Solar at 35.7 GW and wind at 16.9 GW drive 12 GW net exports and slightly negative prices.
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Generation mix
Wind onshore 20%
Wind offshore 6%
Solar 56%
Biomass 6%
Hydro 2%
Natural gas 3%
Hard coal 1%
Brown coal 5%
91%
Renewable share
16.9 GW
Wind (on + offshore)
35.7 GW
Solar
63.5 GW
Total generation
+12.0 GW
Net export
-1.2 €/MWh
Day-ahead price
10.6°C / 9 km/h
Temp / Wind speed
Open-Meteo, Kassel (51.3°N 9.5°E)
85.0% / 133.0 W/m²
Cloud cover / Radiation
60
gCO₂/kWh
Image prompt
Solar 35.7 GW dominates the scene as vast fields of aluminium-framed crystalline silicon photovoltaic panels stretching across the entire centre and right foreground, covering more than half the composition, their blue-grey surfaces gleaming under diffused light. Wind onshore 12.9 GW appears as dozens of tall three-blade turbines with white tubular towers and nacelles arrayed across rolling green hills in the mid-ground right, blades turning gently in light wind. Wind offshore 4.0 GW is visible in the far distance as a cluster of turbines rising from a hazy sea horizon at the far right. Biomass 4.1 GW occupies the mid-ground left as a cluster of wood-clad biomass plants with short stacks emitting pale steam. Brown coal 3.1 GW stands in the left background as two large hyperbolic concrete cooling towers with thin steam plumes rising vertically in calm air. Natural gas 1.9 GW appears as a compact CCGT plant with a single tall exhaust stack beside the cooling towers. Hydro 1.4 GW is a small dam and reservoir nestled in a valley at the far left. Hard coal 0.5 GW is a single small industrial stack barely visible behind the biomass plant. The sky is bright midday daylight but heavily overcast at 85% cloud cover — a luminous white-grey blanket of stratus clouds with occasional thin breaks allowing pale diffuse sunlight through, creating soft shadowless illumination across the landscape. The atmosphere feels calm and expansive, reflecting the negative electricity price. Spring vegetation: fresh bright green deciduous trees in full leaf, wildflower meadows, temperature around 10°C giving a cool crispness to the air. Central German rolling terrain with gentle hills. Highly detailed oil painting in the tradition of 19th-century German Romantic landscape painters — Caspar David Friedrich meets industrial modernity — rich colour palette of greens, silver-blues, and cloud-whites, visible confident brushwork, atmospheric aerial perspective giving depth. Each energy technology rendered with meticulous engineering accuracy: turbine nacelle housings, lattice sub-structures, PV module grid patterns, cooling tower parabolic curvature, steam thermodynamics. A masterwork painting of an overwhelmingly renewable industrial landscape. No text, no labels.