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Economy & MarketsTuesday, June 30, 2026

SAS Anchors Future on Copenhagen With $10bn Airbus Order

The Scandinavian carrier’s largest-ever investment, for up to 40 widebody jets, concentrates long-haul growth at Kastrup and projects 25,000 new jobs across the region.

SAS has placed an order for up to 40 Airbus A330-family widebody aircraft in a deal valued at more than $10 billion at list prices, the largest capital commitment in the airline’s history. The expansion plan, centred on Copenhagen Airport as the primary intercontinental hub, is projected by the company to generate 25,000 jobs across Denmark, the Øresund region and Scandinavia by 2030, with 4,000 of those in southern Sweden.

The order is the most consequential fleet move since SAS emerged from a Chapter 11 restructuring in 2024 and its ownership was reshaped. Air France-KLM now holds a 60.5 percent stake, while the Danish state retains roughly 26 percent; the Swedish and Norwegian governments exited entirely. That ownership shift has dissolved the old tri-national balance, allowing management to concentrate long-haul capacity at Kastrup. The new A330-900neo and A330-300 jets will replace older aircraft and open routes to Africa and South America, while a parallel order for 55 Embraer regional jets feeds domestic and short-haul traffic into the hub.

Viewed from Copenhagen and southern Sweden, the investment is a catalyst for economic integration. Malmö’s municipal leadership and business directors point to improved corporate access and a stronger pull for headquarters relocations, citing the short rail link from Skåne to Kastrup. Danish authorities are backing the expansion with a tripling of annual airport investment to over DKr3 billion, funding terminal and airside upgrades. In Stockholm, however, the decision is read as a strategic loss. Swedish aviation analysts note that Arlanda is being pushed into a secondary role, forcing more Swedish travellers to connect through Copenhagen even on intra-European routes, and they link the decline to years of underinvestment and the loss of state influence over SAS.

The expansion’s timeline depends on Copenhagen’s ability to deliver new terminal capacity, with the first major addition—an expanded airside section of Terminal 3—due to open next year. SAS executives have flagged infrastructure readiness as the primary risk to the plan. The airline will also need to finalise delivery schedules and leasing arrangements, while Air France-KLM’s move to increase its holding remains subject to competition clearance.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

30%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Russian & CIS pressContinental European press
Russian & CIS press/ State
SkepticismPragmatism

The SAS order for 40 Airbus A330s is framed as a strengthening of European aviation integration, with geopolitical implications for competition with Russian manufacturers. The choice of Copenhagen as the main hub is seen as a move that consolidates the Western bloc, but with measured tones that do not rule out future trade tensions.

Continental European press/ Nordic
TriumphPragmatism

The SAS order for 40 Airbus A330s is celebrated as a triumph for Scandinavian connectivity, with Copenhagen establishing itself as a central hub in Northern Europe. Emphasis is on economic benefits and employment, with an optimistic tone grounded in concrete data.

Broaden your view

Read more
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Upd. 02:50 PM1 language · 2 outlets
PreviousEconomy & MarketsNext
2 outlets|1 language|2 min read
Tuesday, June 30, 2026

SAS Anchors Future on Copenhagen With $10bn Airbus Order

The Scandinavian carrier’s largest-ever investment, for up to 40 widebody jets, concentrates long-haul growth at Kastrup and projects 25,000 new jobs across the region.

SAS has placed an order for up to 40 Airbus A330-family widebody aircraft in a deal valued at more than $10 billion at list prices, the largest capital commitment in the airline’s history. The expansion plan, centred on Copenhagen Airport as the primary intercontinental hub, is projected by the company to generate 25,000 jobs across Denmark, the Øresund region and Scandinavia by 2030, with 4,000 of those in southern Sweden.

The order is the most consequential fleet move since SAS emerged from a Chapter 11 restructuring in 2024 and its ownership was reshaped. Air France-KLM now holds a 60.5 percent stake, while the Danish state retains roughly 26 percent; the Swedish and Norwegian governments exited entirely. That ownership shift has dissolved the old tri-national balance, allowing management to concentrate long-haul capacity at Kastrup. The new A330-900neo and A330-300 jets will replace older aircraft and open routes to Africa and South America, while a parallel order for 55 Embraer regional jets feeds domestic and short-haul traffic into the hub.

Viewed from Copenhagen and southern Sweden, the investment is a catalyst for economic integration. Malmö’s municipal leadership and business directors point to improved corporate access and a stronger pull for headquarters relocations, citing the short rail link from Skåne to Kastrup. Danish authorities are backing the expansion with a tripling of annual airport investment to over DKr3 billion, funding terminal and airside upgrades. In Stockholm, however, the decision is read as a strategic loss. Swedish aviation analysts note that Arlanda is being pushed into a secondary role, forcing more Swedish travellers to connect through Copenhagen even on intra-European routes, and they link the decline to years of underinvestment and the loss of state influence over SAS.

The expansion’s timeline depends on Copenhagen’s ability to deliver new terminal capacity, with the first major addition—an expanded airside section of Terminal 3—due to open next year. SAS executives have flagged infrastructure readiness as the primary risk to the plan. The airline will also need to finalise delivery schedules and leasing arrangements, while Air France-KLM’s move to increase its holding remains subject to competition clearance.

Source divergence

Economy & Markets · 2 outlets · 1 language

30%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable88%
Neutral12%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Russian & CIS pressContinental European press
Russian & CIS press/ State
SkepticismPragmatism

The SAS order for 40 Airbus A330s is framed as a strengthening of European aviation integration, with geopolitical implications for competition with Russian manufacturers. The choice of Copenhagen as the main hub is seen as a move that consolidates the Western bloc, but with measured tones that do not rule out future trade tensions.

Continental European press/ Nordic
TriumphPragmatism

The SAS order for 40 Airbus A330s is celebrated as a triumph for Scandinavian connectivity, with Copenhagen establishing itself as a central hub in Northern Europe. Emphasis is on economic benefits and employment, with an optimistic tone grounded in concrete data.

This story appeared in

2 outlets · 1 language

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