
To install for development purposes, such as adding new features. Installing nempy to use in your project is easy. Feel welcome to get in touch if you have any questions, want to provide feed back, have a feature request,Īre interested in collaborating or just want to discuss this project. As part the project we hope to engage with and support prospective users of On Energy and Environmental Markets (CEEM). This project is being lead by Nick Gorman, a PhD candidate at the University for New South Wales and the Collaboration Contributions should follow the PEP8 style guide (with exception of line length up to 120 rather than 80), ensure that all existing automated tests continue to pass (unless you are explicitly changing intended behavour, please highlight this in your pull request description), implement automated tests for new features, and provided doc strings for public interfaces.

ContributingĬontributions via pull requests are welcome.

Issues with Nempy can be reported via the issues register ( ), issues submissions do not need to adhere to any particular format. You can seek suport for using Nempy using the discussion tab on GitHub ( ), checking the issues register ( ), or by contacting Nick directly n.gorman at. Nempy is open-source and we welcome all forms of community engagement, some more info is provided below.

Ramping constraints, interconnectors, FCAS markets and more.Ī brief introduction to the NEM can be found at the link below:Ī more detailed introduction to Nempy, examples, and reference documentation can be found on the That you can start simple, like in the example below, and grow the complexity of your model by adding features such as Nempy is a python package for modelling the dispatch procedure of the Australian National Electricity Market (NEM).
