Shipping companies in Ireland are making plans to bypass British ports after Brexit and travel direct to continental Europe to avoid new customs checks and possible tailbacks.

Irish hauliers, who use Britain as a staging post to travel to Europe, have brought forward new direct routes, despite British government promises that future trade will be frictionless as it is now and agreement on a Brexit transition period prolonging the status quo until the end of 2020.

Michel Barnier, the European Union’s chief Brexit negotiator, has repeatedly warned that frictionless trade is impossible outside of the bloc’s single market and customs union even if there is a UK-EU free trade agreement.

CLdN, a Luxembourg-based shipping company, has introduced two “mega vessels” on new direct freight routes between Dublin with the Belgian port of Zeebrugge and the Dutch port of Rotterdam.

Irish Continental Group will boost weekly freight capacity from 120 to 1,155 trucks between Dublin and the French port of Cherbourg this summer. Brittany ferries will this month start a service between Cork and Santander in Spain

“In anticipation of Brexit, the shipping community was looking for alternative solutions” CLdN told the Financial Times.

Freight between the two countries will continue to be busy even if the direct routes do lessen the traffic.