Currently, over 25% of the European population suffer from airborne allergies, and this number only continues to grow. Climate change affects allergy patients in a multitude of ways. For example, rising CO2 levels boost plant growth, which increases pollen emissions and thereby exacerbates allergies, forcing patients to alter their routines to avoid or mitigate the impact of pollen in their daily lives. Air pollution, a key driver of climate change, also has negative effects on both plants and humans. Air pollution irritates the airways of all those exposed, particularly allergy patients, and plants produce more allergenic and irritant pollen when stressed by pollution. In addition to increased and more allergenic pollen, climate change is also changing plant distributions across geographic regions. As a result, people are being exposed to new types of allergens that they may not have been exposed to before. In some cases, this causes new allergies in people who have previously never suffered. Providing real-time information about the levels of aeroallergens, such as pollen and fungal spores, can help to significantly improve the quality of life of allergy patients. According to WHO the percentage of European allergy patients is expected to increase from 25% to 50% by 2050.