The decision to pick up negotiations which hit an impasse earlier this week came as government urged a rapid solution to the longest strike in 16 years, which is costing Air France up to USD 25 million a day.
We must "find a solution in the coming hours", Prime Minister Manuel Valls said, warning the 10-day strike was endangering Air France, Europe's second-largest flag carrier.
As pressure mounted on management and unions to end the deadlock, confusion erupted after Transport Minister Alain Vidalies told French radio the airline had scrapped plans to expand its Transavia budget subsidiary.
But within minutes, an Air France spokesman told AFP it was "premature" to say the airline had buried the plans to develop its budget subsidiary, which it sees as vital to survive in the cut-throat world of low-cost aviation.
"There is no change in the negotiations to suggest that this project has been withdrawn," a spokesman told AFP.
"The proposal on the table remains to freeze this project and to begin a wide dialogue with social partners between now and the end of the year, as management announced on Monday," added the spokesman.
The pilots are striking in protest at the airline's plans to further develop Transavia, which currently serves holiday destinations across Europe and the Mediterranean.
The pilots, who can earn up to 250,000 euros a year, fear management will eventually seek to replace Air France flights with those operated by Transavia, where pilots earn considerably less.
"If abandoning or postponing the Transavia project allows for a solution to the crisis, it is the right solution," said Valls.
As in previous days, more than half of Air France flights were cancelled nationwide but the situation at some regional airports was much worse, with 80 and 70 per cent of flights scrapped at the southern airports of Nice and Toulouse respectively.
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