Bangkok Post

‘GHOST KITCHENS’ BOOM AS PANDEMIC FEEDS DEMAND

- By Amber Wang and AFP reporters

In an industrial unit on the outskirts of Taipei, chefs are plating meals that will never be served in a restaurant: welcome to the world of “ghost kitchens”.

Even before the pandemic sent an earthquake through the global restaurant trade, the “Amazonific­ation” of commercial kitchens was well under way, but coronaviru­s lockdowns and restrictio­ns have fuelled explosive growth in Asia.

The recent boom in food delivery apps meant customers were already used to having restaurant-quality meals quickly delivered to their homes.

To meet that demand, a growing number of restaurant­s started setting up delivery-only “cloud kitchens” — or rented space in them.

Then the pandemic struck, ending dining out for hundreds of millions.

“It really drove the whole industry into sort of hyper growth, so that really helped us,” Jason Chen, the chief executive officer of Just Kitchen, told AFP.

Just Kitchen started operating Taiwan’s first ghost kitchen early last year — now it runs 17 across the island, as well as one in Hong Kong and is aiming to expand into the Philippine­s and Singapore by the end of this year, he said.

Regional delivery giants like Singapore-based Grab and Indonesia’s Gojek have also jumped on the trend. Grab opened 20 new cloud kitchens in Southeast Asia last year, up from 42 before the pandemic.

The global ghost kitchen industry is expected to grow more than 12% each year to be worth US$139.4 billion by 2028, according to a report by Researchan­dmarkets.com.

Asia Pacific, home to 4.3 billion people, already accounts for some 60% of the internatio­nal market.

For many in the region’s densely populated cities, where living space is at a premium, eating daily from cheap restaurant­s or food stalls is more affordable and viable than cooking at home.

The research group Euromonito­r estimates there are some 7,500 cloud kitchens now operating in China and 3,500 in India — compared to 1,500 for the United States and 750 for Britain.

Third-generation Thai restaurate­ur Natalie Phanphenso­phon had to pivot her family’s 45-strong restaurant empire into takeaway-only for much of the last year because of the pandemic.

Her family owns the popular Mango Tree and Coca chains, many located in shopping malls where rents are high and lockdowns lasted for weeks.

Earlier this year they opened their first cloud kitchen on the outskirts of Bangkok, with plans for two more.

“Our goal is to ensure everyone on our boat can sail through this together,” the 35-year-old explained.

Cloud kitchens, she said, are less lucrative than restaurant­s because people don’t order as many dishes compared to dining out. But their operating costs are far lower.

iBerry Group, which operates restaurant­s and ice-cream shops, mostly in shopping malls in Thailand, also set up a delivery-only hub.

“Having a cloud kitchen is basically an oxygen mask for us during Covid-19,” said brand manager Thitanun Taveebhol.

While conglomera­tes and chains have moved into delivery-only operations, mom-and-pop cloud kitchens are also opening.

After recently retiring from Air India, Nirjash Roy Chowdhury sank his savings into setting up a cloud kitchen in Mumbai.

His six employees were from the hotel trade which has been ravaged by the pandemic.

“They didn’t have anything to eat. If I can give somebody bread and butter by doing this, then there’s nothing like it,” the 61-year-old added.

Chowdhury estimates it will take six months to break even but is confident there is long term potential.

“I think this cloud kitchen culture is here to stay,” he predicted. Experts say that’s a safe bet. Nailul Huda, an analyst at the Jakarta-based Institute for Developmen­t of Economics and Finance, says lower operating costs and the ordering habits of tech-savvy younger generation­s will ensure continued growth.

“People will keep ordering food even after the pandemic and I think that the ghost kitchen … has the potential to keep growing rapidly even after it’s over,” he said.

Just Kitchen’s Chen says the pandemic has changed the way people order food direct to their door.

“Once you do it, you become so used to it, the convenienc­e is hard to get away from. … We are very positive of the outlook.”

At a time when so much of the catering industry was devastated, ghost kitchens have kept chefs, delivery drivers and wholesaler­s in business.

But they have unavoidabl­y added to the mountain of plastic already being produced.

One recent study in Bangkok found plastic waste has nearly doubled during the pandemic, some of it because of food delivery services.

Food writer Leslie Tay says that while ghost kitchens have “taken away the personalit­y or the soul of the food to a certain extent”, there is space for them to thrive alongside dine-in restaurant.

“At the end of the day, I think the food speaks for itself. … If your food is good, people will start talking about it.”

“Having a cloud kitchen is basically an oxygen mask for us during Covid-19”

THITANUN TAVEEBHOL Brand manager, iBerry Group

 ?? ?? A delivery driver collects freshly prepared lunch boxes at 5Km Kitchen, a business set up in March to rent out cooking spaces for delivery-only companies in Seoul.
A delivery driver collects freshly prepared lunch boxes at 5Km Kitchen, a business set up in March to rent out cooking spaces for delivery-only companies in Seoul.
 ?? ?? Staff prepare takeaway orders inside a cloud kitchen for Thai restaurant­s under the iBerry Group in Bangkok.
Staff prepare takeaway orders inside a cloud kitchen for Thai restaurant­s under the iBerry Group in Bangkok.
 ?? ?? “Once you do it, you become so used to it, the convenienc­e is hard to get away from,” says Jason Chen, CEO of Just Kitchen in Taipei.
“Once you do it, you become so used to it, the convenienc­e is hard to get away from,” says Jason Chen, CEO of Just Kitchen in Taipei.
 ?? ?? A GrabFood delivery driver collects takeaway orders from a cloud kitchen run by iBerry Group.
A GrabFood delivery driver collects takeaway orders from a cloud kitchen run by iBerry Group.
 ?? ?? A worker checks packaged meals at Just Kitchen in Taipei.
A worker checks packaged meals at Just Kitchen in Taipei.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand