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Grid Poet — 14 June 2026, 19:00
Strong onshore wind at 28.5 GW and fading solar at 8.0 GW drive a 90% renewable grid with modest net exports.
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Grid analysis Claude AI
At 19:00 on a mid-June evening, the German grid is wind-dominated: onshore and offshore wind collectively deliver 34.0 GW, accounting for 64% of the 52.9 GW generation stack. Solar contributes 8.0 GW as the sun descends through partly cloudy skies, while biomass provides a steady 4.0 GW baseload. Thermal generation remains modest, with natural gas at 2.2 GW, brown coal at 1.8 GW, and hard coal at 1.0 GW — consistent with the 90.4% renewable share suppressing dispatch of conventional units. Generation exceeds domestic consumption by 2.9 GW, resulting in a net export position, though the day-ahead price of 62.1 EUR/MWh remains at a moderate level, likely reflecting demand conditions in neighboring markets and the approaching evening ramp as solar output will decline within the next hour.
Grid poem Claude AI
The wind strides across a darkening land like an invisible titan, its breath alone lighting fifty million homes beneath a bruised and fading sky. Coal and gas whisper from the margins, embers of an older world stubbornly glowing against the gathering dusk.
Generation mix
Wind onshore 54%
Wind offshore 10%
Solar 15%
Biomass 8%
Hydro 3%
Natural gas 4%
Hard coal 2%
Brown coal 3%
90%
Renewable share
34.1 GW
Wind (on + offshore)
8.0 GW
Solar
52.9 GW
Total generation
+3.0 GW
Net export
62.1 €/MWh
Day-ahead price
15.5°C / 17 km/h
Temp / Wind speed
Open-Meteo, Kassel (51.3°N 9.5°E)
70.0% / 30.0 W/m²
Cloud cover / Radiation
64
gCO₂/kWh
Image prompt
Wind onshore 28.5 GW dominates the scene as dozens of towering three-blade turbines with white tubular towers and detailed nacelles stretching across rolling green hills from centre to far right, their rotors visibly turning in moderate wind; wind offshore 5.5 GW appears as a distant line of larger turbines on the hazy horizon at sea, barely visible through atmospheric perspective; solar 8.0 GW occupies the centre-left foreground as expansive fields of aluminium-framed crystalline silicon panels on tilted ground-mount racks, their surfaces reflecting the dim orange-red glow of the low western horizon; biomass 4.0 GW is rendered as a modest industrial facility with a wood-chip storage dome and a single smokestack emitting thin white vapour in the left-middle ground; natural gas 2.2 GW appears as a compact combined-cycle gas turbine plant with a single tall exhaust stack and visible heat-recovery unit, positioned at the left edge; hard coal 1.0 GW is a small power station with a single chimney and coal conveyor barely visible in the far left background; brown coal 1.8 GW is represented by a single hyperbolic cooling tower releasing a modest steam plume, also in the far left background; hydro 1.8 GW suggested by a small river with a weir and run-of-river turbine house in the lower foreground. The sky is a dusk scene at 19:00 in June — the upper sky is deepening blue-grey fading toward dark indigo overhead, while only the lower western horizon retains a narrow band of warm orange-red light; 70% cloud cover creates layered altocumulus catching the last amber and rose tones of sunset; the landscape is lush early-summer green with long grasses and wildflowers; the moderate 62 EUR/MWh price is reflected in a slightly heavy but not oppressive atmosphere with thickening clouds. Painted in the style of a highly detailed 19th-century German Romantic oil painting — rich, saturated colour palette, visible impasto brushwork, deep atmospheric perspective with haze softening distant elements — yet every turbine blade, every solar panel frame, every cooling tower curve rendered with meticulous engineering accuracy. No text, no labels.
Grid data: 14 June 2026, 19:00 (Berlin time) · Generated 2026-06-14T17:20 UTC · Download image