GFCIs are built with a CT around the Hot and Neutral; poly-phase GFCIs have their CTs around the phase legs. As long as the current flowing into and out of the CT are equal, the magnetic fields are equal and opposite, and they cancel each other out. The CT sees zero current. They are set to trip if there is a current imbalance of about 5 milliamps.
If you are having intermittent tripping of several GFCI devices you probably have one piece of kitchen equipment that is connected line to ground rather than line to neutral. This piece of equipment is not used every day, but when it is used, the line to ground current returns home to the XO lug of the supply transformer through all the pathways available. That means there is line to ground current on all the ground wires, but also these currents will flow through the neutrals. If the line to ground currents exceed 5 milliamps at any of the many GFCIs you will get a GFCI trip.
If you have installed the branch circuit distribution system with proper isolation between ground and neutral, then there is a piece of equipment, or pieces of equipment, that are connected line to ground. New residential appliances often are delivered with a neutral-ground link. That link must be removed when the appliance is terminated. Look for new appliances and check their neutral connection and make sure they are isolated from the equipment ground.
If your installation is part of a multi-tenant space, all fed by the same service transformer, there could be a line to ground connection in an adjacent tenant space that is the culprit.
You are spending a lot of effort trouble shooting this. I recommend you place a recording meter at the main service and monitor all phases, neutral and ground. Be watching for ground current that is intermittent. Then if you discover a time of day when the current occurs, have the owner find out what equipment was opprating at that time.