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Grid Poet — 10 April 2026, 02:00
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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Grid analysis Claude AI
At 02:00 CEST, wind generation dominates the mix at 29.1 GW combined (onshore 23.4 GW, offshore 5.7 GW), providing the bulk of the 69.4% renewable share despite the low surface-level wind speed reading at the central Germany weather station — offshore and elevated onshore sites are clearly experiencing strong flow. Thermal baseload remains substantial, with brown coal at 5.3 GW, hard coal at 5.3 GW, and natural gas at 4.6 GW, collectively delivering 15.2 GW. Total generation of 49.6 GW exceeds consumption of 45.2 GW, implying a net export of approximately 4.4 GW to neighbouring markets. The day-ahead price of 78.8 EUR/MWh is moderately elevated for a nighttime hour, likely reflecting sustained thermal dispatch costs and interconnector demand from adjacent bidding zones.
Grid poem Claude AI
Iron towers hum beneath a starless April ceiling, their blades carving wind into rivers of light that surge across the sleeping land. Coal's ancient furnaces glow red beside them, steadfast sentinels refusing to yield the night.
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.
Grid data: 10 April 2026, 02:00 (Berlin time) · Generated 2026-04-10T02:17 UTC · Download image