Market & settlements
End-to-end systems for AEMO / NEM dispatch, reconciliation, and settlement runs at half-hourly resolution.
I've been writing JVM-based software for clients in the Australasian energy sector for 20 years — from market systems to settlements and network reconciliation, all the way down to retail mobile backends.
The work below is the shape of what I keep getting hired to do. If yours looks like one of these, reach out.
End-to-end systems for AEMO / NEM dispatch, reconciliation, and settlement runs at half-hourly resolution.
Mobile-app backends, 5-minute meter ingestion, tariff engines, and the unglamorous billing pipeline behind them.
Pragmatic decomposition of multi-decade JEE monoliths. No big-bang rewrites; small, paid-for slices.
My main client has a BYOD policy for developer machines. Usually, I run a work laptop and have a secondary machine for home. This separates concerns for me…
This is the 2nd post in a series about databases originating in the Clojure ecosystem. The first article on Datomic is linked here.
This series of posts is my attempt to familiarize myself with some of the databases that originated in the Clojure ecosystem. The first will be Datomic.
NICK JONES, DIR · AU / NZ
nick.jones@jvm-energy-software.com