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Grid Poet — 3 April 2026, 11:00
Solar leads at 30 GW under full overcast; wind adds 15.5 GW; Germany net-exports 5 GW at 89.5% renewables.
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Grid analysis Claude AI
Solar dominates generation at 30.1 GW despite full cloud cover, reflecting the high diffuse-light capture of Germany's extensive PV fleet on an overcast April midday. Combined wind generation of 15.5 GW (9.6 onshore, 5.9 offshore) provides solid secondary support, bringing the renewable share to 89.5%. Total generation of 57.0 GW exceeds domestic consumption of 52.0 GW, yielding a net export of approximately 5.0 GW. The day-ahead price of 53.0 EUR/MWh is moderate, consistent with residual fossil dispatch of 6.0 GW across brown coal, gas, and hard coal maintaining system reserves and grid stability under heavy overcast conditions.
Grid poem Claude AI
Beneath a pewter sky the panels drink what light the clouds concede, conjuring thirty gigawatts from grey alone. The turbines turn their slow hymn while coal smolders in the margins, a fading chorus beneath the solar reign.
Generation mix
Wind onshore 17%
Wind offshore 10%
Solar 53%
Biomass 7%
Hydro 2%
Natural gas 4%
Hard coal 1%
Brown coal 5%
90%
Renewable share
15.5 GW
Wind (on + offshore)
30.1 GW
Solar
57.0 GW
Total generation
+5.0 GW
Net export
53.0 €/MWh
Day-ahead price
7.0°C / 4 km/h
Temp / Wind speed
Open-Meteo, Kassel (51.3°N 9.5°E)
100% / 48.5 W/m²
Cloud cover / Radiation
71
gCO₂/kWh
Image prompt
Solar 30.1 GW dominates the centre and right of the scene as vast fields of aluminium-framed crystalline silicon PV panels stretching across flat farmland under a uniformly overcast, pearl-grey sky; wind onshore 9.6 GW appears as dozens of tall three-blade turbines with white nacelles and lattice towers dotting the mid-ground hills, their blades barely turning in the light 3.8 km/h breeze; wind offshore 5.9 GW is visible far in the background as a distant line of offshore turbines rising from a grey North Sea horizon; biomass 4.2 GW is rendered as a cluster of industrial biomass plants with green-painted hoppers and moderate steam plumes on the left; brown coal 2.8 GW appears as two hyperbolic cooling towers with thin rising steam columns in the far left background; natural gas 2.3 GW is a compact CCGT plant with a single tall exhaust stack and faint heat shimmer beside the cooling towers; hydro 1.2 GW is a small concrete dam with spillway visible in a forested valley to the far right; hard coal 0.9 GW is a single dark-brick power station with a short chimney near the brown coal towers. The time is 11:00 AM on an early April day: full diffuse daylight but no direct sun, no shadows, sky a flat blanket of thick stratocumulus in shades of silver and slate-grey. Temperature is 7°C — early spring vegetation with bare deciduous trees just beginning to bud, pale green grass, patches of last autumn's brown leaves. The atmosphere is calm and slightly oppressive, moderate-price energy market conveyed through a heavy but not threatening overcast. Highly detailed oil painting in the tradition of 19th-century German Romantic landscape painters — Caspar David Friedrich's atmospheric depth merged with meticulous industrial-age technical accuracy. Rich muted colour palette of grey, sage green, steel blue, and dull ochre. Visible impasto brushwork, luminous diffuse light rendered with layered glazes, atmospheric perspective fading distant turbines and cooling towers into the cloud base. No text, no labels.
Grid data: 3 April 2026, 11:00 (Berlin time) · Generated 2026-04-03T11:17 UTC · Download image