Strong onshore wind at 21.4 GW leads overnight generation, with brown coal and gas filling a modest 2.7 GW import gap.
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Generation mix
Wind onshore 55%
Wind offshore 7%
Biomass 11%
Hydro 3%
Natural gas 9%
Hard coal 3%
Brown coal 13%
76%
Renewable share
24.0 GW
Wind (on + offshore)
0.0 GW
Solar
39.0 GW
Total generation
-2.8 GW
Net import
76.6 €/MWh
Day-ahead price
11.5°C / 13 km/h
Temp / Wind speed
Open-Meteo, Kassel (51.3°N 9.5°E)
100.0% / 0.0 W/m²
Cloud cover / Radiation
167
gCO₂/kWh
Image prompt
Wind onshore 21.4 GW dominates the right two-thirds of the scene as dozens of tall three-blade turbines with white tubular towers and detailed nacelles stretching across rolling central-German hills into the deep distance; brown coal 4.9 GW occupies the left background as a cluster of massive hyperbolic cooling towers emitting thick steam plumes lit from below by orange sodium lights; biomass 4.2 GW appears as a pair of medium-scale industrial plants with wood-chip conveyor belts and modest chimneys, positioned left of centre; natural gas 3.5 GW is rendered as two compact CCGT units with single tall exhaust stacks and faintly glowing turbine halls in the centre-left; wind offshore 2.7 GW is suggested by a distant row of turbines on the far-right horizon above a faintly visible coastal silhouette; hydro 1.3 GW appears as a small concrete dam with spillway nestled in a valley in the right foreground; hard coal 1.0 GW is a single small power station with a square stack at the far left edge. The sky is completely dark — no twilight, no glow on the horizon — a deep navy-black overcast ceiling of 100% cloud cover obscuring all stars. The only illumination comes from sodium-orange streetlights along a country road, the warm industrial glow of plant windows and safety lighting on the cooling towers, and blinking red aviation warning lights atop every wind turbine nacelle receding into darkness. The atmosphere feels heavy and close — warm spring night at 11.5°C, with a moderate breeze visibly swaying the fresh green April grass and young-leafed deciduous trees. The mood is industrious and slightly oppressive, reflecting an elevated electricity price. Rendered as a highly detailed oil painting in the tradition of 19th-century German Romantic landscape painters — rich, dark colour palette of deep blues, warm oranges, and cool greys; visible confident brushwork; atmospheric depth achieved through layered mist around the cooling towers and progressively dimmer turbine lights in the distance; meticulous engineering accuracy in every nacelle, rotor blade, lattice substation, and cooling tower silhouette. No text, no labels.