S. electricity expansion. In 2024, the U.S. installed nearly 50 GW of new solar capacity, more than any other energy source has contributed in a single year in over two decades. Solar represented 61% of all new power generating capacity in 2024, showing how decisively the market has pivoted.(Wood Mackenzie)

Momentum is accelerating. The U.S. Energy Information Administration reports that in Q1 2025, 69% of all new generation capacity added was solar. This level of dominance that suggests solar is not only a fast-growing industry but the defining driver of grid expansion.(EIA)

Why it matters for OTC: GREH: By focusing on urban rooftop projects, GREH is operating in the core of where expansion will be demanded most… dense markets with rising electricity costs and high demand for distributed generation. Investors aren’t backing a speculative trend; they’re positioning in the structural heart of the new grid.

Infographic of the projected 2030 U.S. EV charging network showing an estimated 28 million charging ports needed to support 33 million EVs. Most ports (25.7 million) are private Level 1 or Level 2 chargers at single-family homes. Smaller segments include 570,000 ports at multifamily homes, 490,000 at workplaces, 1.07 million public Level 2 ports, and 182,000 public DC fast charging ports. Each dot in the graphic represents 50,000 charging ports.

2. EV Charging Infrastructure Is Exploding, and GREH Is Plugged In

The electric vehicle (EV) market is scaling at a pace unseen in the auto sector’s history. By 2030, the U.S. will require 28 million EV charging ports to support an estimated 33 million EVs on the road. Crucially, 92% of those ports will be Level 1 and Level 2 chargers in homes, workplaces, and urban centers. Only 182,000 will be public fast-charging units.(U.S. DOE)

This infrastructure boom represents a massive capital expenditure opportunity. PwC estimates that the U.S. charging market will grow from 4 million charge points today to 35 million by 2030, creating a $100 billion revenue opportunity by 2040 across hardware, software, and operations.(PwC)

Why it matters for OTC: GREH: Through partnerships with ChargeTronix and hospitality rollouts such as Hilton’s pilot locations, OTC: GREH is already positioning to deliver EV charging solutions at scale. This is an entry into an infrastructure layer that will underpin the transportation system of the future. This positioning is reinforced by recent developments: Green Rain Energy Holdings (OTC: GREH) is pleased to announce a joint venture with Wallace Engineering for Co-Development and ownership of EV charging projects across the country.” (Press release, September 22, 2025)

3. Urban Solar-Greenhouse Model Multiplies ROI, Not Just Integer Kilowatts

Unlike utility-scale operators who focus on massive solar farms in rural areas, OTC: GREH has pioneered a dual-use rooftop model. By integrating solar panels with greenhouse and aquaponic systems, OTC: GREH’s installations provide multiple simultaneous benefits:

  • Increased photovoltaic efficiency due to moderated rooftop temperatures.

  • Extended roof lifespan by reducing weathering.

  • Reduced urban runoff through controlled greenhouse systems.

  • Ancillary agricultural output, improving food supply chain resilience.

The result is not just power generation, it’s urban asset optimization. Each rooftop becomes a multi revenue ecosystem that maximizes utility while minimizing waste.

Why it matters for OTC: GREH: Investors aren’t just buying exposure to kilowatt-hours. They’re buying into a model that densifies returns, converts unused urban real estate into productivity centers, and provides a defensible moat against conventional single-use solar competitors.

Bar and line chart of U.S. annual and cumulative clean power capacity growth from 2000 to 2024. Bars show yearly additions from wind, utility solar, battery storage, and offshore wind. A rising line shows cumulative capacity, surpassing 300 gigawatts in 2024. Key highlights note that 93% of new capacity added in 2024 came from solar, wind, and storage, with 49 GW installed that year.

4. Clean Energy Is Recession-Resistant and Policy-Empowered Infrastructure

Clean energy has proven to be one of the most resilient sectors against economic downturns because it is driven by regulation, corporate ESG commitments, and policy mandates rather than discretionary consumer behavior. In 2024, 93% of new capacity added to the U.S. grid came from clean energy sources, solar, wind, and battery storage, demonstrating its structural dominance.(ACP / CleanPower)

Federal policy further strengthens this. The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) has allocated nearly $20 billion in solar and renewable incentives, while domestic solar manufacturing has quadrupled since enactment.(MyJournalCourier) This reduces reliance on imports, secures supply chains, and entrenches renewables as strategic infrastructure.

Why it matters for OTC: GREH: Unlike cyclical consumer sectors, OTC: GREH operates in a policy-backed, recession-immune industry. Investors gain exposure to infrastructure that remains essential regardless of macroeconomic turbulence. In other words, a portfolio stabilizer in volatile times.

5. Distributed Infrastructure Advantage: Smart, Agile Deployment

While legacy utilities pursue massive solar farms in remote areas, OTC: GREH has carved out a differentiated strategy: distributed, rooftop-based infrastructure. This approach has three decisive advantages:

  1. Proximity to Demand: rooftop solar generates power where it is consumed, reducing transmission losses.

  2. Lower Capital Hurdles: smaller modular deployments scale quickly and flexibly.

  3. Alignment with EV charging rooftop projects can integrate seamlessly with building-level EV charging systems, directly meeting urban electrification demand.

With 92% of EV charging ports projected to be residential or workplace-based, OTC: GREH’s urban footprint is strategically positioned to capture that demand at the point of need.(DOE)

Why it matters for OTC: GREH: This distributed model avoids the land acquisition, permitting delays, and transmission bottlenecks that plague utility scale projects. Investors in OTC: GREH gain exposure to a model that is lean, urban, and strategically tuned to the energy transition’s real growth centers.

This corporate alignment is reflected in OTC: GREH’s structural moves: Green Rain Energy Holdings (OTC: GREH) is pleased to announce the renaming and rebranding of its wholly owned subsidiary Green Rain Solar Inc. to Green Rain Development Inc. This revamping [of OTC: GREH] is a nod to its true purpose as the incubator for numerous projects spanning several areas of the clean tech industry”. (Press release, September 23, 2025)

Conclusion

The global energy system is shifting at a velocity not seen since the Industrial Revolution, and the numbers are undeniable: solar now accounts for the majority of new U.S. capacity, EV adoption is driving demand for tens of millions of charging ports, and clean energy incentives are reshaping capital flows. Within this structural transformation, Green Rain Energy Holdings (GREH) stands uniquely positioned.

Where legacy utilities chase sprawling rural projects, OTC: GREH is targeting the most valuable and underutilized terrain, the rooftops and urban infrastructure of North America. By combining rooftop solar, greenhouse integration, and EV charging solutions, OTC: GREH is building the distributed utility model of the future. This approach reduces inefficiency, maximizes asset productivity, and delivers energy where it is needed most.

For investors, the opportunity is clear: OTC: GREH is not just an energy company; it is an infrastructure platform, aligned with powerful policy incentives, explosive market demand, and a business model engineered for resilience and scalability. As solar and EV adoption accelerate through 2030, GREH’s urban-centric deployments provide a differentiated and defensible position within a trillion-dollar transformation.

The bottom line: This is more than an investment in renewable energy. It’s an investment in the very architecture of the electrified, decarbonized cities of the future.

DISCLAIMER

Under Regulation A of the JOBS Act, companies can use radio advertising to market their securities to the general public, including non-accredited investors. This is permitted because Reg A is considered a “mini-public offering,” unlike traditional private placements that restrict general solicitation.

Radio advertising rules for Reg A offerings

Before beginning an offering, issuers must file a disclosure document called a Form 1-A offering statement with the SEC and have it “qualified” by the commission. Once qualified, companies can use radio advertising, subject to these restrictions:

  • During the offering: All radio advertising must be truthful and not misleading.
    • It cannot contain information that is false or implies SEC approval of the securities offered.
    • It must use specific disclaimer statements, which must be given equal emphasis to the major portion of the advertisement.
  • “Testing the waters” pre-offering: Issuers can use radio advertising to gauge interest in a potential offering before filing their Form 1-A with the SEC.
    • Any solicitation materials, including radio ads, must be accompanied or preceded by a preliminary offering circular after the offering statement is filed.

Key marketing benefits of Regulation A

The ability to use radio advertising is part of the broader marketing flexibility of a Regulation A offering, which includes:

  • General solicitation: Companies can advertise their offering to the general public through various media, such as radio, social media, and websites.
  • Targeting non-accredited investors: Unlike Rule 506(c) offerings that limit sales to accredited investors, Reg A allows both accredited and non-accredited investors to participate.
  • Simplified investor onboarding: Companies can work with technology providers and broker-dealers to streamline the investment process for a broad audience.

Potential drawbacks and compliance obligations

Despite its marketing flexibility, a Regulation A offering also comes with additional compliance obligations:

  • SEC qualification: A company must file and qualify an offering statement (Form 1-A) with the SEC.
  • Ongoing reporting: For a Tier 2 offering, issuers must file annual and semi-annual reports with the SEC.
  • Audited financials: Tier 2 offerings require audited financial statements.
  • Investment limits: There are limits on how much a non-accredited investor can invest in a Tier 2 offering.

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