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Air France to unveil drastic cost-cutting plan

Decision to announce cuts next week comes after breakdown in talks with pilots’ unions to trim €170 million annually over three years.

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The French arm of Franco-Dutch group Air France-KLM plans to unveil a steep cost-cutting plan, the carrier announced Thursday after failing to reach an agreement with pilots, reports The Wall Street Journal.

The board of Air France met Thursday and formally instructed management to come up with new cuts to the carrier’s loss-making operations by Oct. 5. No details were provided on the forthcoming plan.

The decision came in response to a breakdown in negotiations with pilots’ unions. Talks between the unions and Air France initially aimed to trim €170 million ($190 million) annually over the next three years. But pilots refused to fly more hours for the same pay, casting the demand as an effective pay cut.

The clash underlines the difficulty Europe’s legacy airlines face in making their operations lean and flexible enough to compete with budget airlines. At the same time, Gulf carriers are eating up market share on more expensive long-haul travel to Asia.

Despite rising sales, Air France remains in the red this year because of a weak euro and declining demand in emerging markets.

Read more of this report from The Wall Street Journal.