Skip to main content
Open this photo in gallery:

An SAS aircraft in Copenhagen Airport, Denmark, on July 18.RITZAU SCANPIX/Reuters

Swedish, Danish and Norwegian pilot union members have voted to adopt a collective bargaining agreement reached with airline SAS last month, and will thus not resume their strike, the labour unions said on Saturday.

SAS grounded some 3,700 flights during a crippling 15-day strike in July.

In Denmark, 93 per cent of pilot union members voted in favour of the deal.

“I am incredibly happy about the great support for the agreement, not least when we have been through such a long and tough conflict,” said Henrik Thyregod, chairman of the Danish pilots union.

“The members have clearly understood the gravity [of the situation] and this shows how strong the unity is among the pilots,” he said.

Unions in Norway and Sweden said a majority of their members also backed the deal, but did not immediately disclose how many had voted in favour.

Long-struggling SAS, which filed for U.S. bankruptcy protection on the second day of the strike, has estimated the industrial action cost it more than US$145-million during what is normally the profitable peak summer travel season.

The deal entails lower wages and longer hours for the pilots but also a commitment from SAS, whose biggest owners are the governments of Sweden and Denmark, to rehire pilots laid off during the pandemic.

The new collective bargaining deal between SAS and unions also needs approval by a U.S. court handling creditors’ interests in the Chapter 11 process.

Under the agreement, pilots were given a guarantee that SAS will not set up new subsidiaries on different terms than what has now been agreed, Dansk Metal, the union representing Danish pilots, said in a statement.

SAS, which was already loss-making before the pandemic owing to rising competition from low-cost carriers, has said it needs to slash costs further and raise more capital in order to survive.

While the Swedish government has rejected the company’s plea for more cash, Denmark says it might inject fresh funds if SAS also finds support from private-sector investors.

Our Morning Update and Evening Update newsletters are written by Globe editors, giving you a concise summary of the day’s most important headlines. Sign up today.

Interact with The Globe