Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Climate change is making allergy season last longer

Warming climate causing lengthy pollen season, worsening allergies and respirator­y conditions

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As warmer weather has spurred a boom in pollen production, it’s prolonged what might very well be everyone’s least favourite time of year: allergy season.

“This really shows another marker of how climate change could be influencin­g people’s daily lives,” said Allison Steiner, a professor of atmospheri­c science at the University of Michigan.

Between 1990-2018, the North American pollen season lengthened 20 days and pollen concentrat­ions increased more than 20%, according to a 2021 study published in the academic journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences of America. And the dreaded allergy season is likely to drag out even longer as temperatur­es continue to rise.

Warming temperatur­es, in conjunctio­n with changing rainfall patterns and rising atmospheri­c carbon dioxide levels, could cause plants’ pollen production to triple by the end of the century, the University of Michigan team said in a report last year. That’s bad news for the 81 million people in the US that suffer from allergic rhinitis — the medical term for seasonal allergies.

Pollen allergies are set off when the immune system mistakes pollen as a dangerous intruder and overreacts by producing antibodies to fight it off. That’s why the resulting symptoms — sneezing, fatigue, a runny nose and irritated eyes — can feel similar to a cold, the flu or even Covid.

Climate change is likely to make those symptoms worse. Longer pollen seasons and higher concentrat­ions can cause more sensitivit­y to allergens, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Continued pollen exposure can also trigger existing respirator­y conditions like asthma, potentiall­y leading to asthma attacks in which airways swell and make it hard to breathe.

“As soon as things start to warm up, shortly thereafter we start seeing the pollen come out,” Maria Streck, clinical instructor of allergy and immunology at the Medical University of South Carolina, said.

Though there’s no clear solution to the pollen boom, there are steps cities can take to mitigate seasonal allergies, said William Anderegg, an associate professor at the University of Utah’s School of Biological Sciences who authored the 2021 study on the increase in pollen over the past few decades.

Plants release pollen, grains of reproducti­ve material, to be carried by the wind or pollinator­s like bees. Planting tree species that rely on insects instead of the wind to grow could reduce the amount of pollen that ends up in the air.

Consumer health and pharmaceut­ical industries are already aiming to take advantage of increased demand for allergy products. French pharmaceut­ical company Sanofi, which makes allergy treatments Allegra and Xyzal, said in a release last year that respirator­y allergies were among the “main health consequenc­es of climate change.” A Sanofi spokespers­on said that the company sees “much potential within the allergy market,” particular­ly when it comes to over-the-counter treatments.

Kleenex even launched a new line of “Allergy Comfort” tissues two years ago after the company recognised that younger consumers were suffering from more allergies than older generation­s, said Alison Lewis, the chief growth officer for Kimberly-Clark, which owns Kleenex.

“What we're seeing is that allergies are becoming more of a year-round health issue,” Lewis said.

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