Ryanair strike threat set to add to summer
airport chaos in Europe
Planned action by the airline’s Spain-based cabin crew
over working conditions will increase disruption for holidaymakers
Mark
Townsend Home Affairs Editor
@townsendmark
Sun 3 Jul
2022 06.01 BST
British
holidaymakers are braced for fresh travel chaos across Europe this summer with
staff at Ryanair on Saturday becoming the latest to threaten strike action.
As striking
airport workers in Paris forced the cancellation of dozens of flights on
Saturday and promised more industrial action later in July, Spain-based cabin
crew at Ryanair revealed they now plan to strike for 12 days in July.
Elsewhere,
Scandinavian carrier SAS and its pilots confirmed continuing wage talks would
run until Monday in the hope of averting a strike.
In the UK,
airlines will this week announce a series of cancellations to summer flights,
with reports indicating British Airways is expected to face the brunt of axed
flights and Britain’s biggest airport, Heathrow, anticipated to be the worst
affected.
On Saturday
night, the government tried to dampen fears about the staff shortages that have
been a key factor in the recent travel chaos witnessed in the UK, saying
security tests for new workers are being completed in record times.
The
Department for Transport (DfT) said counter-terrorist checks for staff to
handle baggage and carry out security checks are now being processed on average
in less than 10 days – half the time it took in March.
Despite the
DfT’s announcement, there is continuing anxiety over the industry’s ability to
cope this summer.
Chaotic
scenes at UK airports over Easter have already seen easyJet and British Airways
preemptively axing thousands of flights to prevent last-minute cancellations.
On Saturday
morning a sign of fresh chaos to come was witnessed in Paris, with a fifth of
flights cancelled at France’s busiest airport amid a dispute over wages and
working conditions.
Several
hours later, Ryanair crew in Spain announced that they would also pursue strike
action to demand better working conditions.
Their
action is planned to occur laterin July and affect the 10 Spanish airports
where Ryanair operates, unions said.
At the same
time, Scandinavian carrier SAS and its pilots agreed to extend talks until
Monday in the hope of averting another strike that would bring significant
misery to travellers.
Almost
1,000 pilots in Denmark, Sweden and Norway plan to strike if talks break down,
according to unions, which SAS warns could leave about 30,000 passengers
stranded each day.
“We need to
sleep, none of us have slept for a really long time,” said Marianne Hernaes,
head negotiator of SAS, after the latest round of talks ran through Friday
night.
Pressure is
also mounting at Heathrow, which is racing to rework its flight schedules amid
reports it must finalise the airport’s summer schedule by Friday.Flights
cancelled or removed from airline schedules after the Friday deadline will not
fall under the slot amnesty, it is understood.
The amnesty
on flights last month allowed airlines to hand back landing and take-off slots
if they are unable to use them despite having purchased slots ahead of the
season.
Airline
workers across Europe have been staging walkouts as the industry adapts to a
resumption of high travel demand after pandemic lockdowns.Industry figures have
warned that the problems affecting airports are unlikely to be resolved by
summer.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário