Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
An airplane landing at the Polderbaan at Schiphol Airport in 2021
An airplane landing at the Polderbaan at Schiphol Airport in 2021 - Credit: Roger Cremers / Amsterdam Airport Schiphol - License: All Rights Reserved
Business
air travel
Aviation
Zembla
budget airline
aviation safety
atypical employment contracts
fake self-employed
zero-hour contract
Transavia
EasyJet
Karolinska University
pilot
cabin crew
Thursday, 12 October 2023 - 16:20

Share this article:

Air travel becoming less safe due to overworked pilots: study; Transavia denies findings

European aviation has become less safe in recent years due to overworked and exhausted pilots and cabin crew members, Zembla reports based on a study by Sweden’s Karolinska University. Zembla found a culture of fear at several budget airlines where employees don’t dare report illness or fatigue. Transavia denied the findings to the program.

The researchers surveyed 10,000 pilots and cabin crew members. A third said that European air travel has become less safe. Eighty percent of cabin crew and 66 percent of pilots said working conditions have deteriorated. Many cited an increase in atypical contracts, like false self-employment and zero-hour contracts, as the reason behind the worsening working conditions. These contracts weakened employees’ legal position, making them less likely to report being “unfit to fly.”

Zembla spoke to multiple pilots at budget airlines and found a culture of fear preventing them from blowing the whistle. Pilots even told the program about falling asleep during flights. “I suddenly noticed that my eyes were closed. When I opened them, I saw my colleague also had his eyes closed,” a pilot told the program.

Transavia denied that its employees were afraid to report being too sick or tired to fly. “Reporting fatigue, unfitness, and safety issues are explicitly encouraged,” the KLM budget subsidiary said. Transavia also said that most of its employees have permanent employment contracts.

EasyJet would not respond substantively, saying the problems don’t affect them. RyanAir and Wizz Air did not respond.

More like this

Image
A Koninklijke Marechaussee officer at Schiphol Airport
More flight crew members caught under the influence of alcohol last year
Image
Transavia passenger planes on the tarmac of Eindhoven Airport
Thousands of travelers affected by Transavia cancellations last week
Image
A airplane flies across a blue partly cloudy sky leaving vapour trails.
Big increase in GPS sabotage; 983 Dutch flights affected so far this year
Image
A KLM aircraft takes off above a Transavia airplane on the ground
Air rage on the rise; Incidents on planes nearly doubled
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Over 170 noise complaints filed during Boothstock festival in Rotterdam’s Kralingse Bos
  • Amsterdam landlord: full repairs after Osdorp explosion to take weeks to months
  • Utrecht to review marathon timing, route after heat-related death of 22-year-old runner
  • Max Verstappen finishes fourth in Spain as Lewis Hamilton claims first Ferrari win
  • Fourth suspect arrested in Heemstede synagogue terror plot

Top stories

  • Warm air set to lift temperatures late in June, but July outlook turns uncertain
  • Residents return to Amsterdam-Osdorp homes after blast injures seven
  • Video: Dozens evacuated in Scheveningen after major fire at fish-smoking facility
  • Dutch military tests camp design for Russian war prisoners in Marnehuizen
  • E. coli boil water advisory for 200,000 in Dordrecht, Zwijndrecht, Hendrik-Ido-Ambacht

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content