Solar at 38.3 GW and wind at 15.1 GW drive a 13.4 GW net export with negative prices on a mild spring morning.
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Generation mix
Wind onshore 21%
Wind offshore 3%
Solar 60%
Biomass 7%
Hydro 2%
Natural gas 2%
Hard coal 2%
Brown coal 3%
92%
Renewable share
15.1 GW
Wind (on + offshore)
38.3 GW
Solar
63.7 GW
Total generation
+13.4 GW
Net export
-7.3 €/MWh
Day-ahead price
7.4°C / 7 km/h
Temp / Wind speed
Open-Meteo, Kassel (51.3°N 9.5°E)
53% / 137.0 W/m²
Cloud cover / Radiation
53
gCO₂/kWh
Image prompt
Solar 38.3 GW dominates the scene as a vast sweeping foreground and middle ground filled with thousands of aluminium-framed crystalline silicon PV panels on green spring meadows and barn rooftops, angled south, catching bright diffused light through broken clouds. Wind onshore 13.1 GW spans the rolling hills behind as dozens of tall three-blade turbines on lattice and tubular towers, blades turning gently in light wind. Wind offshore 2.0 GW appears as a distant cluster of offshore turbines visible on a hazy horizon line above a river or lake. Brown coal 2.0 GW is a pair of hyperbolic cooling towers on the far left, emitting thin wisps of steam. Natural gas 1.6 GW sits as a compact CCGT plant with a single slender exhaust stack and minimal flue output, tucked behind a tree line at centre-left. Hard coal 1.2 GW is a smaller coal plant with a single square stack releasing a faint grey ribbon. Biomass 4.3 GW appears as several modest biogas domes and a small wood-chip CHP facility with low chimneys scattered among farm buildings in the mid-ground. Hydro 1.1 GW is a small weir and run-of-river station along a stream at the lower right. Time is 10:00 on an April morning: full daylight, a sky roughly half covered with cumulus clouds allowing strong patches of sunshine and soft shadow across the landscape. Temperature is cool at 7°C — early spring: trees show fresh pale-green buds, grass is vivid green, patches of yellow rapeseed beginning to bloom. The atmosphere is calm and open, reflecting the negative electricity price — expansive sky, no oppressive haze, gentle luminosity. 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 palette, visible confident brushwork, atmospheric aerial perspective with depth receding to blue-grey hills, meticulous engineering detail on every turbine nacelle, every PV module frame, every cooling tower's parabolic curve. The composition evokes a masterwork panoramic industrial landscape painting. No text, no labels.