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FINANCIAL WOES AT SAS

SAS

Sweden seeks buyer for ailing SAS: minister

Sweden is seeking a buyer for beleaguered Scandinavian airline SAS, in which the Swedish state holds 21.4 percent, Financial Markets Minister Peter Norman said on Tuesday.

Sweden seeks buyer for ailing SAS: minister

“We had a process underway for a while to try to find buyers for the company. Now we’ll have to start again, we’ll contact potential buyers and see where we land,” Norman told financial daily Dagens Industri.

“You have to understand that the Swedish, Norwegian and Danish states have invested more than 10 billion kronor ($1.5 billion) in 10 years,” he recalled, saying it would be “unreasonable to pump more billions into the company.”

Sweden is the biggest state shareholder, ahead of Denmark and Norway which each hold 14.3 percent.

Norway and Denmark have also tried to sell their stakes for several years, but the company has attracted little interest among buyers owing to its high costs.

Stockholm agreed on Monday to make a loan to help SAS finance a vast restructuring plan.

The company’s eight unions have agreed to the plan aimed at turning SAS’ dire finances around through wage and job cuts, an administrative reorganization, divestments and outsourcing.

“My assessment is that before the agreement it was almost impossible to sell, but now I think the chances are better,” Norman said.

He would not identify by name any potential buyers of a slimmed-down SAS.

“It could be the same buyers (that showed interest before), but it could also be new ones,” he said.

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SAS

‘We agree to disagree’: Still no progress in marathon SAS strike talks

By lunchtime on Friday, talks between the Scandinavian airline SAS and unions representing striking pilots were still stuck on "difficult issues".

'We agree to disagree': Still no progress in marathon SAS strike talks

“We agree that we disagree,” Roger Klokset, from the Norwegian pilots’ union, said at lunchtime outside the headquarters of the Confederation of Swedish Enterprise in Stockholm, where talks are taking place. “We are still working to find a solution, and so long as there is still some point in continuing negotiations, we will do that.” 

Mats Ruland, a mediator for the Norwegian government, said that there were “still several difficult issues which need to be solved”. 

At 1pm on Friday, the two sides took a short break from the talks for lunch, after starting at 9am. On Thursday, they negotiated for 15 hours, breaking off at 1am on Friday morning. 

READ ALSO: What’s the latest on the SAS plane strike?

Marianne Hernæs, SAS’s negotiator on Friday told journalists she was tired after sitting at the negotiating table long into the night. 

“We need to find a model where we can meet in the middle and which can ensure that we pull in the income that we are dependent on,” she said. 

Klokset said that there was “a good atmosphere” in the talks, and that the unions were sticking together to represent their members.

“I think we’ve been extremely flexible so far. It’s ‘out of this world’,’ said Henrik Thyregod, with the Danish pilots’ union. 

“This could have been solved back in December if SAS had not made unreasonable demands on the pilots,” Klokset added. 

The strike, which is now in its 12th day, has cost SAS up to 130m kronor a day, with 2,550 flights cancelled by Thursday, affecting 270,000 passengers. 

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