SAS says time running out as pilot strike enters third week
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[July 18, 2022] By
Anna Ringstrom and Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen
STOCKHOLM (Reuters) -SAS warned on Monday
that time was running out as negotiations resumed with pilot unions to
end a two-week strike that the Scandinavian airline says threatens its
existence.
Most SAS pilots in Sweden, Denmark and Norway walked out on July 4 after
talks over conditions related to the carrier's rescue plan collapsed.
The parties returned to the negotiating table in the Swedish capital on
July 13.
The lead negotiator for SAS said that time was running out and that
Monday could be the final day of talks between SAS management and
unions.
"We are approaching a point where, as lead negotiator, I have to admit
that now we can't go any further," Marianne Hernaes told reporters as
she arrived at the talks on Monday.
"We are soon at the end of the road ... Money is flowing out of the
company ... So some decisions have to be taken," she said, without
giving specifics.
Still, unions expressed hope a solution could be found. The optimism was
also reflected in gains in SAS' share price.
"I hope it will get solved," Jan Levi Skogvang, one of the union
officials representing SAS pilots, told reporters.
Shares in SAS were up 18.7% at 1059 GMT and were headed for their
biggest daily gain in almost 20 months as talks continued, though the
stock is down nearly 70% over the past year.
The airline filed for U.S. bankruptcy protection on July 5, but its CEO
Anko van der Werff said last week that the strike was putting the
success of that process and, ultimately, the survival of the company at
stake.
Negotiations had continued through the weekend in a marathon 33-hour
session without breaks, but significant issues had yet to be resolved.
Long-struggling SAS needs to attract new investors and secure bridge
financing, saying it must first slash costs to achieve those objectives.
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SAS flights listed at Copenhagen airport, July 3, 2022.
REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
The strike is costing SAS $10 million to $13 million per day, according to the
airline. Sydbank analyst Jacob Pedersen estimates that if the strike continues,
the airline will have lost up to 5 billion Swedish crowns ($481 million) in cash
flow by the end of July, or more than half of its liquidity.
"The risk of bankruptcy should have been eliminated with the U.S. bankruptcy
protection filing," said Pedersen. "But as the strike continues, the investors
that were lined up to provide bridge financing are having second thoughts."
Pilots employed by the 75-year-old carrier's SAS Scandinaviasubsidiary said
after talks collapsed that they would agree to limited wage cuts and less
favourable terms, while SAS said the concessions offered were not enough for it
to carry out a rescue plan announced in February.
Unions also demand that pilots axed during the COVID-19 pandemic are rehired at
SAS Scandinavia rather than having to compete with external applicants for jobs
on less attractive terms at recently created SAS Link and Ireland-based SAS
Connect.
On Monday, 200 SAS flights, or 62% of those scheduled, were cancelled, according
to flight-tracking platform FlightAware.Pilots at SAS Link and SAS Connect are
not on strike.
($1 = 10.3913 Swedish crowns)
(Reporting by Anna Ringstrom and Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen; writing by Anna
Ringstrom, Gwladys Fouche and Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen; editing by Muralikumar
Anantharaman, David Goodman and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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