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Grid Poet — 14 June 2026, 00:00
Strong overnight wind drives 83% renewable share with modest thermal baseload and slight net exports.
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Grid analysis Claude AI
At midnight on 14 June, strong onshore wind at 23.5 GW and offshore wind at 6.4 GW dominate the generation mix, delivering nearly 70% of total output alone. Renewable share reaches 82.9%, with biomass (3.9 GW) and hydro (1.9 GW) contributing meaningful baseload support. Thermal generation remains online at modest levels — brown coal 2.9 GW, hard coal 2.2 GW, and natural gas 2.2 GW — likely reflecting must-run constraints and anticipated morning ramp needs. Total generation of 43.1 GW exceeds domestic consumption of 41.7 GW, yielding a net export position of approximately 1.4 GW, while the day-ahead price of 67.8 EUR/MWh sits at a moderately elevated level for a nighttime hour, possibly reflecting cross-border demand or constrained transmission corridors.
Grid poem Claude AI
A thousand blades carve the summer dark, tireless sentinels humming across the northern plain. Beneath them the old furnaces breathe low, their amber glow a fading psalm against the wind's dominion.
Generation mix
Wind onshore 55%
Wind offshore 15%
Biomass 9%
Hydro 4%
Natural gas 5%
Hard coal 5%
Brown coal 7%
83%
Renewable share
29.9 GW
Wind (on + offshore)
0.0 GW
Solar
43.1 GW
Total generation
+1.4 GW
Net export
67.8 €/MWh
Day-ahead price
11.9°C / 16 km/h
Temp / Wind speed
Open-Meteo, Kassel (51.3°N 9.5°E)
16.0% / 0.0 W/m²
Cloud cover / Radiation
119
gCOâ‚‚/kWh
Image prompt
Wind onshore 23.5 GW dominates the scene as vast ranks of three-blade turbines with lattice towers stretching across rolling green hills from the centre to the far right, their rotors visibly turning in brisk wind; wind offshore 6.4 GW appears as a cluster of taller turbines on the distant horizon standing in a dark North Sea glimpsed through a gap in the hills; brown coal 2.9 GW occupies the left foreground as two large hyperbolic cooling towers with faint white steam plumes lit from below by orange sodium lamps; hard coal 2.2 GW sits just right of the cooling towers as a compact power station with a single tall stack and a glowing coal conveyor; natural gas 2.2 GW appears as a smaller CCGT plant with a clean single exhaust stack emitting a thin heat shimmer, wedged between the coal plant and the wind farm; biomass 3.9 GW is rendered as a mid-sized industrial facility with a rectangular boiler building and wood-chip storage yard, illuminated by floodlights, positioned in the middle ground; hydro 1.9 GW appears as a concrete dam with water cascading over a spillway in the far left middle distance. The sky is completely dark — deep navy-black, no twilight, no sky glow — with a scattering of stars visible through 16% cloud cover rendered as thin high cirrus wisps. The atmosphere feels moderately heavy and warm for a June night, with a faint haze hanging over the industrial structures suggesting the elevated price. Green summer vegetation — tall grasses, linden and beech trees in full leaf — sways in the 15.6 km/h breeze. All structures are lit only by artificial light: amber sodium streetlights along access roads, white LED floodlights on plant perimeters, red aviation warning lights blinking atop turbine nacelles and smokestacks. Highly detailed oil painting in the tradition of 19th-century German Romantic landscape painters — rich colour palette of deep blues, warm ambers, and cool greys — visible impasto brushwork, atmospheric depth with sfumato in the distance, meticulous engineering detail on every turbine nacelle, cooling tower shell, and exhaust stack. No text, no labels.
Grid data: 14 June 2026, 00:00 (Berlin time) · Generated 2026-06-13T22:20 UTC · Download image