First and foremost his encouraging of wind and solar power put England at a huge disadvantage. According to statistics and projections by the end of this decade balancing the network will cost them almost 8 billion pounds, up from 2-7 last year. They are spending 80 billion to improve the distribution system which will reduce the costs back to 2.9 billion in 2031. Carney's influence is all over their current power problems. Now I am not a banker, nor are any of you I suspect, but I do know that if you live on borrowed money eventually the cost of that money will exceed your ability to re-pay it: welcome to Britain, with us following right behind. The feds spent 40 billion less than they expected last year but a paltry 1.2 billion is all they channeled into debt payment. The rest was re-designated to other destinations. Since Carney is now in charge it is safe to assume that this is his attitude towards a nation's economy. As head of Britain's bank he should have identified their expenditures on power as being non-sustainable. That by itself would have kept their factories running.