
From The Polarbear Science
In the climate change episode of his 2011 BBC Frozen Planet series ‘On Thin Ice’, Sir David Attenborough told viewers that polar bear mothers and cubs across the Arctic were starving because climate change was melting the sea ice, even as he sat beside a fat, healthy Barents Sea female (below).

I wonder how Sir David Attenborough feels now. Has anyone bothered to tell him that Norwegian biologists have finally admitted that Barents Sea polar bears were actually fat and healthy in 2010 when they assisted in the filming of his BBC documentary? Or did Attenborough know even then that this population of polar bears was thriving despite the large loss of sea ice – but let his viewers think otherwise?
The image above is from an expedition Attenborough took to Svalbard (in the western Barents Sea, likely the spring of 2010), where he sat with a sedated fat sow while talking about starving polar bears and falling population numbers due to loss of sea ice. This sequence was filmed in the same area where researchers have recently shown that by 2005, at least, bears were in much better condition than they had been in 1995, even though local sea ice had declined dramatically (Aars et al. 2026).
What this also means is that the bears were being handled and measured, so the biologists must have known that the bears in 2010 were not dying of starvation but were actually doing better than they had been in 1995 – even though the sea ice had markedly deteriorated.
Below is a graph taken from the Norwegian monitoring site that posts their Svalbard polar bear data every year. This graph shows body condition of adult male bears right up to 2025 – seven years beyond the cut-off date for the 2026 Aars study.

The statement below about the population trend vs. sea ice is from the same site:

It seems to me that by 2010 when these same authors helped Attenborough make his BBC documentary, these researchers already had the data they needed to determine that sea ice loss was not causing a population decline in the Barents Sea because female bears were not starving (Lippold et al. 2019).
In the figure below, the last panel (“BCI”) shows body condition (i.e., “fatness”) of females over time, from 1997 until 2017. While by 2010, the modest increase in body condition may not have been as strongly apparent as it was a few years later but there was definitely not a decline.

Fat bears mean the population is healthy and thriving, not struggling to exist.
I suggest one of two options: either Norwegian researchers lied to Attenborough about the status of the Barents Sea bears or they went along with his lie that these bears were starving just like “most of the bears” across the Arctic – because they were all invested in the narrative that sea ice loss blamed on human-caused climate change would eventually drive polar bears to near extinction (Crockford 2019).
I guess we won’t know unless someone asks him.
I’ve written about Attenborough’s Arctic Betrayal before, of course, which reached egregious levels in 2019 when he falsely told the world that Russian walrus had hurled themselves off tall cliffs because of climate change – when it was actually because they were being stalked by bears. There was a video (copied below), and then a book (Fallen Icon: Sir David Attenborough and the Walrus Deception).
Attenborough’s Arctic Betrayal video:
References
Aars, J., Ieno, E.N., Andersen, M. et al. 2026. Body condition among Svalbard Polar bears Ursus maritimus during a period of rapid loss of sea ice. Scientific Reports 16, 2182. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-33227-9 Open access.
Crockford, S.J. 2019. The Polar Bear Catastrophe That Never Happened. Global Warming Policy Foundation, London. Available in paperback and ebook formats.
Crockford, S.J. 2022. Sir David Attenborough and the Walrus Deception. Amazon KDP, Victoria.
Lippold, A., Bourgeon, S., Aars, J., et al. 2019. Temporal trends of persistent organic pollutants in Barents Sea polar bears (Ursus maritimus) in relation to changes in feeding habits and body condition. Environmental Science and Technology 53(2):984-995. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.8b05416
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