Update 26 June: Lufthansa has announced that chief digital and finance officer Thorsten Dirks will step down from his role following the successful implementation of the German government's support package. Dirks joined Lufthansa's executive board in 2017 and initially led Eurowings. He became head of IT, digital and innovation in January this year before his department expanded to include parts of finance in April. His executive board division will temporarily fall under the responsibility of CEO Carsten Spohr.
Deutsche Lufthansa AG¡¯s shareholders last night voted to
accept the conditions of a €9 billion rescue deal arranged by the German
government, shoring up the company¡¯s liquidity enough to ride out the disruption
caused by the coronavirus pandemic.
According to Lufthansa, 30,000 shareholders attended
yesterday¡¯s extraordinary general meeting, representing 39 per cent of the
share capital. Of those, 98 per cent voted in favour of the deal ¨C a good
turnout for the company, which warned last week it did not believe it would
achieve the two-thirds majority it needed to accept the package.
A decision is due in Lufthansa Group¡¯s other home markets ¡°in
the near future¡±.
The cash injection will allow Lufthansa to continue ramping
up flight operations. The group plans to restore 90 per cent of its originally
planned short-haul destinations and 70 per cent of long-haul destinations by
September.
The stabilisation package comes with a set of conditions, including a temporary 20 per cent stake in the company and two seats on its supervisory board for the German government, as well as the need for Lufthansa to transfer up to 24 take-off and landing slots at Frankfurt and Munich airports to a new competitor.
CEO Carsten Spohr said: ¡°The decision of our shareholders
provides Lufthansa with a perspective for a successful future. On behalf of our
138,000 employees, I would like to thank the German federal government and the
governments of our other home countries for their willingness to stabilise us.
We at Lufthansa are aware of our responsibility to pay back the up to €9
billion to the taxpayers as quickly as possible.¡±
The group has also reached an agreement with the Independent
Flight Attendants¡¯ Union (UFO) on a package of measures that will save the
airline more than €500,000 without the need for redundancies. These include the
suspension of pay increases, a reduction in flying hours with a corresponding
decrease in pay and temporary reductions in contributions to the company
pension scheme. It also includes a package of voluntary measures such as unpaid
leave, a further reduction in working hours and the subsidised, early transfer
to a company pension scenario.
Lufthansa said the union agreement will enable the company
to avoid layoffs for its 22,000 cabin staff during the coronavirus crisis.