Airlines are among the worst hit businesses after widespread
lockdowns and travel restrictions to contain the spread of the
virus forced the grounding of most of their fleets.
"The aim of the plan is to ensure that SAS is fully funded and
that shareholders equity will be at levels reported before the
COVID-19 pandemic when anticipated business volumes return to
pre-corona levels in 2022," SAS said in a statement.
Sweden, which has a 14.8% stake in the carrier, said it would
ask parliament for an injection of up to 5 billion crowns and to
increase its stake by an unspecified amount.
Denmark, which has a 14.2% stake, said it would support the
recapitalisation but declined to say how much money it would
invest. It said the amount "must be matched by a fair share of
ownership".
SAS said in May it was in talks with shareholders to raise
funds. Sweden and Denmark have already guaranteed a 3.3 billion
Swedish crown credit facility for the carrier.
SAS said it was also seeking support from the government of
Norway, which sold the last of its shares in SAS in 2018.
Shares in SAS were up 3.4% at 1029 GMT.
SAS reported losses before tax for the February-April quarter
roughly three times the size of its loss a year earlier.
Sweden said its support was conditional on SAS setting tougher
emissions goals as part of its new operating model.
"Let me be clear, Sweden will only go in with capital to SAS if
clear, quantitative targets for reduced emissions are set in
line with the Paris Agreement's 1.5 degree goal," Financial
Markets Minister Per Bolund told reporters at a news conference.
(Reporting by Johannes Hellstrom and Simon Johnson in Stockholm,
Stine Jacobsen in Copenhagen and Gwladys Fouché in Oslo,
additional reporting by Anna Ringstrom in Stockholm; Editing by
Kirsten Donovan and Edmund Blair)
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