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Office Kitchen Crisis: Is The Energy Shortage Bringing WFH Global?
🚨 Is the Office Cafeteria Crisis Bringing WFH Back? Just when strict Return-to-Office (RTO) mandates were becoming the norm, a completely unexpected global issue is forcing companies to pivot: we are running out of commercial cooking gas.
The ongoing geopolitical tensions in West Asia have triggered a massive commercial Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) shortage. Because hospitals and residential areas are rightfully getting priority, industrial-scale corporate kitchens are being left in the cold—literally.
Here is what is happening on the ground across major business hubs:
Tech Campuses are Struggling: In massive IT corridors across Chennai, Bengaluru, and Pune, giants like Infosys and HCLTech are suspending live cooking stations and, in some cases, officially telling employees to work from home to ease the strain on campus facilities.
Wall Street to Canary Wharf: Financial districts in New York and London are shutting down gas-intensive grills and pivoting entirely to cold catering or pre-packaged meals.
The Ripple Effect: It is not just the internal cafeterias. Street vendors and local food courts around business parks from Singapore to Kochi are scaling back, leaving employees with zero hot lunch options.
The big question: If the legendary corporate perks—like hot meals and collaborative dining—are taken away, does commuting to the office still make sense?
Many global HR departments are quietly bringing back temporary WFH days just to handle the logistical nightmare.
Global Energy Crunch: Major Corporate Hubs Pivot to Remote Work as LPG Shortages Disrupt Office Operations
A growing number of multinational companies across major global business centers are beginning to consider bringing back temporary remote work options. The commercial LPG and broader energy supply crunch, triggered by the ongoing conflict in West Asia, is severely squeezing large-scale corporate cafeteria operations worldwide.
While there is no universal shift back to remote work, scattered measures by international corporations and rising calls from global employee unions indicate that limited work-from-home arrangements could return in various sectors—especially the tech industry—if the logistical strain continues.
Here is a look at how the commercial fuel shortage is driving discussions around remote work across key global regions:
https://www.nbloglinks.com/office-kitchen-crisis-is-the-energy-shortage-bringing-wfh-global/
#WFH #ReturnToOffice #EnergyCrisis #WorkFromHome
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