Ryanair quits Copenhagen base after union dispute

Danish unions claim Ryanair cabin crew earn less than half the wages of rival local low-cost airlines

Conflicts with the Danish trade union movement has led Ryanair to move the company’s recently opened base in Copenhagen to Lithuania. Photograph: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images
Conflicts with the Danish trade union movement has led Ryanair to move the company’s recently opened base in Copenhagen to Lithuania. Photograph: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images

Ryanair has carried out its threat to quit its base at Copenhagen airport* in a dispute with trade unions that threatens to drive the airline out of Denmark. The airline also repeated its pledge to close its base at the country's Billund airport on Friday if union action is not called off.

Danish unions have claimed that Ryanair cabin crew earn less than half the wages of rival local low-cost airlines. They won a ruling in a labour court this month that allows them to strike and blockade Ryanair aircraft if the airline refuses to sign a collective agreement with staff.

Eddie Wilson, the airline's personnel director, said that closure plans at Billund would go ahead unless the unions responded by this evening.

“We are sad because we have had a successful base for three years in Billund without problems, but we are being blackmailed,” he said. More than 100 staff would relocate in Europe, Mr Wilson added, although Ryanair would continue to fly from Billund.

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The union called the threat a "media stunt". "For just DKr37 [€4.96] extra per ticket, Ryanair could get an agreement," the union told Danish business daily Borsen.

Ryanair's sole Copenhagen-based aircraft will now operate out of Kaunas in Lithuania, but the airline will continue to fly to Copenhagen.

The company reiterated its threat of taking its appeal to the European Court of Justice. Ryanair said: “What these actions show is that the Danish model cannot be applied to mobile transport workers, especially when it has already failed in the past at other Danish airlines.” – (Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2015)

*This article was edited on July 16th.