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Macron Says Europe Must Become 'Space Power' Again (phys.org)

(Saturday June 21, 2025 @03:00AM (BeauHD) from the cheese-wine-and-low-earth-orbit dept.)


French President Emmanuel Macron [1]urged Europe to reassert itself as a global space power , warning that France risks being sidelined in the low Earth orbit satellite market dominated by players like SpaceX and China. Phys.Org reports:

> Macron spoke at the Paris Air Show in Le Bourget outside the French capital a day after France more than doubled its stake in satellite operator Eutelsat, the EU rival to Elon Musk's Starlink. Macron called for more investment as the European space industry struggles to remain competitive in the face of US and Chinese rivals. "SpaceX has disrupted the market, Amazon is also getting involved. China is not far behind, and I think we all need to be very clear-headed," Macron said. Europe must become "a space power once again, with France at its heart," he said. He warned that Europeans were "on the verge of being completely" squeezed out of the low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite constellation market.

>

> Macron said France and its partners should not be reliant on non-European constellations in low orbit, calling it "madness." He called non-European players to team up with France. "This must be the solution for our major strategic partners in the Gulf, India, Canada and Brazil," he said. "We really need to succeed in increasing our collective investment effort," Macron added, noting the importance of private investors and public-private collaboration. He also said France planned to organize a space summit in early 2026 to "mobilize our public and private partners across the globe."



[1] https://phys.org/news/2025-06-macron-europe-space-power.html



Re: Sure (Score:3)

by ArmoredDragon ( 3450605 )

They haven't been an anything power since the second world war, where the continent leveled its own industries and infrastructure. Sure, the US helped, but only after being dragged into it. And that did induce us into ramping up our already strong industrial capacity many times over.

Besides, the first time I ever watched a rocket launch in person was falcon 9 carrying a payload to orbit at Cape Canaveral, right before recovering the booster. Its payload? The first Eutelsat bird.

Re: (Score:2)

by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

Europe is an aerospace power, with Airbus being the world's leading company of aircraft that don't kill the occupants. The ESA is decently successful, and has pulled off projects like Galileo, and some interesting space science and exploration missions.

Europe also invented the World Wide Web. CERN is one of the world's leading research institutions.

Militarily, both France and the UK are nuclear armed, and the UK, Germany, and France export a lot of weapons.

Re: (Score:2)

by nonicknameavailable ( 1495435 )

Sweden also exports weapons

MESPA! (Score:2)

by Mr. Dollar Ton ( 5495648 )

But how?

Under ESA, under EUSPA or under the Airbus, Thales and SpaceRISE rule?

Re: (Score:2)

by Fons_de_spons ( 1311177 )

Mmmm, since this is the EU, I bet all of them will be involved.

Re: (Score:2)

by nevermindme ( 912672 )

Unmanned commercial space programs were alot of using cold war surplus and DOD standard launch platforms at 90,000USD/kg, when spacex grew from not prime delivery to LEO, to a very well scheduled and very flexible way to get a generic satellite to a orbit only limited by ones budget and last stage diameter. While not 9,0000USD/kg but on a path that may be the price for the last 33KG of a microsat program.

Just launch from some colony far away (Score:2)

by thesjaakspoiler ( 4782965 )

just like the French did with their nuke tests.

Will space power matter (Score:2)

by JamesTRexx ( 675890 )

in 10 to 15 years when we're even more hit by the consequences of not caring about the climate?

Oh great, just what we needed (Score:2)

by AntisocialNetworker ( 5443888 )

Loads more space junk filling the night sky.

Perhaps the reason SETI doesn't find anybody out there is that all civilisations eventually disappear behind a wall of orbiting trash.

That must be wonderful: I don't understand it at all.
-- Moliere