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Pilot union plans to call on European regulators to close labor loophole

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on June 12, 2026

3 min read

· Last updated: June 12, 2026

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European Cockpit Association Urges Action on Airline Outsourcing Loopholes

Airline Outsourcing Practices and Regulatory Concerns

By Dan Catchpole, Joanna Plucinska and Alessandro Parodi

ECA's Call to Action

June 12 (Reuters) - The European Cockpit Association plans to publicly call on European regulators on Friday to close a loophole that it says airlines use to avoid labor laws - hiring pilots and cabin crew through outsourcing agencies, rather than as direct employees.

Common Practices in ACMI and Wet Leasing

That practice is common among airlines that hire out airplanes with crew, maintenance and insurance, known as ACMI, or "wet" leasing. 

"Crew are disposable, a number in the system. You can get rid of them with a day's notice," ECA Secretary General Ignacio Plaza said in a statement to Reuters.

Case Study: SmartLynx Airlines Collapse

Impact on Pilots and Cabin Crew

Latvia-based ACMI operator SmartLynx Airlines' sudden collapse last October left hundreds of pilots and cabin crew hired through outsourcing agencies without jobs and many without final paychecks. 

Former SmartLynx workers told Reuters that the airline directed them to apply through third-party staffing agencies rather than hiring them directly. 

SmartLynx's Role in the European Market

SmartLynx was one of Europe's largest wet-lease providers, hired by airlines including Scandinavia's SAS, India's IndiGo and European leisure carrier TUI Airways to bolster capacity at times of need. It had 68 planes in its fleet in 2024, according to a company announcement from March 2025.

SmartLynx's parent, Lithuania-based Avia Solutions Group, sold the airline last October for €1 million ($1.16 million) to a Netherlands-based investment fund formed a month earlier and two SmartLynx executives as minority owners. The airline had €238 million in debt, 73% of it owed to other Avia Solutions companies.

It folded in November, along with subsidiaries in Malta and Estonia.

The former CEO did not respond to a request for comment, and contact details for the Netherlands-based fund were not publicly available.

Contractual Issues and Legal Disputes

Contracts reviewed by Reuters allowed salary reductions, instant termination and limited employer obligations. A contract from Dubai-based Aerviva said any disputes would be settled in English courts.

An Aerviva spokesperson told Reuters that it never received the necessary documents from SmartLynx to issue final paychecks. 

Industry-Wide Implications

Findings from the University of Ghent Study

A 2025 University of Ghent study found nearly 14% of more than 4,000 pilots surveyed were not direct airline employees. Of those, 65% worked for ACMI operators. They reported worse mental health, greater reluctance to report fatigue and higher job insecurity.

Broader Concerns for European Aviation

"This is not only about one airline," Plaza said. "It is about whether Europe allows airlines to operate with workers who are essential in practice but invisible when responsibility is assigned."

($1 = 0.8633 euros)

(Reporting by Dan Catchpole in Seattle, Joanna Plucinska in London, Alessandro Parodi and Alban Kacher in Gdansk; Editing by Jamie Freed)

Key Takeaways

  • European Cockpit Association demands regulators close labor loophole allowing outsourcing of pilots and cabin crew under ACMI contracts
  • SmartLynx Airlines' collapse last October–November affected hundreds of agency-hired crew, highlighting risks of subcontracted employment
  • 2025 Ghent University study found nearly 14% of pilots weren’t direct employees, 65% of them working via ACMI operators and experiencing higher insecurity and poorer well‑being

Frequently Asked Questions

What labor loophole is the European Cockpit Association targeting?
The ECA is targeting the loophole allowing airlines to hire pilots and crew through outsourcing agencies rather than as direct employees.
How does wet leasing or ACMI contribute to labor issues in European airlines?
Wet leasing lets airlines hire complete crews via outsourcing, making it easier to terminate staff and avoid direct employment responsibilities.
What happened to SmartLynx Airlines and its crew?
SmartLynx Airlines collapsed in October, leaving many outsourced crew without jobs or final paychecks.
What are the reported impacts on pilots working for ACMI operators?
Pilots at ACMI operators reported worse mental health, increased job insecurity, and reluctance to report fatigue compared to direct employees.
How significant is the use of outsourcing among European pilots?
A University of Ghent study found nearly 14% of surveyed pilots were not direct employees, with 65% of them working for ACMI operators.

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