Ferry sailings into and out of the Port of Holyhead, RTE News reports, have resumed this morning after a temporary closure shut down the UK’s second busiest ferry port due to damage during Storm Darragh in early December.
One of two ferry berths at the port’s Salt Island Terminal was damaged; one has reopened (terminal berth 5), permitting ferry sailings to take place at the North Wales port. It was more than six weeks ago when the storm hit, damaging the terminal jetty, which led to major disruption, notably over the festive period, affecting thousands of passengers and freight flows.
However, the Port of Holyhead, which is owned by Stena Line, has insisted that it will still be able to operate at full volume by altering its schedule on the core central Irish Sea corridor route.
Afloat adds the company’s Stena Adventurer departed Dublin last night and arrived in Holyhead in the early hours to become their first ferry to use the port in more than a month. At the time of writing, the ferry returned to the Irish capital this morning, as according to Stena updates, it departed the Welsh port at 0658 instead of its scheduled time of 0400. The company also has the Stena Estrid back-on-service.
As RTE also writes, Irish Ferries has said this morning’s (W.B. Yeats) 07.30 sailing from Dublin to Holyhead has been delayed until 9.30 due to "operational reasons.". The 01:30 sailing from Holyhead to Dublin departed late, due to what Irish Ferries said was a technical issue with a shore ramp.
More here on the much-awaited development to partially reopen the port, where the UK government marine investigators have probed into last month's incident.
The reopened berth 5 is used by Stena Line vessels, however, it is currently shared with Irish Ferries, as their adjacent berth 3 was damaged in the storm.

















































