The Swedish Air Line Pilots Association said negotiations had failed to find a solution to pilots’ working conditions.

Pilots at Scandinavian carrier SAS have walked off the job in Sweden, Denmark and Norway, stranding more than 72,000 travellers as 673 flights were cancelled, the airline said.

A total of 1,409 pilots were on strike on Friday, affecting domestic, European and long-haul flights, SAS said, predicting that 170,000 passengers would be affected through Sunday.

The Swedish Air Line Pilots Association, which initiated the strike, said months of negotiations had failed to find a solution to pilots’ “deteriorating work conditions, unpredictable work schedules and job insecurity”.

The Swedish Confederation of Transport Enterprises meanwhile said it could not accept the 13-percent wage increase demanded by the pilots, given their “already high average wage of 93,000 kronor ($9,769) a month”.

The pilots’ association said work schedules, and not wages, were the main focus of the negotiations, as most SAS pilots have to work variable times and days.

“Many SAS pilots have no control over when and how long they have to work. In a worst-case scenario, they risk having to work seven weekends in a row,” the pilots’ association said in a statement.

“Everyone who has a family life can imagine how difficult it is to not know when you have to work,” SAS’ Swedish union representative at the pilots’ association, Wilhelm Tersmeden, said.

SAS, whose shares traded 4.7 percent lower in Stockholm on Friday, said it hoped to resume negotiations and reach an agreement as soon as possible.

https://twitter.com/SAS/status/1121688561164660736?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

‘Hope we’ll be rebooked’

SAS contacted most passengers before the cancellations to warn them of the strike and offered to rebook them at no extra cost.

On Friday, many travellers turned up at Stockholm’s Arlanda airport in the hopes of getting on other flights.

Elsa Lundberg, 20, and Christoffer Weil, 22, had been due to travel to Scotland for a hiking trip with their college class.

“This trip is the biggest thing this semester,” Weil told news agency TT.

“We hope that we’ll be rebooked on another flight. But we’re a big group and it’s unlikely everyone would be able to get on the same flight,” Lundberg said.

“They’re offering free coffee at Arlanda now, so that’s at least a good thing,” she said.

Swedish pastor Ronny Nygren, who was scheduled to take his church’s youth group to Rome on Friday and was hoping they too would be rebooked on another flight, said he had mixed feelings about the strike.

“It’s good that they’re fighting for their work conditions. But then, you have to think about the 13 percent, compared to other Swedes’ salaries,” he told TT.

The strike affected about 70 percent of SAS flights, with the remainder operated by partner airlines.

SAS has implemented repeated savings programmes in recent years to improve its profitability, after teetering on the brink of bankruptcy in 2012.

In the first quarter of 2019, the airline widened its losses, impacted by negative exchange effects and high fuel prices.

Danish bank Sydbank on Friday predicted the strike would cost SAS 60 to 80 million kronor ($6m-$8m) a day.