ESA Announces Astronaut Thomas Pesquet Will Fly To The International Space Station In 2016

March 17, 2014

Image Caption: ESA astronaut Thomas Pesquet during spacewalk training at NASAs Neutral Buoyancy Lab in Houston, USA. Credit: NASA/ESA-J.Blair

ESA

ESA astronaut Thomas Pesquet has been assigned to a long-duration mission on the International Space Station, it was announced today.

The assignment of the French-born astronaut was announced by ESAs Director General Jean Jacques Dordain in the presence of the French Minister for Higher Education and Research, Genevive Fioraso, and the President of the French space agency, CNES, Jean-Yves Le Gall.

The announcement was made in coordination with the international partners of the International Space Station.

With Thomas Pesquets assignment, all six ESA astronauts from the class of 2009 will have flown to the Station on missions within seven years of graduation.

The Director General noted: Thomas mission assignment concludes the first phase for our newest members of the ESA astronaut corps which was to make each of them assigned to a spaceflight.

This is a clear demonstration of the reputation of ESA among the international partners of ISS as well as of ESA astronauts among the international community of astronauts. The flight experience gained by this new class of ESA astronauts is providing a solid ground for ESA Member States to contribute to further international human exploration missions.

Born in Rouen, France, Thomas will be the 10th Frenchman to go to space, following Lopold Eyharts who supported the commissioning and first utilization of ESAs Columbus microgravity laboratory on the Space Station.

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ESA Announces Astronaut Thomas Pesquet Will Fly To The International Space Station In 2016

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