Energy & Water Data Analyst

SOLOS Consultants Ltd
Chester
1 month ago
Create job alert

Energy & Water Data Analyst
Long-term contract | North Wales (with UK travel) | BPSS+ required
Up to £29.89/hr PAYE or £40/hr Umbrella
We’re supporting a major engineering and manufacturing organisation in their search for an experienced Energy & Water Data Analyst. This is a fantastic long-term opportunity (running until late 2026, with strong potential to extend) to play a pivotal role in energy, water and sustainability performance across a large UK property portfolio.
You’ll join a specialist Energy & Sustainability team and take ownership of the full lifecycle of resource data — from metering and systems through to analysis, insight, compliance, and project support. If you love turning complex data environments into meaningful action, this one’s for you.
What you’ll be doing
Data Management & Insight

  • Act as the UK data expert for energy and water systems, ensuring data platforms and EMS tools are configured, accurate and reliable.
  • Analyse large, complex consumption datasets to spot anomalies, trends, inefficiencies, and failures across multiple UK sites.
  • Build meaningful KPIs, dashboards and reports used by operations and senior leadership.
  • Maintain data integrity and lead remedial actions when issues arise.
    Compliance & Project Support
  • Provide technical expertise on energy and water compliance standards, legislation, and best practice.
  • Support the delivery of CO₂ reduction and decarbonisation roadmaps.
  • Contribute data and cost modelling for Opex/Capex planning and investment cases.
  • Assist with feasibility, tender support, and oversight of infrastructure projects.
  • Participate in internal and contractor compliance audits, supporting environmental standards such as ISO 50001.
    Stakeholder Engagement
  • Work closely with FM, sustainability teams, project teams, contractors, and senior management.
  • Support UK sites with occasional travel (approx. 1–2 times per month).
    What we’re looking for
  • 5+ years’ experience in Energy or Environmental Management, ideally in large or complex facilities.
  • Expert knowledge of the end-to-end energy data lifecycle (BMS systems, metering, EMS tools such as eSight, data transfer solutions).
  • Strong technical understanding of water systems, consumption reduction approaches, and infrastructure improvements.
  • Solid grasp of compliance requirements, including relevant legislation, regulations, and codes of practice.
  • Confident analysing large datasets (e.g., regression, baseload analysis) and presenting clear insights.
  • Strong stakeholder engagement skills and the ability to work across multiple sites.
  • Must be a British national and able to obtain BPSS+ clearance.
    Contract Details
  • Location: Primarily North Wales, with travel to UK sites.
  • Hours: 35 per week over 4.5 days, flexible between 7am–7pm.
  • IR35: Inside (off-payroll working rules apply).
  • Start: As soon as clearance is completed.
  • Interview process: One stage.
    If this role is of interest and you meet the above criteria, then please apply immediately

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Energy & Water Data Analyst

Energy & Water Data Analyst

Data Analyst - Energy & Water

Data Analyst - Energy & Water

Associate Data Scientist

Project Data Scientist

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

Maths for Machine Learning Jobs: The Only Topics You Actually Need (& How to Learn Them)

Machine learning job adverts in the UK love vague phrases like “strong maths” or “solid fundamentals”. That can make the whole field feel gatekept especially if you are a career changer or a student who has not touched maths since A level. Here is the practical truth. For most roles on MachineLearningJobs.co.uk such as Machine Learning Engineer, Applied Scientist, Data Scientist, NLP Engineer, Computer Vision Engineer or MLOps Engineer with modelling responsibilities the maths you actually use is concentrated in four areas: Linear algebra essentials (vectors, matrices, projections, PCA intuition) Probability & statistics (uncertainty, metrics, sampling, base rates) Calculus essentials (derivatives, chain rule, gradients, backprop intuition) Basic optimisation (loss functions, gradient descent, regularisation, tuning) If you can do those four things well you can build models, debug training, evaluate properly, explain trade-offs & sound credible in interviews. This guide gives you a clear scope plus a six-week learning plan, portfolio projects & resources so you can learn with momentum rather than drowning in theory.

Neurodiversity in Machine Learning Careers: Turning Different Thinking into a Superpower

Machine learning is about more than just models & metrics. It’s about spotting patterns others miss, asking better questions, challenging assumptions & building systems that work reliably in the real world. That makes it a natural home for many neurodivergent people. If you live with ADHD, autism or dyslexia, you may have been told your brain is “too distracted”, “too literal” or “too disorganised” for a technical career. In reality, many of the traits that can make school or traditional offices hard are exactly the traits that make for excellent ML engineers, applied scientists & MLOps specialists. This guide is written for neurodivergent ML job seekers in the UK. We’ll explore: What neurodiversity means in a machine learning context How ADHD, autism & dyslexia strengths map to ML roles Practical workplace adjustments you can ask for under UK law How to talk about neurodivergence in applications & interviews By the end, you’ll have a clearer sense of where you might thrive in ML – & how to turn “different thinking” into a genuine career advantage.

Machine Learning Hiring Trends 2026: What to Watch Out For (For Job Seekers & Recruiters)

As we move into 2026, the machine learning jobs market in the UK is going through another big shift. Foundation models and generative AI are everywhere, companies are under pressure to show real ROI from AI, and cloud costs are being scrutinised like never before. Some organisations are slowing hiring or merging teams. Others are doubling down on machine learning, MLOps and AI platform engineering to stay competitive. The end result? Fewer fluffy “AI” roles, more focused machine learning roles with clear ownership and expectations. Whether you are a machine learning job seeker planning your next move, or a recruiter trying to build ML teams, understanding the key machine learning hiring trends for 2026 will help you stay ahead.