SAS deal to end pilot strike comes at a cost
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[May 03, 2019]
By Gwladys Fouche and Anna Ringstrom
OSLO/STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - SAS reached a
deal with unions to end a week-long strike by pilots that has grounded
380,000 passengers in a costly conflict that has dented the Scandinavian
airline's prospects of making a profit this year.
SAS Chief Executive Rickard Gustafson said the airline and the unions
agreed on a 3.5 percent salary increase in 2019 as part of a new
three-year collective agreement.
Flights would resume as soon as possible, but it would likely take up to
24 hours before operations were entirely up and running again, he said.
SAS had canceled more than 4,000 flights as of Thursday after pilots
went on strike on April 26 over wages and working conditions.
"I can with relief inform our customers and our staff that we now can
put this conflict behind us. We have tonight signed a new collective
agreement with our four pilot unions," Gustafson told a news conference
late on Thursday.
Shares in the flag carrier, which remains part-owned by the governments
of Sweden and Denmark, fell 2.75 percent by 0820 GMT after racking up
gains on Thursday as expectations grew for a resolution of the conflict.
Sydbank analyst Jacob Pedersen said that while SAS had gained in
competitiveness relative to rivals in recent years, the strike and
resulting wage deal were a step in the wrong direction.
"SAS could be on the brink of losing their competitiveness if this
agreement is not counteracted by more savings," he said, estimating that
the strike would cost the airline about 500 million Swedish crowns ($52
million) in lost revenue.
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Scandinavian Airlines (SAS) CFO, Torbjorn Wist, talks to the press
after the parties in the SAS pilot strike have come to an agreement,
in Oslo, Norway May 2, 2019. NTB Scanpix/Terje Pedersen via REUTERS
Close to bankruptcy in 2012, SAS sold assets and cut wages and thousands
of jobs in return for a life-saving credit facility. It has been
profitable in the last four years, but fuel costs are rising and
overcapacity is still squeezing the sector.
Pilots had been seeking around a 13 percent pay hike, to make up for the
2012 wage cuts, a level SAS said would have led to dire consequences for
the airline.
"The agreements between SAS and the pilots' unions concern
predictability of scheduling, job security and salaries. In addition,
the previously canceled agreements concerning collaboration and career
paths have been reintroduced," SAS said in a statement.
The Swedish Airline Pilots Association said the key target had been to
ensure the job security of its members.
"The fact that our most important demands have won approval, and the
final result of the agreement have made it possible for us to recommend
the deal to our members," it said.
Analysts have estimated the stand-off could cost SAS as much as $10.5
million a day, threatening to wipe out the airline's annual profit in
less than two weeks.
(Additional reporting by Helena Soderpalm in Stockholm , Stine Jacobsen
in Copenhagen and Nerijus Adomaitis in Oslo; Writing by Anna Ringstrom
and Niklas Pollard; Editing by Leslie Adler and Keith Weir)
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