Solar at 33.8 GW drives 8.0 GW net export and near-zero prices on a warm, mostly clear afternoon.
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Generation mix
Wind onshore 18%
Wind offshore 2%
Solar 62%
Biomass 7%
Hydro 3%
Natural gas 3%
Hard coal 0%
Brown coal 5%
92%
Renewable share
10.9 GW
Wind (on + offshore)
33.8 GW
Solar
54.8 GW
Total generation
+8.0 GW
Net export
3.0 €/MWh
Day-ahead price
24.9°C / 11 km/h
Temp / Wind speed
Open-Meteo, Kassel (51.3°N 9.5°E)
32.0% / 624.0 W/m²
Cloud cover / Radiation
60
gCO₂/kWh
Image prompt
Solar 33.8 GW dominates the scene as a vast expanse of crystalline silicon photovoltaic panels stretching across rolling green farmland in the foreground and middle ground, occupying roughly 60% of the canvas, their aluminium frames glinting in strong afternoon sunlight. Wind onshore 9.9 GW appears as clusters of tall three-blade turbines with white nacelles and lattice towers scattered across low hills in the right third, blades turning gently in a light breeze. Wind offshore 1.0 GW is a faint row of turbines on the far-right horizon above a silvery river. Biomass 3.7 GW is rendered as a modest biogas plant with cylindrical green digesters and a low exhaust stack near a farmstead at left-center. Brown coal 3.0 GW occupies the far left background as two hyperbolic cooling towers with thin white steam plumes rising lazily into the sky. Hydro 1.7 GW appears as a small weir and powerhouse set into a stream in the lower-left foreground. Natural gas 1.4 GW is a compact CCGT unit with a single slim exhaust stack beside the brown coal plant, barely steaming. Hard coal 0.2 GW is a single small smokestack, almost dormant, partially hidden behind the CCGT. The sky is predominantly clear with scattered cumulus clouds (32% coverage), sunlight strong and golden at 4 PM Berlin time casting long warm shadows toward the east. Temperature is 24.9 °C; lush late-spring foliage on deciduous trees, wildflowers in meadows, vivid green grass. The atmosphere is calm and luminous, reflecting the near-zero electricity price. 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 saturated colour, visible impasto brushwork, atmospheric aerial perspective, meticulous engineering detail on every installation, dramatic depth from foreground panels to distant cooling towers. No text, no labels.