MPs’ Pension Scheme Might Have to be Bailed Out by Taxpayer Thanks to Years of Investments in Dodgy Green Stocks

Britain’s bombed out pension scheme for Members of Parliament might have to be bailed out by taxpayers following disastrous speculations in ‘ethical’ green investments. But the MPs have only their virtue-signalling selves to blame. For years they have nodded through statutory Net Zero measures that promote increasingly whacky technologies that nobody would dream of investing in unless huge state subsidies were on offer. The technical term for most green punts is dog shares. If MPs own gold-plated pensions are now at risk, the appropriate response to any request for taxpayer help should be, “Damn your impudence, get lost.”

The Telegraph reports the observation of Reform deputy leader Richard Tice that so-called ethical investments have crashed the pension scheme’s performance. It is noted that the £800 million fund is 25% short of its target for the year to March 2024 with a dangerous 40% used for Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) investment. These ESG speculations that appeal to the virtuous could lead to taxpayers propping up the fund with tens of millions of pounds, notes Tice. On GB News, the Reform MP talked about investments in energy renewables and battery storage, all technologies helped on the legislative front by British lawmakers. He suggested that the funds should have been invested in traditional equities that perform in line with the wider market.

Green dog shares litter the financial landscape, and have done so for a number of years. Many of them have a history of under-performing the market for decades. Consider below the long-term performance of the Renewable Energy Industrial Index (RENIXX) which tracks the stock capitalisation of the 30 largest renewable energy industrial companies in the world.

Since the official start date around 2006 there has been zero capital growth. The situation is even worse for those who piled in at the recent height of the short Net Zero mania. As the RENIXX graph below shows, investments have more than halved in less than three years.

Last September, the Daily Sceptic published an article titled ‘If you want an investment portfolio full of dog shares try filling it with renewable and green punts’. We noted the fate of the retail exchange traded iShares Global Clean Energy fund which since its inception in 2008 has more or less halved an initial investment of £10,000. UK investment trust Greencoat Renewables PLC was said to provide “attractive risk adjusted returns with a compelling growth opportunity”. As we noted at the time, it was an imaginative way of explaining a loss in share value of 18.6% over the last five years. Perhaps it doesn’t come as a surprise to discover that both investment opportunities have each lost a further, one might say compelling, 10% of value this year to date.

When we published the article, many green energy stocks were suffering as the era of cheap, low interest money was coming to an end. Of course, the British governing classes were directly responsible for the fleeting boom in these junk stocks since for years they printed money and kept interest rates artificially low, as well as directing vast state subsidies into useless technologies such as wind and solar farms, heat pumps and battery storage. To this day, the MPs are promoting all manner of no expense-spared duds such as explosive hydrogen and potentially dangerous, pointless carbon capture. The further tragedy for Britain is that a split vote on the right allowed a deindustrialising, anti-working class Labour party to gain power last year devoted to the zealous promotion of the Net Zero fantasy. This is occurring in a world now waking up to the futility of taking hydrocarbons out of a modern industrial society solely because sandwich board activists have declared a fake climate crisis.

What brazen cheek it will be if the 200 parliamentary boobies, including the entire Lib Dem faction, who expressed support for the recent private member’s Climate and Nature Bill, ask for a taxpayer top-up to their pensions. This bill, which thankfully failed to make progress, would have brought about mass starvation, widespread disease and fatalities and the almost certain collapse of civil liberties. Within a few years, the bill would have reduced the domestic and imported use of hydrocarbons to just 10% of the current level. On the day of the debate, the height of the virtue on verbal display was twinned with the dismal low understanding of economics and science. Tory old buffer Sir Roger Gale summed up the all-round ignorance and pompous wind baggery by admitting the bill had a few “flaws” but would support it anyway for the sake of his grandchildren.

The few flaws in this bill promoted heavily by the Green Blob-funded Zero Hour would have included barely enough power to run basic services such as hospitals, led to people freezing in their homes, no food in the shops, no generally available medicines, no power to run sewage plants or hydrocarbons-based chemicals to clean the water, not to mention an inevitable breakdown in law and order. And, need it be added, no pensions, gold-plated or otherwise.

Chris Morrison is the Daily Sceptic’s Environment Editor.

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RTSC
RTSC
11 months ago

“The further tragedy for Britain is that a split vote on the right allowed a deindustrialising, anti-working class Labour party to gain power last year devoted to the zealous promotion of the Net Zero fantasy.”

Come off it Chris. The Not-a-Conservative-Party is not right-wing; it has admitted that for 14 years it talked “right” but governed “left.” And it was just as committed to the Net Zero de-industrialism SCAM as Labour is.

Alok Sharma gleefully blew up our coal-fired power stations and the Fat Oaf bragged about making us the Saudi Arabia of wind ….. whilst destroying the economy with the Covid Tyranny.

The vote was split because no genuine conservative could possibly vote for the Treacherous Tories.

JeremyP99
11 months ago
Reply to  RTSC

We may as well have elected Corbyn and not Johnson; not sure he would have done as much damage as has happened since then.

Lockdown Sceptic
11 months ago

Green Investments Tank

huxleypiggles
11 months ago

A Git in other words.

Art Simtotic
11 months ago

Corbyn and Lucas meet Thunberg. The blind and the blind led by the autistic.

Not for nothing did Bubbleminster pass the 2008 Climate Claptrap Act by a majority of 605 to 5.

Nemesis moves in mysterious ways.

JeremyP99
11 months ago
Reply to  Art Simtotic

So did Miliband. His eyes went all gooey…

soundofreason
soundofreason
11 months ago
Reply to  Art Simtotic

Autistic? I’m not convinced.

Spoiled and uneducated certainly.

Solentviews
Solentviews
11 months ago

One of the most contagious diseases in the country is ‘ignorance’ (and the harsher strain ‘pig ignorance’). It’s widespread and has swept through most political classes. There’s no easy cure, but the symptoms can sometimes reduce with age and experience.

However, the chances of a recovery are drastically reduced (to near zero) if the individual continues to maintain a ‘virtue seeking’ lifestyle. Many cannot break the habit despite being informed of the risks and will go to their graves carrying this illness.

JeremyP99
11 months ago
Reply to  Solentviews

Pigs are smart.

Just saying

soundofreason
soundofreason
11 months ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

…and tasty.

ellie-em
11 months ago
Reply to  Solentviews

I’m thinking Big Pharma have missed a golden egg opportunity to sell a ‘vaccine’ that is safe and effective to protect people against that disease…

soundofreason
soundofreason
11 months ago
Reply to  ellie-em

Yeah, but… suppose it actually worked?

EppingBlogger
11 months ago

The author seems to be under the illusion there is a common shared set of values and policies between what he inaccurately refers to as “a split vote on the right”. There is no such affinity between the Conservative Party (14 years, remember) and Reform.

JeremyP99
11 months ago
Reply to  EppingBlogger

here is no such affinity between the Conservative Party”

Or with real conservatives. more to the point…

Cotfordtags
11 months ago

So many stories of green businesses tumbling like weeds across the environment waste land and here is another. These tales always lead me to ask the question, what is it in the green argument that leads supposedly successful billionaires like Hohn, Bloomberg and co to keep pushing the green agenda with millions poured into the activism? What are their long term goals and where do they see their investment return. The answer, if any, truly terrifies me, if it is the destruction of the world as we know it, because they must have a plan not to suffer!

DontPanic
DontPanic
11 months ago
Reply to  Cotfordtags

To ensure cheap and plentiful fuel for their industries in unregulated countries and their private jets ?

Tonka Rigger
11 months ago

Screw them. They’ve wasted enough of our cash, and most of them don’t deserve any kind of pension when one considers the unaccountable gravy train they have been riding whilst in office, stuffing their pockets and paying very little on the same outgoings the rest of us struggle by with.

DiscoveredJoys
DiscoveredJoys
11 months ago
Reply to  Tonka Rigger

Quite so. Reality bites but politicians rarely learn the lessons that they expect us mere mortals to grasp.

JohnK
11 months ago

Hmmm. Isn’t the scheme run by an independent organisation? https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/parliamentary-contributory-pension-fund/about Most schemes have to go through an actuarial assessment every few years or so, to determine their longer term liabilities and assets etc.

Having glanced at the link attached, CARE was novel to me. As an existing pensioner on a traditional final salary one, it looks a bit risky to me – but then, being an MP on a short term job is as well, but there income is pretty high while they survive financially.

At the end of they, they could look forward to this: https://www.ppf.co.uk/

Jack the dog
Jack the dog
11 months ago

And anyway as usual we pick up the tab for their stupidity.

Move along please nothing to see here.

huxleypiggles
11 months ago

Another £22 billion black hole ?

DontPanic
DontPanic
11 months ago

Norfolk Pension Fund sent a blurb round about investing in ethical and green. I responded that their job was to invest to get the best return for pensioners and future pensioners, not for political or woke reasons. Response came there none.

Jackthegripper
Jackthegripper
11 months ago

I have argued for many years that all public sector workers, including MPs, should be on defined contribution, not defined benefit, pensions. as the system is unfunded future debt that will cost trillions. Now would be a good time to make the change.

EUbrainwashing
11 months ago

Proof that whoever ran the pension pot didn’t understand fake green industry is a scam built of straw (or they just have a wicked sense of justice and humour).