Mutant curve rises steeply.
According to the Danish Institute of Health, approximately one in three coronavirus infections is included in the B1.1.7 causing a British variant in the country in the second week of February.
Researchers say the British boom will become dominant in the Scandinavian country later this month.
In Italy, the Ministry of Health estimated Friday that the British surrogate was responsible for 17 per cent of new infections with the Coronavirus.
In Germany, less than 6 percent of the 30,000 infections at the Robert Koch Institute showed, according to a week-long survey, that the British variant had been discovered, but the institute expects results from recent tests next week to show a much higher rate.
A recent study in the United States also predicts that the British variant of the Coronavirus will cause the most illnesses in several federal states in March.