Air France’s main pilots’ union offered to lift its crippling strike late on Friday, if an independent mediator is named to run negotiations in a bitter battle over the fate of the company’s low-cost subsidiary.
The SNPL union, in what it called a “gesture of appeasement,” said it was “ready to end the conflict as soon as this mediator is named” by the French government.
The French prime minister’s office told reporters there were “no grounds for new negotiations with a mediator.”
Photo: AFP
More than half of Air France’s planes were grounded for the 12th day running, and the strike was extended until at least tomorrow, after pilots blocked the most recent management proposals to scale back development plans for its low-cost Transavia airline.
The strike at Europe’s second-largest flag carrier is costing an estimated 15 million euros to 20 million euros (US$19 million to US$25 million) a day.
French Prime Minister Manuel Valls renewed a call for the “unbearable” strike to end.
Air France’s share price has fallen nearly 15 percent since the stoppage began.
“This strike is catastrophic for the French aviation sector,” a joint statement from key industry unions said, including those representing travel operators. “In a more-than-morose economic context, it is compromising a future that is already seriously under threat.”
Air France’s management also rejected the idea of a mediator, and voiced surprise that pilots’ representatives had left the negotiating table while “discussions were going well.”
“We are not far from a solution,” spokesman Eric Schramm said.
He stressed, however, that the company was in an “extremely delicate” situation.
The protracted strike and fruitless negotiations have also prompted anger among aviation staff grounded alongside their planes, about 200 of whom protested against the stoppage.
A concession from management to scrap plans to expand Transavia further into Europe was “necessary... but not enough” to stop the strike, SNPL spokesman Guillaume Schmid said.
Schmid later called on the government to name an “independent mediator as quickly as possible.”
He blasted Air France-KLM chief executive Alexandre de Juniac for “his inability to carry out a respectful dialogue” with the unions.
The pilots are fighting for a “single contract” across Air France-KLM’s subsidiaries to avoid being forced to accept less attractive working conditions at Transavia.
Transavia currently serves holiday destinations across Europe and the Mediterranean.
Air France pilots, who earn up to 250,000 euros a year, fear some flights will be replaced with services operated by Transavia.
They fear they will end up earning less and having shorter recovery times between flights.
A Transavia captain earns up to 160,000 euros a year, although copilots on both airlines will earn about the same amount as each other at the beginning of their careers, according to sources.
While Air France management agreed to scrap the development of Transavia abroad, it has vowed to maintain at least some part of its plans to enter the low-cost market, a key “growth opportunity,” De Juniac said.
The Air France-KLM board of directors has thrown its support behind management.
The withdrawal of plans to expand Transavia will come as a blow to the airline’s efforts to be more competitive in the crowded and changing European skies, increasingly dominated by no-frills operators such as Irish airline Ryanair.
France’s MEDEF employers’ association said on Thursday the conflict at Air France — which is 16 percent state-owned — encapsulated the malaise gripping the country’s crisis-hit economy.
The union action is “again dragging a company into the red,” MEDEF vice president Jean-Francois Pillard said. “For those who want to invest or travel in France, this does not contribute, at an already extremely difficult time, to improving the image of the country.”
Air France has already implemented an ambitious restructuring plan to reduce costs and improve efficiency.
“Low-cost airlines now represent between 25 and 45 percent of air traffic in Europe, depending on the country,” said Didier Brechemier, an aviation expert at consultants Roland Berger.
Ryanair will soon expand its fleet to 400, which would take it above Air France’s 350 aircraft.
“With competitors like that it’s not hard to see why Ryanair is the fastest-growing airline in Europe,” company boss Michael O’Leary said dismissively of Air France’s offer to put its expansion plans on ice.
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