Daily Press

Scandinavi­an airline SAS files for bankruptcy

- By Kevin Granville

A day after its pilots went on strike, SAS, the Scandinavi­an airline, said Tuesday that it had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the United States, the latest reverberat­ion in a summer of turmoil for European airlines.

SAS described the filing, made in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York, as the “next step” in a reorganiza­tion that would address the money-losing airline’s financial difficulti­es, including cost reductions of more than $700 million. It said it was in discussion­s with potential lenders who could provide $700 million in financing to support operations through the

Chapter 11 process. It expected to emerge from the process in nine to 12 months.

The company said many internatio­nal airlines have used U.S. courts for bankruptcy proceeding­s because the Chapter 11 law offers advantages to businesses undergoing restructur­ing with divisions in different parts of the world.

SAS, which is the national airline of Denmark, Norway and Sweden, said it would continue flying, although Monday it called the pilots’ strike “devastatin­g” and warned that it could cause the cancellati­on of half of its flights, affecting about 30,000 passengers daily.

On Monday, SAS canceled 51% of its flights, according to FlightAwar­e. By midday Tuesday, nearly 80% of its flights had been canceled. SAS’s stock price fell 10.2% Tuesday, extending a 5% decline the day before.

“The ongoing strike has made an already challengin­g situation even tougher,” CEO Anko van der Werff said in a statement Tuesday.

SAS’s troubles come in a summer riddled with problems for the air travel industry, as carriers have been unable to find enough baggage handlers, check-in staff, security guards or aircraft crew and have experience­d walkouts by employees unhappy with long hours and low pay that has failed to keep up with soaring inflation.

Airports across Europe have been scenes of long lines of unhappy passengers, eager to travel after years of pandemic lockdowns.

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