It wouldn’t be the first time. In the winter of 1973–74, power shortages forced the government to restrict electricity use for industry and businesses.
Offices shut early, factories slowed down or shut for two days a week, and the economy had to squeeze a week’s worth of work into just a few days.
Fast forward to today and the question is obvious:
Could modern businesses actually cope?
The Reality Check for Employers
For many organisations, the biggest shock wouldn’t be shorter weeks, it would be discovering how much time is wasted.
A three-day operational window would quickly expose bloated meeting schedules, endless internal emails, and projects that never quite deliver anything useful.
Businesses would have to get brutally efficient.
The priorities would be simple:
focus on the work that actually generates revenue
cut non-essential meetings and bureaucracy
make decisions faster
stop doing things “because we always have”
In other words, many companies would be forced to run leaner, and arguably smarter.
Flexible Working Would Stop Being Optional
If energy restrictions meant offices could only operate on certain days, businesses would have to rethink scheduling overnight.
Expect to see:
compressed working hours across fewer days
rotating teams sharing office time
remote work becoming the default
Ironically, many firms that resisted flexible working after the pandemic might suddenly discover they have no choice.
Technology already exists to keep businesses running from almost anywhere. The real barrier has never been tech, it has been management mindset.
Energy Efficiency Would Suddenly Matter
Companies love talking about sustainability in glossy reports.
A fuel crisis would test how serious they actually are.
Businesses that have invested in energy-efficient lighting, heating, equipment and renewable power would be far better placed than those still relying on outdated infrastructure.
In a restricted-energy economy, using less power becomes a genuine competitive advantage.
Staff Would Feel the Pressure Too
Workers might initially welcome the idea of a shorter working week.
But if a crisis reduces overtime, bonuses or hours, the financial reality could quickly bite.
Employees might need to adapt by:
tightening household budgets
working from home due to scarcity or rationing of fuel to travel to work
taking on freelance or part-time work
using downtime for training or reskilling
In uncertain times, flexibility becomes a survival skill.
Crisis Often Reveals What Actually Works
There is a strange truth about disruption.
It often exposes how inefficient systems were in the first place.
A forced three-day working week would undoubtedly cause chaos in some sectors. But it might also show that many organisations can achieve more in less time when they stop wasting energy, both literally and organisationally.
The Bigger Lesson for Businesses
Fuel shortages, energy shocks and economic disruption are no longer theoretical risks.
Businesses that survive these events tend to have three things in common:
lean operations
flexible working models
lower energy dependence
Those that don’t adapt tend to discover, rather quickly, that the biggest risk isn’t the crisis itself.
It’s being unprepared when it arrives.





