BBC Earth announces new series ‘The Green Planet’ with Sir David Attenborough

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‘The Green Planet’ aims to be the first immersive portrayal of an unseen, inter-connected world, full of new behavior and emotional stories from the world of plants. (Supplied)
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Sir David Attenborough, will narrate ‘The Green Planet,’ a new five-part series from BBC Studios’ Natural History Unit. (Supplied)
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Updated 04 January 2022
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BBC Earth announces new series ‘The Green Planet’ with Sir David Attenborough

  • Five-part series will air in MENA region from January 10

DUBAI: BBC Earth has announced that English broadcaster, author, and natural historian, Sir David Attenborough, will narrate “The Green Planet,” a new five-part series from BBC Studios’ Natural History Unit.

Known for writing and narrating the nine-part Life series, Attenborough said: “This is a wonderful opportunity to explore a neglected yet truly remarkable part of the natural world.”

Set to air in the Middle East and North Africa region from Jan. 10, “The Green Planet” aims to be the first immersive portrayal of an unseen, inter-connected world, full of new behavior and emotional stories from the world of plants.

The series will transport viewers “into a world beyond their imagination,” said Mike Gunton, executive producer of the show.

“The world of plants is a mind-blowing parallel universe; one that we can now bring to life using a whole range of exciting new camera technology. This is ‘Planet Earth’ for plants,” he added.

The show’s producers have used new developments in robotics, moving time-lapse, super-detail thermal cameras, deep focus frame-stacking and ultra-high-speed to capture photographic and videographic detail that would be invisible to the naked eye.

Attenborough travels to the US, Costa Rica, Croatia, and northern Europe, exploring terrains including deserts, mountains, rainforests, and the frozen north.

“The Green Planet” premieres on Jan. 10 at 9 p.m.


Saudi Arabia ‘ideal partner’ in shaping next wave of intelligent age, communication minister tells WEF

Updated 23 January 2026
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Saudi Arabia ‘ideal partner’ in shaping next wave of intelligent age, communication minister tells WEF

  • Abdullah Al-Swaha said aim was to “help the world achieve the next $100 trillion by energizing the intelligence age”

DAVOS: Saudi Arabia has accelerated efforts in “energizing the intelligent age,” making the Kingdom the world’s ideal partner in shaping the next wave of the technological age, said the minister of communication and information technology.

Speaking during a panel discussion at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Abdullah Al-Swaha said the aim was to “help the world achieve the next $100 trillion by energizing the intelligence age.”

He said the Kingdom was expanding global partnerships for the benefit of humanity and highlighted both local and international achievements.

“We believe the more prosperous the Kingdom, the Middle East, is, the more prosperous the world is. And it is not a surprise that we fuel 50 percent of the digital economy in the kingdom or the region,” he told the audience. He added the Kingdom fueled three times the tech force of its neighbors and, as a result, 50 percent of venture capital funding.

Al-Swaha said Saudi Arabia was focused both on artificial intelligence acceleration and adoption. At home, he said, the Kingdom was doubling the use of agentic AI in the public and private sector to increase worker productivity tenfold. He also cited the world’s first fully robotic heart transplant, which was conducted in Saudi Arabia.

“If we double down on talent, technology, and build trust with partners, we can achieve success,” he said. “And we are following the same blueprint for the intelligence age.”

He said the Kingdom aimed to be a “testbed” for innovators and investors. Rapid technological adoption and investment have boosted Saudi Arabia’s non-oil economy, with non-oil activities accounting for 56 percent of GDP and surpassing $1.2 trillion in 2025, ahead of the Vision 2030 target.

In terms of adoption, Al-Swaha said the Kingdom had introduced the Arabic-language AI model, Allam, to be adopted across Adobe product series. It has also partnered with Qualcomm to bring the first hybrid AI laptop and endpoints to the world.

“These are true testimonies that the kingdom is not going local or regional; we are going global,” he said.