Pay & Benefits
Biden Climate Edict Could Spell End for TSP Fossil Fuel Investments
The presidents executive order aimed at incorporating climate-related financial risk into federal budgeting also instructs officials to review how the Thrift Savings Plan considers risks from climate change in its decision-making.
MAY 24, 2021 04:48 PM ET
THRIFT SAVINGS PLAN | CLIMATE CHANGE
Erich Wagner
President Bidens recent
executive order aimed at ensuring federal agencies consider the risks of climate change in their budgeting and making the American economy carbon-neutral by 2050 also has the potential to impact how federal employees save for retirement.
The
edict instructs the secretary of Labor to identify actions to protect federal employee pensions from the threats of climate-related financial risk. And it requires an assessment within 180 days of how the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board, which administers the Thrift Savings Plan, has taken environmental, social and government factors, including climate-related financial risk, into account.
Democratic lawmakers in recent years have introduced legislation to require the Thrift Savings Plan to offer versions of their investment funds that divest from contributors to climate change like fossil fuel companies, but those bills never advanced through Congress. The most recent iteration, the
RESPOND Act, introduced by Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., and Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., would establish a Federal Advisory Panel on Climate Change within the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board, create an optional investment plan for those who dont want to invest in fossil fuels, and plan to divest from corporate polluters altogether if certain profitability metrics are met.
Efforts to offer 401(k)-style retirement savings opportunities to federal workers without investing into fossil fuel companies got a boost following Biden signing the climate change executive order, when the American Federation of Government Employees, the largest federal employee union, endorsed both the executive order and the RESPOND Act. Previously, only AFGEs local representing Environmental Protection Agency workers had endorsed the bill.
{snip}