A warming climate is leading to an “explosion” of allergies like hay fever, with experts cautioning that longer and more intense pollen seasons are causing a surge in symptoms ranging from runny noses and itchy eyes to worsening asthma.
The United Nations’ World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) has already linked the shifting climate to alterations in the production and distribution of pollen and spores.
Studies show that earlier thawing of winter frost and warmer spring weather are causing plants and trees to flower sooner, thereby extending the pollen season.
Compounding the issue, air pollution is believed to increase individuals’ sensitivity to allergens. Additionally, invasive plant species are spreading into new regions, introducing novel sources of allergies.
In recent decades, there has been a notable increase in reported allergy symptoms, particularly in industrialised nations. Currently, approximately a quarter of European adults suffer from airborne allergies, including severe asthma, with that figure rising to 30% to 40% among children.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) projects that by 2050, half of all Europeans could be affected.
“We’re in crisis because allergies are exploding,” said Severine Fernandez, president of the French Allergists’ Union.
Whereas previously an allergic person would endure only what is commonly known as hay fever, albeit sometimes for years, “now that person can become asthmatic after one or two years”, Fernandez said.
Rising pollen production
Climate change affects allergy patients in multiple ways, according to a 2023 report by the WMO.
Rising levels of carbon dioxide, one of the main heat-trapping gases produced by burning fossil fuels, boost plant growth, in turn increasing pollen production.
Air pollution not only irritates the airways of people exposed, but it also causes stress to plants, which then produce more “allergenic and irritant pollen”.
Nicolas Visez, an aerobiologist at the University of Lille, said each plant species reacted differently to a variety of factors such as water availability, temperature and CO2 concentrations.
Birch trees for example will wither as summers get hotter and drier, while the heat causes a proliferation of ragweed, a highly allergenic invasive plant.
“There’s no doubt that climate change is having an effect,” Visez said.
In a study published in 2017, researchers projected that ragweed allergies would more than double in Europe by 2041-2060 as a result of climate change, raising the number of people affected from 33 million to 77 million.
The authors suggested that higher pollen concentrations as well as longer pollen seasons could make symptoms more severe.
Allergy protection
A Europe-wide “AutoPollen” programme under development aims to provide real-time data on the distribution of pollen and fungal spores.
In Switzerland, a tie-up with MeteoSwiss allows patients and doctors to match personal allergy profiles with maps of specific allergens throughout the country.
In parts of France, authorities have planted “pollinariums”, gardens packed with the main local allergen species.
These provide information on the very first pollen released into the air so that people can start taking antihistamines and other protective measures in a timely manner.
“Hazelnuts have started to bloom as early as mid-December, which wasn’t the case before,” said Salome Pasquet, a botanist with the association behind the pollen gardens.
“That’s really because we’ve had very mild winters, so flowering has come earlier,” she said.
Some countries are taking an interventionist approach, cutting off the pollen at the source.
In Japan, the government announced a plan in 2023 to combat allergies caused by the archipelago’s many cedar trees, which includes felling cedars to replace them with species that produce less pollen.
Countries in Europe are also more mindful of species in the environment, both native ones that have been planted and invasive newcomers like ragweed.
Preference is given to species with a lower allergenic potential, such as maple or fruit trees.
“The idea is not to stop planting allergenic species,” said Pasquet, but to be mindful of creating diversity and avoiding having “places where there are rows of birch trees, as was the case a few years ago”.
It was birch trees in a client’s garden that originally set off symptoms for Simon Barthelemy, an architect who lives near Paris.
“I had a major eye allergy, and it’s been a recurring problem every year since,” he said.
“I’m on antihistamines, but if I don’t take them I get itchy eyes, I’m very tired, I cough… I can’t sleep at night.”