Climate change has received an extensive attention from public opinion in the
last couple of years, after being considered for decades as an exclusive
scientific debate. Governments and world-wide organizations such as the United
Nations are working more than ever on raising and maintaining public awareness
toward this global issue. In the present study, we examine and analyze Climate
Change conversations in Qatar's Twittersphere, and sense public awareness
towards this global and shared problem in general, and its various related
topics in particular. Such topics include but are not limited to politics,
economy, disasters, energy and sandstorms. To address this concern, we collect
and analyze a large dataset of 109 million tweets posted by 98K distinct users
living in Qatar -- one of the largest emitters of CO2 worldwide. We use a
taxonomy of climate change topics created as part of the United Nations Pulse
project to capture the climate change discourse in more than 36K tweets. We
also examine which topics people refer to when they discuss climate change, and
perform different analysis to understand the temporal dynamics of public
interest toward these topics.Comment: Will appear in the proceedings of the International Workshop on
Social Media for Environment and Ecological Monitoring (SWEEM'16