The biggest summer getaway since 2019 is underway, with millions of British holidaymakers on the move.
The busiest day for international travellers since before the Covid pandemic has begun relatively smoothly, with delays for ferry passengers at Dover well below the 150-minute worst-case waits forecasted by the port authorities.
The four hours between 6am and 10am were expected to see the highest number of cars of the year, with over 3,100 expected to turn up for ferries to Calais and Dunkirk. Overall, travel association Abta predicts more than two million UK travellers will head abroad over the weekend.
This time last year, queues built up swiftly as families heading abroad encountered tougher border checks as a consequence of Brexit. The port of Dover – squeezed between the White Cliffs and the Channel – became a hard EU frontier, with French border officials required to check and stamp every passport.
Additional border posts and a coach processing centre away from the Eastern Docks have eased the pressure, with 10,000 drivers and passengers passing through by 7am on Saturday. The waiting time for French passport formalities was estimated at 90 minutes as it approached 9am.
Port authorities are urging motorists not to turn up more than three hours ahead, which would add to congestion. Any motorists who are delayed will be accommodated on the next available sailing.
But motorists who successfully cross the Channel could find their problems only beginning. The French highway authorities are warning of severe traffic congestion – “circulation très difficile” – on the autoroutes south from Paris all day on Saturday.
On the roads of the UK, it is expected to be the busiest weekend of the year so far for holidaymakers, with the RAC predicting peak congestion between midday and 6pm.
The M60 Manchester orbital motorway has been singled out for the worst jams, anticlockwise between Junction 14 for St Helen’s and Junction 11 for Eccles. The M5 motorway south of Bristol and London’s M25 are also likely to be extremely busy.
Across England, the roads are expected to be extra busy due to the latest rail strike by members of the RMT union. It has caused thousands of train cancellations across England. Train drivers belonging to the Aslef union are on the last…
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