So, as I promised, I made "near ground" simulation and here are the results.
Near the ground effect was so strong that flow separation was even at negative AoA. So I was forced to change airfoil, add slat and reduce jet stream angle.
First picture:
no ground, AoA = 20deg, stream angle = 60deg, steam speed = 300m/s, V = 30m/s, Cl = 3.6, Cd = 0.98
Next we add moving ground below airfoil like that:
And now what we get:
AoA = 10deg, stream angle = 60deg, steam speed = 300m/s, V = 30m/s, Cl = 5.9, Cd = 0.054
Next we add moving ground above airfoil like that:
And now what we get:
AoA = 10deg, stream angle = 60deg, steam speed = 300m/s, V = 30m/s, Cl = 4.1, Cd = 0.21
As a conclusion I'd like to say that ground has significant effect on circulation. Even we twice reduce AoA, we still have more lift/downforce. However we can see that when ground is below airfoil we have 1.5 times more aerodynamic forces.
In both cases "near ground" we have significant Cd reduction.