Ryanair's directly employed pilots in Ireland will strike for 48 hours next week, the Irish pilots' union Forsa/IALPA said late last night, after mediated talks failed to bring an agreement with the company over the union's pay proposals.
To prevent a strike on August 22-23, Ryanair management had needed to make a counter-proposal by August 14 that properly addressed all areas of the union's claim, Forsa/IALPA had demanded.
"No such counter-proposal was made at the mediation meeting today," Forsa/IALPA said in a statement.
Ryanair has called on its pilots and the union to return to the mediation with proposals that take falling airfares and company profits into consideration, the airline said in a separate statement.
"We have done everything in our power to avoid disruption to our flights and our customers' holidays. However, no company can concede to grossly unreasonable demands from its highest paid workers... at a time when the airline industry is in crisis," said Ryanair Chief People Officer Eddie Wilson.
Pilots in the Forsa/IALPA trade union voted overwhelmingly in favour of industrial action last week after accusing Ryanair of stalling on talks since pay demands were submitted in late March.
Europe's largest budget airline suffered a number of strikes a year ago after a rocky start to its move to recognise unions for the first time, and it is now also facing strike action in Sepetember (1, 2, 6, 8, 13, 15, 20, 22, 27 and 28) from its cabin crew in Spain over the company's plans to close several bases in the country.