Sunday Tribune

Load shedding sees more people back at the office

- EDWARD WEST edward.west@inl.co.za

AS LOAD shedding continues to disrupt workforce productivi­ty, returning to the office may be becoming an attractive prospect.

Galetti Corporate Real Estate CEO John Jack said many companies had invested in back-up power solutions such as generators, inverters and renewable energy sources to ensure continued operations when Eskom load shedding was in force.

“South Africa is experienci­ng some of its worst power outages since 2021, and we are well on our way to a new record in 2022,” said Jack.

Engelbert Binedell, chief operating officer of Growthpoin­t Properties, the JSE’S biggest primary listed Reit, said load shedding had already resulted in a “significan­t pick-up” in people working from office buildings in order to get the power they need to be able to function and do their work.

“The fact is that it is exceptiona­lly difficult to work from home during load shedding hours, and many businesses with hybrid workplace policies are struggling to maintain productivi­ty as a result,” said Jack.

He said both corporate and small business productivi­ty had been affected by the load shedding because of failing internet connection­s, missed deadlines as employees aren’t able to complete tasks on time, and disruption­s to supply chains from the reduced output of goods manufactur­ed.

“Staff are having to redo work owing to lost data and are generally forced to take a longer period to complete their work,” he said.

Covid-19 prompted a shift in the modern work environmen­t that allowed employees to work from home or enjoy flexible hybrid work models. This resulted in the worsening of a significan­tly oversuppli­ed office property market in South Africa.

Jack said an increased employee reliance on company office space for continued power supply would encourage many companies to renew their leases and even take out more floor space to accommodat­e the return of their staff to the workplace.

“The bottom line is that the costs

of lost productivi­ty and reduced output are far more deadly to a business than the costs of investing in premises with an uninterrup­ted power supply where employees can work as normal,” he said.

“In cases where a company has given up their physical premises and allowed employees to work fully remotely, we are seeing a trend of employers paying for their employees to work from co-working spaces with generators or other continued power supply sources,” he said.

“Covid-19 restrictio­ns decreased the overall demand for commercial office space, but load shedding will likely have the opposite effect.”

Discovery Insure’s Work from Home Index, which is compiled from telematic driving data from clients, showed people, on average, are now driving three days a week to their work or offices and that, in the last couple of months, 80 percent of people are now working at their work locations.

The proportion of people working at their workplaces is still 20 percent lower than pre-covid levels.

Last month, Growthpoin­t said in an update to its investors that an initial sentiment that offices would no longer be needed was receding, and hybrid working patterns were set to endure.

Bigger businesses, however, were returning their staff to offices with different strategies, some fully and others still on a rotational system.

 ?? | AFP ?? LOADSHEDDI­NG leaves traffic lights throughout South Africa not working, which causes traffic jams and other traffic disruption­s.
| AFP LOADSHEDDI­NG leaves traffic lights throughout South Africa not working, which causes traffic jams and other traffic disruption­s.

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