
NiDirect, the Northern Ireland government’s citizen portal, has urged motorists to plan extra time for journeys on 14 April as new fuel-price demonstrations threaten to spill onto arterial routes that feed the cross-border M1 and A5 corridors. Public and school transport are expected to operate, but Police Service of Northern Ireland units will be on standby to manage any disruptive convoys or rolling roadblocks. If you’re travelling into or out of Ireland for business during this period and need help securing the right travel documents, VisaHQ’s Dublin-based team can streamline the application process and keep you informed of any embassy schedule changes—see https://www.visahq.com/ireland/ for expedited options and real-time status tracking. Although the protests are north of the border, previous actions quickly affected the island’s integrated supply chains and diverted traffic onto secondary roads in the Republic. Cross-border commuters and assignees based in Dublin’s tech corridor but living in Newry or Belfast should monitor @TrafficwatchNI for live updates and consider remote-work options. Employers with time-sensitive shipments through Larne or Belfast ports may need to re-route via Dublin, where fuel availability is still stabilising after earlier blockades. Logistics insurers remind firms that force-majeure clauses triggered by civil unrest require timely notification. The advisory illustrates the knock-on effect domestic protests can have on Ireland’s broader mobility ecosystem under the Common Travel Area.