When Nikolaj Coster-Waldau — best known to many as Jaime Lannister from Game of Thrones and now a UNDP Goodwill Ambassador — steps into the muddy tidal flats of Kendrapara, he isn’t there for scenery. He’s filming a segment of the new season of 'An Optimist’s Guide to the Planet' (2024) that follows how villagers, scientists and government programmes are restoring mangroves as living coastal armour against rising seas and storm surges. The sequence brings international attention to a quiet but high-stakes experiment in resilience on India’s east coast.
Coster-Waldau’s episode — titled “Protect” — follows the Enhancing Climate Resilience of India’s Coastal Communities (ECRICC) initiative in Bagapatia village, Kendrapara district, showing residents planting saplings, rebuilding livelihoods and using restored mangrove belts to blunt coastal erosion. The segment frames mangrove revival not as a distant conservation project but as an immediate, people-led strategy that keeps houses, fields and fishers safer during cyclones and high tides. Local participants and UNDP partners explain how a mix of traditional knowledge and technical support has scaled community plantations and created alternative livelihoods.
Odisha’s coastline — about 480 kilometres long — sits on the Bay of Bengal and is among India’s most cyclone-prone regions, with roughly a century of recorded severe storms reshaping its shorelines and economies. That exposure makes the state a strategic testing ground for nature-based solutions: restored mangroves trap sediment, reduce wave energy, and can lower immediate risk to coastal settlements and infrastructure. National and state programmes, often implemented with UNDP technical support and international finance, are pairing restoration with fisheries, aquaculture and livelihood training so communities don’t have to choose between income and protection.
Project scale: ECRICC and allied restoration programmes in Odisha and nearby coasts have reported thousands of hectares of restoration activity; targeted project reports cite local restoration deliverables in the low thousands of hectares for programme phases, accompanied by plans for additional planting and monitoring. These efforts are part of larger, multi-scheme restoration tallies that national reporting shows have brought tens of thousands of hectares of degraded mangroves under active recovery across recent years.
Central support: The Union government and state authorities have channelled specific funds for Bhitarkanika conservation and other mangrove work — for example, a Centre allocation cited for Bhitarkanika conservation ran into crores of rupees to support protection and restoration activities. That financing has been used for nursery development, patrols, local employment and ecosystem monitoring.
Climate context: Recent regional studies underline accelerating climate variability in coastal Odisha — more frequent extreme rainfall, shifting cyclone behaviour and sea-level threats that together compound risks to agriculture, fisheries and infrastructure. Policymakers and scientists point to the need for micro-level planning that combines early warning, evacuation systems and ecosystem restoration to reduce loss.
The episode gives viewers closeups of intertidal planting techniques, conversations with women who manage nursery beds, and the incremental work of turning eroded mudflats into living forest strips. It also underlines that mangrove restoration is not a quick fix: survival of saplings depends on species choice, hydrology and community stewardship. The film, by placing human faces at the centre, amplifies a policy truth: resilience succeeds when environmental repair is coupled with secure livelihoods, clear land-use planning and adequate finance. UNDP’s involvement in the project, and the decision to include Odisha in the series, signal how international agencies are using storytelling to attract attention — and funding — to scalable local solutions.
The episode’s reach matters because Odisha’s coastal experience is not unique: millions live along similar deltas and embayments worldwide. If community-led mangrove restoration in places like Kendrapara consistently demonstrates measurable reductions in damage and improved livelihoods, it becomes a replicable model for other vulnerable coasts. Coster-Waldau’s visit, captured on camera as he plants a sapling with villagers, turns a local story into a visual argument: protecting coasts in a warming world requires working with nature and centring the people who depend on it.
Who is Nikolaj Coster-Waldau and why is he visiting Odisha?
Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, known for his role in 'Game of Thrones' and serving as a United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Goodwill Ambassador, visited Odisha’s coast to film a segment of his documentary series 'An Optimist’s Guide to the Planet' — focusing on mangrove restoration in Kendrapara district under the ECRICC initiative.
What is the mangrove restoration effort in Odisha featured in the documentary?
The documentary showcases how local communities in Bagapatia village, Kendrapara district, are planting and restoring mangroves under the Enhancing Climate Resilience of India’s Coastal Communities (ECRICC) initiative. The project is collaboration among the Green Climate Fund, India’s MoEFCC, Odisha’s forest department and UNDP.
Why is Odisha’s coastline important for climate resilience?
Odisha has about a 480 km coastline along the Bay of Bengal, is highly vulnerable to cyclones, storm surges and sea-level rise — making mangrove belts crucial as natural buffers against erosion and extreme weather.
Where can I watch the documentary featuring Odisha’s mangrove work?
The series 'An Optimist’s Guide to the Planet' (Season 2) premiered on Bloomberg Originals and is available on major streaming platforms such as Amazon Prime Video, Samsung TV+, and YouTube. The Odisha segment begins around the 15-minute mark in the episode titled “Protect”.
How does travel or tourism relate to the mangrove restoration story in Odisha?
While the story is grounded in environmental conservation and coastal resilience, for travellers it offers insight into how destinations like coastal Odisha are more than scenic beaches — they are sites of climate action, community engagement and ecosystem renewal. Being aware of and visiting such places responsibly adds depth to travel.