After a sharp post-Brexit decline, Ireland’s largest port recorded a rebound in freight volumes to and from the UK during the first quarter of this year.
New figures from Dublin Port show that freight to and from the ports of Holyhead, Liverpool and Heysham grew by 23% from the same period in 2021 to 192,000 units.
However, the stats also show that trade across the Irish Sea remains 18% lower than before Brexit.
Brexit border controls were introduced on 1st January 2021 after the UK formally left the European Union.
That saw a 15% drop in freight volumes between Dublin Port and the UK in the first quarter of last year.
The new data is being seen as an encouraging sign that freight trade between Ireland and the UK could recover after the shock of Brexit.
Dublin Port’s CEO Eamonn O’Reilly said the port’s growth of almost 14% in the quarter was “largely driven” by the surge in traffic to and from the UK routes.
Just Eat downgrades growth forecast and mulls sale of Grubhub bought only last year
Funding Circle founder Desai wins Accel backing for Super Payments venture
Netflix shares plunge as subscribers fall for first time in a decade
“Given that the first quarter of 2021 was very weak in the wake of Brexit – with overall cargo volumes back by 15% – we anticipated, and, duly saw, a strong recovery of 14% in the first quarter of the year to nine million gross tonnes.”
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
In January, Mr O’Reilly said that he thought the so-called landbridge was “gone” because of Brexit.
The landbridge is the decades-old transit route through Britain that many Irish businesses chose for transportation needs to continental Europe.
Figures for 2021 show that increasingly, Irish traders were opting for direct routes to Europe, bypassing Britain and the post-Brexit red tape.
A spokesperson for Dublin Port described today’s figures for Dublin-UK trade as “a positive development.”