From 2007 to 2009, Cousteau served as Chief Ocean Correspondent for
Animal Planet, and appeared on ''Ocean's Deadliest
and Springwatch
. He has co-hosted a series called Oceans
on BBC Two, and has served a correspondent on CNN and for the public radio show, Living on Earth''. In 2010, he spent a great deal of time covering the
BP Oil Spill with ABC's
Good Morning America and Sam Champion and later CNN. Cousteau was the first person to scuba dive on television into the spill. From 2010 through 2014 Cousteau was a Special Correspondent for
CNN International and the host of Going Green, a series that explored critical conservation issues around the world. In addition, Cousteau hosted Expedition Sumatra for CNN in 2013, an 8-part series exploring the
deforestation crisis in
Sumatra, Indonesia. Since 2014, Cousteau has been the host and executive producer of
Xploration Awesome Planet, a series syndicated on FOX and Hulu. In 2015 he was nominated for a
Daytime Emmy Award in the "Outstanding Lifestyle/ Travel/ Children's Series Host" category. In 2015, Cousteau and his wife Ashlan traveled to Nepal to film wild Bengal tigers in partnership with the World Wildlife Fund and the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation; this led to a series about the expedition entitled
Treasures of the Terai which aired online at Takepart.com and KTLA. In 2016, Ashlan and Philippe produced and co-starred in an hour-long documentary for Discovery Channel's
Shark Week called
Nuclear Sharks, which looked at how grey reef sharks in Bikini Atoll were able to recover from nuclear testing in the 1940s and 50s. Philippe and his wife
Ashlan Gorse Cousteau co-starred in the Travel Channel series Caribbean Pirate Treasure. The show won the Cynopsis TV Award for the best adventure reality series after its first season. ==Personal life==