How weather shapes energy production: Why accurate solar & wind forecasting matters more than ever
By Robin Bruneel
April 16, 2026
4 min read
Across Europe and beyond, weather patterns are shifting. These changes fundamentally reshape how renewable energy behaves. Discover why accurate, weather-driven forecasting has become a core operational capability.
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Across Europe and beyond, weather patterns are shifting. We see brighter springs, more volatile cloud formations, sudden wind ramps, and longer warm periods. These changes affect much more than daily life — they fundamentally reshape how renewable energy behaves.
For energy companies, every sunny hour or unexpected cloud layer directly impacts production, consumption, and market exposure. That's why accurate, weather-driven forecasting has become a core operational capability for suppliers and BRPs around the world.
This article breaks down how weather data is used, why it matters, and how modern forecasting teams stay ahead.
What weather data do energy companies rely on?
To understand and predict renewable generation, suppliers and BRPs use several key sources.
1. Numerical Weather Predictions (NWPs)
National meteorological institutes publish large-scale models, such as:
- Alaro (Belgium)
- ICON (Germany)
- Harmonie (Netherlands & Denmark)
- AROME, GFS, and many others globally
These models include critical variables:
- Solar Surface Radiation (SSR)
- Direct & diffuse irradiance
- Temperature
- Cloud cover
- Wind speed & direction
- Pressure fields
Different models overlap, differ in resolution, and perform better in some regions than others. So forecasting teams often combine and tune multiple NWPs to match the characteristics of their own portfolio.
In practice, this turns forecasting engineers into weather engineers — translating raw weather data into actionable power output predictions.
2. Satellite imagery for short-term nowcasting
Systems like METEOSAT (Europe) or GOES (Americas) provide:
- Infrared imagery
- Visible-spectrum imagery
- Water vapor maps
This enables nowcasting: predicting solar or wind output minutes to hours ahead based on real-time cloud movement.
Nowcasting is essential for:
- Detecting sudden cloud shadows
- Predicting sharp solar ramps
- Responding to fast-changing wind conditions
- Adjusting intraday positions proactively
3. Long-term climate trends
Climate change introduces slow but structural shifts:
- Earlier solar ramp-ups in spring
- More frequent heatwaves
- Shifts in wind patterns
- Increased variability across seasons
Forecasting models must be retrained regularly to absorb these long-term effects without overreacting to short-term anomalies.
Why weather matters so much in modern energy systems
In traditional systems, production from gas and nuclear units was predictable and centrally dispatched by the national system operator (e.g., Elia in Belgium, TenneT in the Netherlands/Germany, National Grid ESO in the UK, REE in Spain, etc.).
But today's systems rely heavily on decentralized, weather-driven assets:
- Rooftop PV
- Utility-scale solar fields
- Onshore & offshore wind turbines
- Batteries
- Heat pumps
- Flexible demand
Their output depends on the weather — and weather is never perfect to predict.
Every day, suppliers must purchase power for the next day on the day-ahead market. To do that effectively, they need accurate predictions for both:
- Expected consumption
- Expected renewable generation
If the weather doesn't behave as forecasted:
- More sun or wind than expected → oversupply, imbalance exposure
- Less sun or wind than expected → shortages, expensive corrections
Intraday markets allow adjustments, but only if forecasting tools detect changes early enough.
This makes high-quality forecasting both a financial lever and a risk management tool.
How energy suppliers handle this — and where Amplifino makes the difference
Many system operators provide basic solar and wind forecasts for their national markets. But these models:
- Are not optimized for individual portfolios
- Lack transparency
- Cannot be tuned to local customer characteristics
That's why modern suppliers require tailored forecasting.
Elindus, a Belgian energy supplier, uses Amplifino's in-house forecasting models to convert radiation and wind fields into expected renewable output — tailored to their own portfolio and regional footprint.
Amplifino's AmpliCast™ models combine:
- Multiple NWPs
- Satellite nowcasting
- Local tuning
- Explainable AI
- Continuous recalibration
This helps forecasting teams reduce uncertainty — specifically in high-impact hours where accuracy matters most.
Even small improvements in forecast quality can result in:
- Better day-ahead purchasing
- Fewer intraday corrections
- Lower imbalance exposure
- More stable operations
Conclusion
Weather will continue to shape the energy landscape across Europe, North America, Asia, and beyond.
Energy players who combine strong weather data inputs, advanced transparent forecasting models, real-world operational experience, and tuning to local assets and portfolios — will be the ones who navigate volatility with confidence.
Amplifino helps forecasting teams turn weather complexity into clear, actionable intelligence.
Want to improve your solar or wind forecasting across regions? Discover our AmpliCast™ forecasting suite or connect with our engineering team to explore a tailored model for your portfolio.