SAS transfers 27 routes to
2 new controversial subsidiaries
By
-
7 February 2022
SAS Airbus A321LR
SAS is now
launching a controversial business plan with new subsidiaries in earnest. 27
unprofitable routes are transferred from the old company to the new ones,
Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter reports.
The decision
increases tensions between the management and the pilots ahead of this spring’s
contract negotiations. The SAS Group’s decision to establish the new
subsidiaries, SAS Link and SAS Connect, has created major internal protests.
Despite the
strong internal resistance, SAS Scandinavia decided that a total of 27 routes
will be moved to the new companies: 13 from Copenhagen Kastrup and 14 from
Stockholm Arlanda, which have not been profitable in 2021.
SAS has long
argued that new subsidiaries are a necessity for the Group to be able to
survive when competition from low-cost companies becomes fiercer, at the same
time as business travellers become fewer.
The unions
see it rather as a way for management to round off agreements and get rid of
existing staff in favour of cheaper labour with worse conditions in the new
companies.
As the plans
became more concrete last year, tensions between unions and employers have
increased. Now that the newly appointed CEO Anko Van der Werff speeds up the
subsidiaries, the situation is seriously worse than it has been for a long
time.
SAS’s press
manager Freja Annamatz says that SAS is adapting to increased competition and
new travel patterns. “This work includes
optimisation of routes, which means evaluation and reallocation of routes
between the various operating platforms. No jobs will be lost, but SAS is
currently recruiting for all three platforms, SAS Scandinavia, SAS Link and SAS
Connect, to meet the growing demand for travel,” she writes.
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