
Met Éireann activated a Status Yellow Gale Warning from Carnsore Point to Dungarvan to Valentia for the period 05:00-11:00 on 21 January, forecasting easterly winds reaching Force 8 at times. A nationwide Small Craft Warning—cyclonic variable winds of Force 6 or higher—remains in effect until 22 January.
While inland travel is currently unaffected (no land warnings are in place), the marine alert could disrupt passenger ferries on the Rosslare–Pembroke and Cork–Roscoff routes, as well as helicopter transfers to offshore wind-farm sites. Regional airlines operating Dublin–Kerry and Dublin–Waterford services occasionally adjust schedules during such gusty conditions.
Irish Coast Guard guidance advises mobility coordinators to check with ferry operators for possible cancellations and to allow extra lead time for cargo movements to the UK and continental Europe. Companies shipping time-sensitive components should consider air-freight alternatives via Shannon, where cross-winds are less severe.
The warning also has implications for the Common Travel Area: rough seas can push ad-hoc travellers to reroute via Northern Irish ports, adding an immigration step for non-EEA nationals who would otherwise remain within the CTA. Ensure that employees carry appropriate UK or Irish residence proof if diverting.
If rerouting introduces new visa or re-entry requirements, VisaHQ’s Dublin hub can fast-track UK, Schengen, or Irish documentation and provide real-time entry-rule guidance—visit https://www.visahq.com/ireland/ for streamlined assistance.
Met Éireann’s marine outlook shows low pressure persisting through Thursday, so further advisories are possible. Subscribe to SMS alerts and build weather clauses into vendor contracts covering relocation shipments and corporate crew moves.
While inland travel is currently unaffected (no land warnings are in place), the marine alert could disrupt passenger ferries on the Rosslare–Pembroke and Cork–Roscoff routes, as well as helicopter transfers to offshore wind-farm sites. Regional airlines operating Dublin–Kerry and Dublin–Waterford services occasionally adjust schedules during such gusty conditions.
Irish Coast Guard guidance advises mobility coordinators to check with ferry operators for possible cancellations and to allow extra lead time for cargo movements to the UK and continental Europe. Companies shipping time-sensitive components should consider air-freight alternatives via Shannon, where cross-winds are less severe.
The warning also has implications for the Common Travel Area: rough seas can push ad-hoc travellers to reroute via Northern Irish ports, adding an immigration step for non-EEA nationals who would otherwise remain within the CTA. Ensure that employees carry appropriate UK or Irish residence proof if diverting.
If rerouting introduces new visa or re-entry requirements, VisaHQ’s Dublin hub can fast-track UK, Schengen, or Irish documentation and provide real-time entry-rule guidance—visit https://www.visahq.com/ireland/ for streamlined assistance.
Met Éireann’s marine outlook shows low pressure persisting through Thursday, so further advisories are possible. Subscribe to SMS alerts and build weather clauses into vendor contracts covering relocation shipments and corporate crew moves.









