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Why Infosys wants to know how much power employees use at home

The exercise applies to staff operating under Infosys’ hybrid policy, which requires employees to work from the office at least 10 days a month while spending the rest of their time at home.

January 25, 2026 / 10:26 IST
Infosys Ltd
Snapshot AI
  • Infosys asks remote staff to share home electricity use for sustainability tracking.
  • Survey seeks appliance details, energy-saving ideas to enhance emissions reporting
  • Renewable sources met 77% of Infosys' electricity needs in India last year

Infosys has begun asking employees who work from home to share details of their household electricity consumption, linking personal energy use to the company’s wider sustainability accounting.

Employees received an internal email from Chief Financial Officer (CFO) Jayesh Sanghrajka announcing a work-from-home electricity consumption survey and requesting them to take a few minutes to respond, according to The Economic Times.

The exercise applies to staff operating under Infosys’ hybrid policy, which requires employees to work from the office at least 10 days a month while spending the rest of their time at home.

In the email, Sanghrajka explained the reasoning behind the initiative: “With hybrid work becoming an integral part of our operations, the environmental impact of our work increasingly extends beyond our campuses and into our homes. Electricity consumed while working from home also contributes towards Infosys' greenhouse gas emission footprint. As we seek to enhance and update our reporting methodology, obtaining accurate data on current work-from-home energy usage is essential to our ongoing efforts.”

He added that employee participation would enable the company to “measure the impact more precisely and design effective sustainability initiatives”.

The Bengaluru-based IT services major, which employs more than 300,000 people globally, has been building its sustainability framework for over 15 years.

It positions environmental responsibility not as a single target but as a collective obligation shared across the organisation.

According to Sanghrajka, this approach has already delivered measurable results. Infosys has achieved carbon neutrality ahead of global benchmarks, cut per capita energy consumption by 55% compared with 2008 levels, and met around 77% of its electricity demand from renewable sources during the previous year.

Employees quoted in the report said the survey is also meant to encourage awareness around conservation and responsible electricity use within households.

By linking everyday home practices to corporate emissions data, Infosys is attempting to bridge the gap between personal habits and organisational climate goals.

What Infosys is asking employees to share -- and why

The questionnaire goes beyond a simple monthly electricity figure. It seeks information on the kinds of appliances used while working from home, including computers, lighting, fans, air conditioners and heaters.

Employees are asked to indicate the wattage of lights, whether they use solar power at home, and to describe any energy-saving ideas they may have successfully implemented.

Alongside data collection, Infosys is encouraging staff to adopt efficiency measures within their homes.

The company notes that its own office buildings typically consume 50-60% less electricity than conventional commercial structures, largely due to green design and operational practices.

This is not the first time Infosys has attempted to quantify work-from-home emissions. During 2020-21, it became one of the early companies globally to estimate and disclose the carbon impact of remote work.

That earlier assessment was also based on a work-from-home electricity consumption survey, used to calculate energy usage from lighting, fans, computers, air conditioning and other devices.

The current exercise, according to the ET report citing sources, is aimed at revalidating earlier assumptions and strengthening the accuracy of emissions reporting.

Infosys’ broader clean energy strategy underpins this effort. As per its 2024-25 environment, social and governance (ESG) report, renewable sources account for 77% of the power the company uses in India. Infosys also operates its own renewable energy facilities with a combined capacity of 60 megawatts, which supply green electricity to key campuses and reduce dependence on the grid.

The company’s push into self-generation began more than a decade ago. In June 2014, Infosys proposed setting up a 50 MW solar park in Karnataka, becoming the first Indian software firm to announce plans to produce electricity that would meet most of its office requirements.

Rewati Karan
Rewati Karan is Senior Sub Editor at Moneycontrol. She covers law, politics, business, and national affairs. She was previously Principal Correspondent at Financial Express and Copyeditor at ThePrint where she wrote feature stories and covered legal news. She has also worked extensively in social media, videos and podcasts at ThePrint and India Today. She can be reached at rewati.karan@nw18.com | Twitter: @RewatiKaran
first published: Jan 25, 2026 10:26 am

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