Air Berlin pilots mull work stoppage to push for higher pay

Pilots at Air Berlin pilots plan a short-term strike sometime in coming days in a push for higher pay, arguing they are not the ones to blame for losses at the company.

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Pilots at Air Berlin, Europe's third-biggest discount carrier, plan a short-term strike sometime in coming days in a push for higher pay, arguing they are not the ones to blame for losses at the company.

The carrier should make up for wages that lag behind the average at competitors by at least 10 per cent, Markus Germann, chief negotiator for the Vereinigung Cockpit pilots union, said. Air Berlin needs to narrow its business focus rather than basing a turnaround push on employees' concessions, he said.

"Air Berlin is doing a little bit of everything: touristic flights, city shuttles and business passengers," Mr Germann said. "That strategy obviously doesn't work, and that's not the pilots' fault."

The airline outlined a strategy in January of reducing its fleet and cutting 900 jobs, or 10 per cent of its workforce, in a push to increase earnings by €400 million by 2014. Air Berlin, based in the German capital, posted its first annual net income since 2007 last year only after selling control of its frequent-flier programme to Etihad Airways, the carrier's biggest investor.

Mr Germann declined to specify the union's demand beyond saying he wants a "strongly improved offer" from Air Berlin that would raise pilot wages in about three years to the average paid by Deutsche Lufthansa's Germanwings low-fare unit, TUI's competing TUIfly division and Thomas Cook Group's Condor charter brand. He also declined to give dates or times for the warning strike.

Air Berlin made "a fair offer" to pilots on May 12, said Mathias Radowski, a spokesman, declining to give figures. The company will do everything it can to minimise effects of any strike, he said.

Cumulative losses in the four years prior to 2012 amounted to €610.6m, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, and the first-quarter loss in 2013 totaled €196.4m. The company plans to generate an operating profit this year, and reduce net debt to €500m from €728m on March 31.

The company is also suffering from capacity constraints at its Berlin home hub after the opening of a new airport being built in the city was delayed.

Productivity at the company's namesake brand is declining as Air Berlin shifts routes to partner airlines abroad, Mr Germann said. The airline currently employs almost 1,300 pilots, according to the labour representative.

Etihad, the Abu Dhabi-based airline that's the third-biggest Arabian Gulf carrier and the owner of a 29 per cent stake in Air Berlin, said in May that it is recruiting pilots from the German partner amid an expansion drive by the Middle Eastern company.

* Bloomberg News