Strong onshore wind and midday solar drive 88.6% renewable share, pushing the day-ahead price to zero with 5 GW net export.
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Generation mix
Wind onshore 49%
Wind offshore 10%
Solar 23%
Biomass 5%
Hydro 2%
Natural gas 4%
Hard coal 3%
Brown coal 5%
89%
Renewable share
42.8 GW
Wind (on + offshore)
17.2 GW
Solar
73.5 GW
Total generation
+5.0 GW
Net export
-0.0 €/MWh
Day-ahead price
9.8°C / 22 km/h
Temp / Wind speed
Open-Meteo, Kassel (51.3°N 9.5°E)
28% / 477.0 W/m²
Cloud cover / Radiation
79
gCO₂/kWh
Image prompt
Wind onshore 35.8 GW dominates the scene, filling the entire right half and extending into the centre as dozens of tall three-blade turbines on lattice and tubular towers stretching across rolling green early-spring hills, blades visibly turning in brisk wind. Wind offshore 7.0 GW appears in the far background right as a cluster of offshore turbines on a hazy North Sea horizon line. Solar 17.2 GW occupies the centre-left foreground as expansive fields of aluminium-framed crystalline silicon photovoltaic panels angled south, reflecting bright midday sunlight, panels gleaming blue-violet. Biomass 4.0 GW is rendered as a modest agricultural biogas facility with a green domed digester and small exhaust stack at centre-left. Brown coal 3.4 GW appears in the far left as two hyperbolic concrete cooling towers with thin, almost reluctant wisps of steam, a conveyor belt of lignite barely moving. Natural gas 2.7 GW sits just right of the cooling towers as a compact CCGT plant with a single slender exhaust stack and minimal heat shimmer. Hard coal 2.3 GW is a smaller conventional boiler house with a single square chimney emitting faint grey smoke, tucked behind the gas plant. Hydro 1.1 GW is suggested by a small weir and run-of-river turbine house beside a stream in the lower left foreground. Time of day: full midday daylight, sun high in a mostly clear sky with scattered cumulus clouds covering roughly 28% of a luminous blue sky, strong direct sunlight casting defined shadows. Temperature around 10°C: early spring, grass bright green but trees still bare or just beginning to bud, patches of last frost in shaded hollows. Wind animates everything — grass bends, clouds stream, turbine blades blur with motion. The atmosphere is calm and open, an expansive sky suggesting zero electricity price — no oppressive haze, no drama, just serene abundance. Style: highly detailed oil painting in the tradition of 19th-century German Romantic landscape painters such as Caspar David Friedrich and Carl Blechen, rich saturated colour, visible confident brushwork, atmospheric aerial perspective fading to pale blue at the horizon, meticulous engineering detail on every turbine nacelle, every PV cell edge, every cooling tower's parabolic curve. The painting balances pastoral beauty with industrial precision, a masterwork panorama of the energy transition. No text, no labels, no people prominent.