Dublin Port volumes recovered strongly in the first half of 2022 with growth of 10.1% to 18.6 million tonnes.
In trading figures out today, it said container and trailer volumes are now less than 1% behind the record pre‑pandemic and pre-Brexit levels of 2019.
The number of ship arrivals increased by 150 to 3,694 versus the same period last year.
Dublin Port said the increase is a result of two strong performing quarters, with volumes up 13.7% in the first quarter of 2022 and 7% in the second quarter.
Four-fifths of Dublin Port’s cargo volumes are in the Ro-Ro and Lo-Lo modes and the number of trailers and containers that passed through Dublin Port in the first half of 2022 increased year-on-year by 7.6% to 742,000.
Compared to the first half of 2019, trailer and container volumes are only 5,700 or 0.8% lower than they were pre-pandemic and pre-Brexit.
For context, the following figures have been compared to the first six months of 2019 to provide a clearer picture of the trends emerging post-pandemic and post-Brexit, with 2019 the busiest year on record for trade at Dublin Port:
Bulk commodity volumes increased by 20% to 3.5 million tonnes and, within this, petroleum imports increased by 25.6% to 2.3 million tonnes. At this level, petroleum imports are 4.3% higher than they were in the first half of 2019.
Similarly, Bulk Solid volumes (mainly animal feed) grew by 10.7% to 1.1 million tonnes and are +6.5% ahead of 2019 levels.
Trade vehicle imports declined by 3.6% to 47,000 in the first half of 2022 and are 23.7% behind the levels of 2019 due to the impact of the loss of lands given over to State services for border control facilities post Brexit.
Ferry traffic volumes recovered strongly during the first half of 2022 with passenger numbers more than doubling to 671,000 and tourist vehicle numbers more than trebling to 196,000.
However, compared to 2019, passenger numbers are 18.7% behind and tourist vehicle numbers are 15.9% lower than they were three years ago.
Dublin Port’s Chief Executive, Eamonn O’Reilly, said the first half trading results are the first opportunity to assess trends in Dublin Port’s volumes after two years of disruption caused by the pandemic and Brexit.
“What we are seeing is a return of the strong volume growth which has characterised Dublin Port for decades,” he said.
“This is driven by population growth as confirmed in the recent census. More people means more trade and more trade means greater volumes through Dublin Port.”
He said the pattern seen post-Brexit where the average cargo load per container and trailer reduced by 4.2% is now an established reality.
“It is a permanent inefficiency in logistics supply chains caused by the reintroduction of border controls on imports into Ireland from the UK. This is putting greater pressure on port lands as trade volumes climb back to record levels.”
The Dublin Port chief executive said it is fortunate that the investments that it has been making under Masterplan 2040 in recent years gave Dublin Port the capacity it needed to cater for the large switch in volumes from Great Britain to Continental Europe.
“We have invested €500 million over the last ten years and will invest a further €500 million in the next five years alone to keep pace with the growth we are anticipating now that the long-run growth trends we have seen over many decades have re-established themselves.
“We have multiple planning consents in place already and are preparing to bring the third and final Masterplan project – the 3FM Project – to An Bord Pleanála next year to ensure that Dublin Port can develop the critical national infrastructure that will be needed on the Poolbeg Peninsula if a national port capacity deficit is to be avoided in the next decade,” Mr O’Reilly said.
“Big infrastructure takes a long time to plan and we have, as a matter of policy, always started early.”