Solar at 15.5 GW and wind at 10.9 GW dominate a clear May evening, driving 84% renewable share and 2.6 GW net export.
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Generation mix
Wind onshore 19%
Wind offshore 10%
Solar 40%
Biomass 11%
Hydro 4%
Natural gas 6%
Hard coal 2%
Brown coal 8%
84%
Renewable share
11.0 GW
Wind (on + offshore)
15.5 GW
Solar
38.4 GW
Total generation
+2.6 GW
Net export
92.5 €/MWh
Day-ahead price
21.9°C / 11 km/h
Temp / Wind speed
Open-Meteo, Kassel (51.3°N 9.5°E)
0% / 346.0 W/m²
Cloud cover / Radiation
111
gCO₂/kWh
Image prompt
Solar 15.5 GW dominates the centre-right as vast fields of aluminium-framed crystalline silicon PV panels stretching across rolling green May farmland, angled toward the low western sun; wind onshore 7.2 GW appears as numerous three-blade turbines on lattice and tubular towers scattered across the middle distance and ridgelines; wind offshore 3.7 GW is suggested by a row of large offshore turbines visible on a far hazy horizon line; biomass 4.4 GW occupies the centre-left as a cluster of mid-sized industrial plants with woody fuel storage yards and modest steam plumes; brown coal 3.1 GW sits at the far left as two large hyperbolic cooling towers emitting heavy white-grey steam columns; natural gas 2.3 GW appears as a compact CCGT facility with a single tall exhaust stack and thin heat shimmer beside the cooling towers; hydro 1.3 GW is rendered as a small concrete dam and spillway nestled in a forested valley in the left foreground; hard coal 0.8 GW is a single smaller stack with a faint dark wisp near the brown coal plant. The sky is a dusk scene at 18:00 in late spring Berlin time — the sun is low on the western horizon, casting long golden-orange light across the landscape with a warm amber glow along the lower sky fading upward into deepening blue; zero cloud cover means the sky is pristine and clear. Lush green May vegetation — blooming rapeseed fields in yellow, fresh deciduous leaves — covers the rolling terrain at 21.9°C warmth. A light breeze of 11 km/h sets turbine blades in gentle rotation and causes mild ripple in grass. The atmosphere carries a slightly heavy, warm oppressive quality reflecting the elevated electricity price — a faint amber haze hugs the industrial structures. Style: highly detailed oil painting in the tradition of Caspar David Friedrich and Carl Blechen — rich saturated colour, visible impasto brushwork, luminous atmospheric depth, dramatic Romantic composition with meticulous engineering accuracy on every turbine nacelle, PV cell grid, cooling tower parabolic curve, and exhaust stack detail. No text, no labels.