Finnair starts
negotiations regarding temporary furloughs arising from the closure of Russian
airspace
By
-
3 March 2022
Finnair
Airbus A350-900 OH-LWB ‘oneworld’ at NRT © Masakatsu Ukon on wikimedia
The closure
of Russian airspace causes considerable changes in Finnair’s traffic. Finnair
has today called employee representatives to discuss plans regarding possible
furloughs of up to 90 days, which, if implemented, would impact Finnair flight
crews. The estimated need for additional monthly furloughs for pilots ranges
from 90 to 200 and for cabin crew from 150 to 450 employees starting from
April.
The final
furlough need, however, depends on how the exceptional situation progresses and
what mitigations can be found and will be defined during the negotiations. The
negotiations concern all 2800 pilots and cabin crew members in Finland. In
addition, Finnair evaluates the impacts regarding employees outside Finland in
those destinations where the availability of work is estimated to decrease.
Russia
issued a notam (notice to airmen) on Monday 28 February regarding the closure
of Russian airspace from Finnish aircraft until 28 May 2022. Finnair has now
cancelled all of its flights to Russia until May 28, and has so far cancelled a
part of its Asian flights until March 6, 2022. Finnair currently flies to
Singapore, Bangkok, Phuket, Delhi and as of March 9 to Tokyo, avoiding Russian
airspace, and is currently evaluating possibilities to operate a part of its flights
to Korea, and China with an alternative routing. At the same time, Finnair is
preparing an alternative network plan in case the situation is prolonged.
”With Russian
airspace closed, there will be fewer flights by Finnair, and unfortunately less
work available for our employees”, says Jaakko
Schildt, Chief
Operations Officer, Finnair. ”A large share of our staff
has been on long furloughs during the pandemic, so the need for further
furloughs feels especially harsh, and we are sorry for this.”
Passenger
and cargo traffic between Asia and Europe plays an important role in Finnair’s
network; before the pandemic, over half of Finnair’s revenue came from this
traffic. During the pandemic, many Asian countries have restricted travel, but
Finnair has operated many of its Asian routes supported by the strong cargo
demand. Routing the flights avoiding Russian airspace adds at its worst several
hours to the flight time, and the increased jet fuel price combined with the
longer routing weighs heavily on the flights’ possibility to break even.
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