London: German carrier Lufthansa said on Thursday it will slash 22,000 jobs as it struggles to deal with the downturn in air travel caused by coronavirus pandemic. It said the positions of up to 26,000 employees are surplus to requirements, suggesting many more jobs will be cut at the cash-strapped airline than a figure of more than 10,000 flagged a few weeks ago.
The airline employs more than 135,000 people worldwide. About half of them are in Germany. In April, the airline had said that it was losing about one million euros in liquidity reserves per hour. Lufthansa said it will operate about 100 fewer aircraft after the crisis.
Last week, it pledged a wide-ranging restructuring from thousands of job cuts to asset sales as it seeks to repay a nine billion euro government bailout and navigate deepening losses in the face of Covid-19 pandemic.
Speaking after a meeting with trade unions, a company spokeswoman said the airline estimates that it has a surplus of 22,000 full-time equivalent positions or 26,000 employees.