The first cases of the variant outside India were detected in late February 2021, including the
United Kingdom on 22 February, the
United States on 23 February and
Singapore on 26 February. after they flagged evidence in May 2021 that it spreads more quickly than the original version of the virus. With cases from the Delta variant having risen quickly, British scientists considered the Delta variant having overtaken the Alpha variant as the dominant variant of SARS-CoV-2 in the UK in early June 2021. Researchers at Public Health England later found that over 90% of new cases in the UK in the early part of June 2021 were the Delta variant; they also cited evidence that the Delta variant was associated with an approximately 60% increased risk of household transmission compared to the Alpha variant.
Canada's first confirmed case of the variant was identified in
Quebec on 21 April 2021, and later the same day 39 cases of the variant were identified in
British Columbia.
Alberta reported a single case of the variant on 22 April 2021.
Nova Scotia reported two Delta variant cases in June 2021.
Fiji also confirmed its first case of the variant on 19 April 2021 in
Lautoka, and has since then climbed up to 47,000 cases and counting. The variant has been identified as a super-spreader and has led to the lockdowns of five cities (
Lautoka,
Nadi,
Suva,
Lami and
Nausori), an area which accounts for almost two-thirds of the country's population. On 29 April 2021, health officials from
Finland's
Ministry of Social Affairs and Health (STM) and the
Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare (THL) reported that the variant had been detected in three samples dating back to March 2021.
North Macedonia confirmed its first case of the variant on 7 June 2021 after a person who was recovering from the virus in Iraq was transported to North Macedonia. In a laboratory test, the variant was detected in the person. On 22 June 2021, the country reported its second case of the Delta variant in a colleague of the first case who had also been in Iraq and who subsequently developed symptoms. The detection of B.1.617 was hampered in some countries by a lack of specialised kits for the variant and laboratories that can perform the
genetic test. For example, as of 18 May, Pakistan had not reported any cases, but authorities noted that 15% of COVID-19 samples in the country were of an "unknown variant"; they could not say if it was B.1.617 because they were unable to test for it. Other countries had reported travellers arriving from Pakistan that were infected with B.1.617. B.1.617.2.1 was detected in Europe in March 2021, and has since been detected in Asia and America. By 3 July 2021, Delta became dominant in the US. On 9 July 2021, Public Health England issued Technical Briefing 18 on SARS-CoV-2 variants, documenting 112 deaths among 45,136 UK cases of SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant with 28 days follow-up with a fatality rate of 0.2%. Briefing 18 warns that "Case fatality is not comparable across variants as they have peaked at different points in the pandemic, and so vary in background hospital pressure, vaccination availability and rates and case profiles, treatment options, and impact of reporting delay, among other factors." The most concerning issue is the
logistic growth rate of 0.93/week relative to Alpha. This means that per week, the number of Delta samples/cases is growing by a factor of exp (0.93)=2.5 with respect to the Alpha variant. This results, under the same infection prevention measures, in a much greater case load over time until a large fraction of people have been infected by it.
Government responses After the rise in cases from the second wave, at least 20 countries imposed travel bans and restrictions on passengers from India in April and May. UK prime minister
Boris Johnson cancelled his visit to India twice, while Japanese Prime Minister
Yoshihide Suga postponed his April trip. In May 2021, residents of two tower blocks in
Velbert,
Germany, were quarantined after a woman in the building tested positive for the Delta variant. In May, Delhi Chief Minister
Arvind Kejriwal said that a new coronavirus variant from Singapore was extremely dangerous for children and could result in a third wave in India. From 16 May to 13 June 2021, as well as 22 July 2021 to 10 August 2021; Singapore entered
lockdowns, known as "Phase 2 Heightened Alert", similar to 2020. On 14 June, the British prime minister
Boris Johnson announced that the proposed end of all restrictions on 21 June in the United Kingdom was delayed for up to four weeks and vaccination roll-out was accelerated following concerns over the Delta variant, which accounted for the vast majority (90%) of new infections. UK scientists have said that the Delta variant is between 40% and 60% more transmissible than the previously dominant
Alpha variant, which was first identified in the UK (as the Kent variant). On 23 June, the province of Ontario in Canada accelerated 2nd dose vaccine appointments for people living in Delta hot spots such as Toronto, Peel and Hamilton. On 25 June,
Israel restored their mask mandate citing the threat of Delta. On 28 June,
Sydney and
Darwin went back into lockdown because of Delta outbreaks.
South Africa banned indoor and outdoor gatherings apart from funerals, imposed a curfew, and banned the sale of alcohol. On 3 July, the islands of Bali and Java in
Indonesia went into
emergency lockdown. On 8 July, Japanese Prime Minister
Yoshihide Suga announced that Tokyo would once again enter a state of emergency, and that most spectators would be barred from attending the
Olympics set to start there on 23 July. On 9 July, Seoul,
South Korea ramped up restrictions urging people to wear masks outdoors, and limiting the size of gatherings. On 12 July, French President
Emmanuel Macron announced that all health care workers will need to be
vaccinated by 15 September and that France will start using
health passports to enter bars, cafés, restaurants and shopping centres from August.
Los Angeles announced it will require masks indoors starting 17 July 2021. The
United Kingdom lifted most COVID-19 restrictions on 19 July, despite a surge in cases as the Delta variant became dominant. The government cited the protection and wide coverage of the
COVID-19 vaccination programme, although health experts expressed concern at the move. On 23 July,
Vietnam extended its lockdown of
Ho Chi Minh City to 1 August, and announced lockdown restrictions would be put in place in
Hanoi, affecting a third of the country's population. The Delta variant had brought upon the country's
largest outbreak to date, after mostly successful containment measures throughout 2020. On 17 August,
New Zealand went into an
alert level 4 lockdown, following a positive case being reported in
Auckland. More cases soon followed in the
Coromandel Peninsula. This was the first reported community transmission case in the country in 170 days (since February 2021). == Extinction ==