Overcast solar at 28.1 GW and 16.9 GW wind dominate; 87% renewable share with slight net export.
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Generation mix
Wind onshore 23%
Wind offshore 6%
Solar 48%
Biomass 7%
Hydro 3%
Natural gas 5%
Hard coal 2%
Brown coal 6%
87%
Renewable share
16.9 GW
Wind (on + offshore)
28.1 GW
Solar
58.0 GW
Total generation
+0.7 GW
Net export
86.1 €/MWh
Day-ahead price
14.2°C / 14 km/h
Temp / Wind speed
Open-Meteo, Kassel (51.3°N 9.5°E)
96.0% / 48.0 W/m²
Cloud cover / Radiation
88
gCO₂/kWh
Image prompt
Solar 28.1 GW dominates the foreground and right half of the scene as vast fields of aluminium-framed crystalline silicon PV panels stretching across rolling green farmland, their surfaces reflecting a flat pewter-white sky; wind onshore 13.5 GW fills the mid-ground as dozens of tall three-blade turbines on lattice and tubular towers spread across gentle hills, rotors turning moderately in the breeze; wind offshore 3.4 GW appears as a distant line of turbines on a grey North Sea horizon at far right; brown coal 3.7 GW occupies the left background as a lignite power station with two large hyperbolic cooling towers emitting thick white steam plumes; biomass 3.9 GW sits left of centre as a modest industrial plant with a wood-chip storage dome and a single exhaust stack with faint vapour; natural gas 2.8 GW appears as a compact CCGT facility with a tall single exhaust stack and clean metal cladding, positioned behind the solar field; hydro 1.7 GW is suggested by a small reservoir dam with cascading water in the far mid-left valley; hard coal 0.9 GW is a small older stack barely visible behind the lignite station. Full mid-morning daylight but entirely diffuse—96% cloud cover renders the sky a uniform heavy grey-white blanket with no sun disk visible, casting soft shadowless light across the landscape. June vegetation is lush bright green, wildflowers dot field margins, temperature is cool at 14°C with a slight dampness in the air. The atmosphere feels heavy and oppressive reflecting the high electricity price—low ceiling of cloud pressing down on the industrial-pastoral panorama. Style: highly detailed oil painting in the tradition of 19th-century German Romantic landscape masters such as Caspar David Friedrich and Carl Blechen—rich layered colour, visible confident brushwork, atmospheric depth and haze, meticulous engineering detail on every turbine nacelle, PV rack, cooling tower and smokestack. No text, no labels.