All ferry sailings between Ireland and Wales on the central Irish Sea have been cancelled today due to damage caused by Storm Darragh on Friday at the Port of Holyhead, leading to widespread disruption.
Both operators of the Dublin-Holyhead route, Irish Ferries and Stena Line, RTE News reports have cancelled all scheduled sailings for today on the route of around 94 nautical miles.
In a statement, Irish Ferries said the Ulysses 8.05am and 8.55pm sailings and the James Joyce 2.30pm sailings from Dublin are cancelled.
In addition Afloat adds the James Joyce sailings for tomorrow (10 Dec) from Dublin at 0200 and the return sailing from Holyhead at 0815 is cancelled. Currently the chartered cruise ferry is in France at the Port of Cherbourg where it also operates, but is behind schedule.
Whereas Stena Line, which owns the Port of Holyhead, said its four scheduled sailings today have been cancelled due to "technical reasons" at the port.
(However, according to The Irish Times, a spokesman for the port said that, on Saturday morning, during Storm Darragh, “an incident occurred at Holyhead Port causing damage to port infrastructure).
Some members of the Irish Road Haulage Association, according to its President Ger Hyland, said trucks are waiting for trailers in both the UK and Ireland.
Speaking on RTÉ's Morning Ireland, he said for the next two days trucks will be idle, and when ferries move again, there will be a three- to four-day catch-up process.
More here RTE continues on the story .
Due to the damage at Holyhead, Afloat adds the Ulysses and Stena Adventurer remain today berthed in Dublin Port. Both of these ferries have not left the capital, as the Ulysses departed Holyhead with an arrival on Saturday morning.
Stena’s second ship on the route, Stena Estrid, having arrived to Dublin last night to discharge, then in the early hours of today was forced to anchor in Dublin Bay due to berth unavailability, where, at the time of writing, it remains offshore of Dun Laoghaire Harbour.
(In an update), Ulysses departed the port during the afternoon to join the Stena E-flexer class ferry at anchorage, noting the arrival of the W.B. Yeats from Cherbourg that took place at a nearby berth.
Speaking on Today with Claire Bryne, a former Stena ferry captain Sean Boyce said a couple of thousand passengers have been affected, and likewise with freight at this busy time of the year, with a lot of fresh produce for supermarkets and goods bound for high-street retailers.

















































