All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 An Introduction by Alexandra Cousteau

    • March 24, 2010
    • National Geographic

    Blue Planet will chronicle the interconnectivity of water.

  • S01E02 Anacostia River: In the Shadow of the Capitol

    Washington DC: centre for one of the world's greatest economies. But flowing in the shadow of Capitol Hill is the Anacostia, which is one of America's most polluted rivers, running through one of America's most dangerous communities....

  • S01E03 Angkor: Lessons for the Modern World

    A World Heritage Site, Angkor is one of the most important archaeological sites in South-East Asia. Stretching over some 400 square kilometers, the park contains the magnificent remains of the Khmer Empire, dating from the 9th to the 15th century AD. All that is left of the empire is 7 small villages and these broken stones....

  • S01E04 Arava Institute: Water Knows No Borders

    A drought in the West Bank is exacerbating the situation in the already conflict-riddled region. As Israelis experience unprecedented water shortages, residential wells in drought-stricken Palestinian regions continue to dry up due to decreased rainfall and Israel's tightening grip on water use. Parts of major West Bank cities such as Jenin, Hebron, and Bethlehem have experienced a lack of ru...

  • S01E05 Unknown

  • S01E06 Crew Videos: Botswana

  • S01E07 Kanpur, Ganges Under Threat

    Kanpur is a city characterized by the countless tanning factories that line the sacred Ganges, pouring millions of gallons of toxic effluent into the river on a daily basis. The Expedition team interviews local environmental hero to learn more about this threat to the holiest of rivers....

  • S01E08 India, Crew Video

    At 1,560 miles (2510 km) long with a river basin between 200 and 400 miles wide, the Ganges river supports nearly half a billion people 'Mother Ganges' is revered by Hindus as the incarnation of a god. But while the river is viewed by some as a sacred entity with great spiritual purity, the environmental reality is another story. Almost 300 million gallons of waste are poured directly in to t...

  • S01E09 Ganges: Endangered Source

    At 1,560 miles (2510 km) long with a river basin between 200 and 400 miles wide, the Ganges river supports nearly half a billion people 'Mother Ganges' is revered by Hindus as the incarnation of a god. The source of the Ganges is Rishikesh, nestled in the foothills of the Himalayan mountains and fed by its enormous and endangered glaciers. The Expedition team investigates the impact on India ...

  • S01E10 Delhi, India, Life in the Slums

    Slum dwellers in India feel the scarcity of clean water and access to sanitation more acutely than anyone else. Here, the team talks with a community living in the slums of Delhi about their water situation....

  • S01E11 India, Ganges: The River Goddess

    Varanas is the most ancient and most holy place in India, a pilgrimage destination for millions of Hindus who gather to pay homage to a living goddess- the Ganges River....

  • S01E12 Interview, Minister of the Environment

  • S01E13 Interview, Osama Suliman, Jordanian Masters Student

  • S01E14 Unknown

  • S01E15 Interview, Bob Nixon: Founder Earth Conservation Corps

    An interview with Bob Nixon....

  • S01E16 Interview, Carl Middleton on International Rivers

    The Mekong River is essential to the cultural identity of the Cambodia people. It feeds them, it provides them with cultural inspiration, myths, water, and transportation. The increasing construction of dams in the river will have serious impacts on the Cambodian population and river's own biodiversity....

  • S01E17 Interview, David Emmett on Conservation International

    Tonle Sap is a particularly strange lake. In the dry season it is only about 3000 sq kilometers in size, but when the rains start up in China and Lao, the lake expands to 15000 sq kilometers. This covers about 6% of the entire country and floods the surrounding forests creating a unique ecosystem of of fish. Climate change and the construction of dams at the Mekong River will severely restrict the...

  • S01E18 Interview, Dr. Clive Lipchin of the Arava Institute

  • S01E19 Interviews, Farmers and Fishermen

  • S01E20 Interview, Muna Dajani

  • S01E21 Unknown

  • S01E22 Interview, Tab Benoit (Voice of the Wetlands)

  • S01E23 Israel, Jordan, West Bank, Water in a Thirsty Land

  • S01E24 Downstream Deadzone

  • S01E25 Louisiana, Life on the Edge

    Life in Louisiana is characterized by the way the rivers, wetlands and coastal areas have been engineered, developed, and paved over. The team talks to local communities that are, literally, living on the edge.

  • S01E26 Mekong, Mother River

    The Mekong River is the mother of water for more than 70 million of the world's poorest people, but climate change and the work of dam builders threaten the river with devastating transformation that could destroy its natural wealth and the lives of its people. Cambodia along with neighboring China, Burma, Thailand, Laos, and Vietnam will suffer tragic consequences if and when the great Mekon...

  • S01E27 Okavango, Botswana, Cradle of Life

    In spite of the Okavango Delta, Botswana does not have unlimited water resources. In this film, the team investigates the role of water in the communities and how the country is working to protect the water they have. But while the river is viewed by some as a sacred entity with great spiritual purity, the environmental reality is another story. Almost 300 million gallons of waste are poured ...

  • S01E28 Okavango, Miracle of Water

  • S01E29 Tonie Sap, Pulse of Life

    A World Heritage Site, Angkor is one of the most important archaeological sites in South-East Asia. Stretching over some 400 square kilometers, the park contains the magnificent remains of the Khmer Empire, dating from the 9th to the 15th century AD. Today, researchers believe that water scarcity may have caused the demise of what was one of the largest and most important civilizations of its...