
Ireland’s National Emergency Coordination Group (NECG) convened twice on 5 February after Met Éireann escalated rain warnings for Dublin, Louth, Wicklow and Waterford to Status Orange. With ground already saturated and river levels at record highs, the NECG urged people in the four counties to avoid all non-essential travel on 6 February and, where possible, work from home.
By dawn on Friday, flooding had shut a section of the DART coastal rail line near Clontarf, blocked the N11 southbound at Bray, and forced Bus Éireann to divert several inter-city services. Dublin Airport remained open but warned passengers to build in extra journey time, citing the M1/M50 corridor’s vulnerability to standing water.
Local authorities placed hundreds of sandbags around flood-prone quays and deployed pumping crews through the night. Dublin City Council said its flood defence gates on the Liffey, installed after Storm Frank in 2015, were closed for the second time this winter. The Irish Red Cross opened a helpline for residents needing temporary accommodation or humanitarian grants, while the Department of Social Protection activated emergency payments for households whose homes are damaged.
For international travellers who suddenly need to reroute through other European hubs, keeping travel documents and visas in order can be another moving part. VisaHQ’s Ireland portal (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) offers fast, paperless visa processing, real-time status updates and expert support for more than 200 jurisdictions, so employees and mobility teams can focus on safety and business continuity rather than paperwork.
For global-mobility managers the practical implications are immediate: employers with Dublin-based staff should prepare for remote working into the weekend, check on relocated assignees living in coastal suburbs such as Sandymount and Clontarf, and advise travelling employees to confirm rail or coach status before departure. International assignees unfamiliar with Ireland’s maritime climate should be briefed not to drive through floodwater and to monitor official channels—Met Éireann, Transport Infrastructure Ireland and local Garda social-media feeds—for route closures.
Although the NECG expects the heaviest rain to ease by Saturday, residual flooding could linger for 48 hours as upland waters move downstream. Companies arranging Monday-morning flights or cross-border shuttles should therefore plan for rolling disruption. Longer term, the episode underscores a growing climate-risk factor for firms that rely on Dublin’s infrastructure for regional hubs and EMEA headquarters.
By dawn on Friday, flooding had shut a section of the DART coastal rail line near Clontarf, blocked the N11 southbound at Bray, and forced Bus Éireann to divert several inter-city services. Dublin Airport remained open but warned passengers to build in extra journey time, citing the M1/M50 corridor’s vulnerability to standing water.
Local authorities placed hundreds of sandbags around flood-prone quays and deployed pumping crews through the night. Dublin City Council said its flood defence gates on the Liffey, installed after Storm Frank in 2015, were closed for the second time this winter. The Irish Red Cross opened a helpline for residents needing temporary accommodation or humanitarian grants, while the Department of Social Protection activated emergency payments for households whose homes are damaged.
For international travellers who suddenly need to reroute through other European hubs, keeping travel documents and visas in order can be another moving part. VisaHQ’s Ireland portal (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) offers fast, paperless visa processing, real-time status updates and expert support for more than 200 jurisdictions, so employees and mobility teams can focus on safety and business continuity rather than paperwork.
For global-mobility managers the practical implications are immediate: employers with Dublin-based staff should prepare for remote working into the weekend, check on relocated assignees living in coastal suburbs such as Sandymount and Clontarf, and advise travelling employees to confirm rail or coach status before departure. International assignees unfamiliar with Ireland’s maritime climate should be briefed not to drive through floodwater and to monitor official channels—Met Éireann, Transport Infrastructure Ireland and local Garda social-media feeds—for route closures.
Although the NECG expects the heaviest rain to ease by Saturday, residual flooding could linger for 48 hours as upland waters move downstream. Companies arranging Monday-morning flights or cross-border shuttles should therefore plan for rolling disruption. Longer term, the episode underscores a growing climate-risk factor for firms that rely on Dublin’s infrastructure for regional hubs and EMEA headquarters.










