Wind dominates at 34.5 GW with 14 GW solar under overcast skies, pushing Germany into slight net export at 1.6 GW.
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Generation mix
Wind onshore 45%
Wind offshore 11%
Solar 23%
Biomass 7%
Hydro 2%
Natural gas 4%
Hard coal 2%
Brown coal 7%
86%
Renewable share
34.5 GW
Wind (on + offshore)
14.0 GW
Solar
62.3 GW
Total generation
+1.6 GW
Net export
77.4 €/MWh
Day-ahead price
15.3°C / 16 km/h
Temp / Wind speed
Open-Meteo, Kassel (51.3°N 9.5°E)
100% / 88.5 W/m²
Cloud cover / Radiation
95
gCO₂/kWh
Image prompt
Wind onshore 27.8 GW dominates the scene as vast ranks of three-blade turbines with white tubular towers and detailed nacelles stretching across rolling green hills from the centre to the far right, their rotors spinning visibly in moderate wind; wind offshore 6.7 GW appears as a distant line of larger turbines on the far-right horizon above a grey North Sea inlet; solar 14.0 GW fills the centre-left foreground as expansive fields of aluminium-framed crystalline silicon PV panels on metal racking, their dark blue surfaces reflecting the pale diffuse light of a fully overcast sky; brown coal 4.2 GW occupies the left background as a lignite power station with two large hyperbolic cooling towers emitting thick white steam plumes; biomass 4.2 GW appears as a mid-sized industrial facility with a tall cylindrical silo and wood-chip conveyors just left of centre; natural gas 2.8 GW is rendered as a compact CCGT plant with a single tall exhaust stack and small heat-recovery unit nestled between the coal plant and the biomass facility; hard coal 1.5 GW shows as a smaller coal plant with a single rectangular cooling tower and coal bunker to the far left; hydro 1.1 GW is a small run-of-river weir with a low concrete dam visible along a river in the left foreground. The sky is entirely overcast with thick, layered stratocumulus clouds in grey and pewter tones, pressing down with a heavy, oppressive atmosphere reflecting the 77.4 EUR/MWh price; late-afternoon daylight at 16:00 in March provides even, flat illumination with no shadows and a slightly warm tone filtering through the cloud deck from the west. The landscape is early spring — fresh pale-green grass emerging, bare deciduous trees with the first buds, patches of muddy earth — at a mild 15°C. Style: highly detailed oil painting in the tradition of 19th-century German Romantic landscape painters such as Caspar David Friedrich and Carl Blechen, with rich layered colour, visible confident brushwork, atmospheric depth and haze, meticulous engineering detail on all turbines, panels, cooling towers and stacks, dramatic compositional scale contrasting the vast turbine fields against the brooding industrial thermal plants. No text, no labels.