Norway’s government announced Wednesday that it was again postponing the near-complete lifting of its coronavirus restrictions, planned for early August, because of the rise of the Delta variant.
Originally planned for July, the fourth phase of the reopening plan was first pushed back earlier this month over fears sparked by the more contagious Delta variant first discovered in India.
“The pandemic is not over,” Health Minister Bent Hoie said in a statement.
“There is a concerning development in several European countries as a result of the Delta variant, also in countries with a higher vaccine coverage than in Norway, such as the UK and the Netherlands.”
The fourth phase of reopening would have meant the lifting of most of the remaining restrictions.
Over the summer the Delta variant has become the dominant variant in Norway, said the government. Officials will reassess the situation in mid-August.
“I think we will be fully open this autumn, but we want more people to be vaccinated,” Prime Minister Erna Solberg told public broadcaster NRK.
Nearly 80 percent of the adult population has received at least a first dose of a COVID vaccine in Norway.
The Scandinavian country of 5.4 million people is only using mRNA vaccines—Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna—in its inoculation programme.
It dropped the AstraZeneca vaccine and reserves the Johnson & Johnson shot for volunteers only in specific cases, due to their rare but serious side effects.
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