aviation
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Politicians squabble over passenger tax, but public wants to pay even more
Survey reveals that a majority of people in Denmark are prepared to pay substantially more than the 13 kroner the government has proposed
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Government’s new green aviation strategy involves passenger fee
Despite political backlash, CPH Airport welcomes the plan and airlines are already making moves to go green
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SAS takes huge loss in third quarter despite passenger uptick
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Benedicte Vagner
The ailing airline has faced a number of stumbling blocks over the summer, including a pilot strike and staff shortages
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SAS cancels more flights in coming months
Beleaguered airline to scrap 1,700 departures in September and October due to lingering effects of staff shortages and the pilot strike
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Strike two! Disgruntled mechanics put SAS under more pressure
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Benedicte Vagner
Mechanics working for SAS threaten to go on strike as there are no finalised agreements
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SAS granted reprieve by Denmark in wake of nightmare weeks
Finally some good news for the embattled airline as Parliament decides to increase ownership stake in company and forgive billions of debt
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SAS woe continues: 1,000 pilots threaten to strike
News that all of its pilots in Scandinavia could go on strike on June 24 is yet another big blow to an airline already wavering
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SAS future up in the air as Sweden pulls carpet
The government announced it will reveal Denmark’s plans for the beleaguered airline sometime in the coming week
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Spiking fuel prices the latest bane for embattled SAS
Scandinavian airline saw a deficit of over 1 billion kroner this quarter and could face bankruptcy if something doesn’t change
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Copenhagen Airport hampered by queue chaos
Long waiting times going through security checkpoints has the airport asking passengers to arrive earlier than normal
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SAS cancels thousands of flights this summer
Cancellations brought on by staffing challenges and issues relating to suppliers, according to beleaguered airline
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Denmark to close down airspace to Russian aircraft
Foreign minister Jeppe Kofod said he hoped the rest of Europe and the west would follow suit