Strong overnight wind (29.1 GW) leads generation with coal and gas providing 15.2 GW of thermal baseload, yielding 4.4 GW net export.
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Generation mix
Wind onshore 47%
Wind offshore 11%
Biomass 8%
Hydro 3%
Natural gas 9%
Hard coal 11%
Brown coal 11%
69%
Renewable share
29.1 GW
Wind (on + offshore)
0.0 GW
Solar
49.6 GW
Total generation
+4.5 GW
Net export
78.8 €/MWh
Day-ahead price
10.1°C / 2 km/h
Temp / Wind speed
Open-Meteo, Kassel (51.3°N 9.5°E)
100% / 0.0 W/m²
Cloud cover / Radiation
213
gCO₂/kWh
Image prompt
Wind onshore 23.4 GW dominates the right two-thirds of the scene as dozens of towering three-blade turbines with white tubular towers and nacelles stretching across rolling dark hills into the deep distance; wind offshore 5.7 GW appears as a distant line of larger turbines on the far-right horizon above a barely visible dark sea; brown coal 5.3 GW occupies the far left as a cluster of massive hyperbolic concrete cooling towers emitting thick white-grey steam plumes lit from below by orange sodium lamps; hard coal 5.3 GW sits left-of-centre as a large power station with rectangular boiler houses, tall slender smokestacks, and coal conveyor belts, lit by harsh industrial floodlights; natural gas 4.6 GW appears centre-left as compact CCGT units with cylindrical exhaust stacks and a single smaller cooling tower; biomass 4.0 GW is rendered centre-right as a modest industrial plant with a wood-chip silo and short smokestack with faint exhaust; hydro 1.3 GW is a small dam structure with spillway visible at the lower-centre foreground near a river. TIME: 02:00 at night — completely black sky, no twilight, no moon visible, total overcast with low dense clouds faintly lit from below by the orange-sodium glow of industrial complexes. Temperature 10°C in early April: bare-branched trees with the faintest suggestion of new spring buds, damp grass, mist hanging in valleys. Heavy oppressive atmosphere reflecting a 78.8 EUR/MWh price — clouds press low and dense, an almost suffocating canopy. Wind turbine blades show gentle rotation blur. All rendered as a highly detailed oil painting in the tradition of 19th-century German Romantic landscape art — rich dark palette of deep navy, burnt sienna, and pale sulphur-yellow industrial glow, visible impasto brushwork, atmospheric aerial perspective with distant turbines fading into haze, meticulous engineering detail on every nacelle, cooling tower, and smokestack. No text, no labels.