Well into the fourth day of the strike, neither employer nor unions in Sweden, Denmark and Norway had yet contacted the other side, and no new talks were scheduled, SAS and the unions said.
SAS pilots went out strike on Friday as wage talks broke down, grounding around 70 percent of the airline’s flights and impacting about 280,000 passengers, including cancellations set for Monday and Tuesday.
SAS Chief Executive Rickard Gustafson told Reuters that the conflict was deeply damaging to the carrier, which remains part-owned by the governments of Sweden and Denmark.
“We simply have to put an end to this conflict, it is deeply damaging to the company, and it erodes our customers’ confidence in the company,” Gustafson said in an interview.
“I have instructed our negotiation team to continue to work on (our proposals) and see what more we can do to find constructive solutions within reason. We also need to survive after the conflict,” he added.
Sydbank analysts have estimated the strike is costing the airline 60-80 million Swedish crowns ($6.31-$8.41 million) per day, a rate which would wipe out the expected net profit this year in just two weeks.
Source: Reuters