Solar at 35.8 GW and 15.9 GW of wind drive 89.9% renewables, pushing prices negative and exports to 11.6 GW.
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Generation mix
Wind onshore 20%
Wind offshore 5%
Solar 56%
Biomass 7%
Hydro 2%
Natural gas 3%
Hard coal 2%
Brown coal 5%
90%
Renewable share
15.9 GW
Wind (on + offshore)
35.8 GW
Solar
63.6 GW
Total generation
+11.6 GW
Net export
-1.6 €/MWh
Day-ahead price
13.9°C / 11 km/h
Temp / Wind speed
Open-Meteo, Kassel (51.3°N 9.5°E)
81% / 431.0 W/m²
Cloud cover / Radiation
71
gCO₂/kWh
Image prompt
Solar 35.8 GW dominates the scene as a vast foreground and middle-ground expanse of crystalline silicon photovoltaic panels stretching across rolling Thuringian farmland, their aluminium frames glinting under a bright but heavily overcast sky with broken clouds allowing shafts of direct sunlight to pierce through; wind onshore 12.8 GW appears as dozens of three-blade turbines with white tubular towers dotting green hills across the right third of the composition, rotors turning gently in moderate wind; wind offshore 3.1 GW is suggested by a distant row of taller turbines visible on a hazy horizon line at far right; biomass 4.2 GW is represented by two medium-scale biogas plants with rounded digesters and small exhaust stacks emitting thin vapour, nestled among trees at centre-left; brown coal 3.1 GW occupies the left background as a pair of hyperbolic cooling towers releasing modest steam plumes above a lignite power station with conveyor belts and coal bunkers; natural gas 2.1 GW appears as a compact combined-cycle gas turbine facility with a single tall exhaust stack and minimal exhaust, tucked behind the biogas plants; hard coal 1.2 GW is a smaller conventional stack barely visible behind the cooling towers; hydro 1.3 GW is a low concrete run-of-river weir visible along a small river cutting through the foreground meadow. The lighting is full late-afternoon daylight at 16:00 in April — sun at a moderate angle from the west-southwest, warm golden tones filtering through large gaps in an 81% broken cloud layer, casting dappled shadows across the panel fields. Spring vegetation: fresh bright-green grass, budding deciduous trees, yellow rapeseed patches. The atmosphere is calm and open, reflecting the slightly negative electricity price — no oppressive haze, just a gentle luminous stillness. Rendered as a 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 impasto brushwork, atmospheric aerial perspective with depth receding to a misty horizon, meticulous engineering detail on every turbine nacelle, PV module, and cooling tower. No text, no labels.