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This picture has been floating around the internet

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On May 8th, 2016, Germany's solar, wind, hydro and biomass plants generated so much energy, power prices actually went negative.

Is this true? I was under the impression that while renewable electricity production was on the rise it still was nowhere near enough to meet the needs of a major nation. Also, if this claim is true, how much power was produced by non-renewable means on that date?

This picture has been floating around the internet

enter image description here

On May 8th, 2016, Germany's solar, wind, hydro and biomass plants generated so much energy, power prices actually went negative.

Is this true? I was under the impression that while renewable electricity production was on the rise it still was nowhere near enough to meet the needs of a major nation. Also, if this claim is true, how much power was produced by non-renewable means on that date?

This picture has been floating around the internet

enter image description here

On May 8th, 2016, Germany's solar, wind, hydro and biomass plants generated so much energy, power prices actually went negative.

Is this true? I was under the impression that while renewable electricity production was on the rise it still was nowhere near enough to meet the needs of a major nation. Also, if this claim is true, how much power was produced by non-renewable means on that date?

Rollback to Revision 3
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Sklivvz
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This picture has been floating around the internet

![enter image description here]]2enter image description here

On May 8th, 2016, Germany's solar, wind, hydro and biomass plants generated so much energy, power prices actually went negative.

Is this true? I was under the impression that while renewable electricity production was on the rise it still was nowhere near enough to meet the needs of a major nation. Also, if this claim is true, how much power was produced by non-renewable means on that date?

This picture has been floating around the internet

![enter image description here]]2

On May 8th, 2016, Germany's solar, wind, hydro and biomass plants generated so much energy, power prices actually went negative.

Is this true? I was under the impression that while renewable electricity production was on the rise it still was nowhere near enough to meet the needs of a major nation. Also, if this claim is true, how much power was produced by non-renewable means on that date?

This picture has been floating around the internet

enter image description here

On May 8th, 2016, Germany's solar, wind, hydro and biomass plants generated so much energy, power prices actually went negative.

Is this true? I was under the impression that while renewable electricity production was on the rise it still was nowhere near enough to meet the needs of a major nation. Also, if this claim is true, how much power was produced by non-renewable means on that date?

Text in picture was cutoff in the smaller version
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This picture has been floating around the internet

![enter image description here]]enter image description here2

On May 8th, 2016, Germany's solar, wind, hydro and biomass plants generated so much energy, power prices actually went negative.

Is this true? I was under the impression that while renewable electricity production was on the rise it still was nowhere near enough to meet the needs of a major nation. Also, if this claim is true, how much power was produced by non-renewable means on that date?

This picture has been floating around the internet

enter image description here

On May 8th, 2016, Germany's solar, wind, hydro and biomass plants generated so much energy, power prices actually went negative.

Is this true? I was under the impression that while renewable electricity production was on the rise it still was nowhere near enough to meet the needs of a major nation. Also, if this claim is true, how much power was produced by non-renewable means on that date?

This picture has been floating around the internet

![enter image description here]]2

On May 8th, 2016, Germany's solar, wind, hydro and biomass plants generated so much energy, power prices actually went negative.

Is this true? I was under the impression that while renewable electricity production was on the rise it still was nowhere near enough to meet the needs of a major nation. Also, if this claim is true, how much power was produced by non-renewable means on that date?

added 49 characters in body; edited tags
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fixing title to correctly reflect the actually claim
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