-
US sanctions interrupt Visa, Mastercard payments in Cuba
-
Cobolli sinks Auger-Aliassime to book French Open semi spot
-
Police probe alleged assault on coach of Australian tennis player in Birmingham
-
France's Saliba 'fine' after injury scare, says Deschamps
-
Somalia ex-PM says attacked by govt forces in Mogadishu
-
Ukraine drone strikes causing 'panic' for Kremlin: EU's Kallas to AFP
-
Rubio brushes off Trump mental acuity concerns as 'absurd'
-
Ukraine's Kostyuk takes on Russian Andreeva in French Open semis
-
German director Wenders pulls 1975 film over child nude scene
-
McIlroy chasing elusive Memorial, Scheffler eyes three-peat
-
Sabalenka implodes as Shnaider books French Open semi with Chwalinska
-
Sabalenka fell into 'dark hole' during French Open loss
-
Ukrainian drones hit Saint Petersburg as 'Russian Davos' opens
-
Stokes defends Archer's England absence due to IPL duties
-
UN urges AI firms to reveal environmental footprint
-
Sabalenka crumbles to French Open quarter-final defeat by Shnaider
-
Henry fit to lead New Zealand's attack at Lord's
-
Yamal, Williams should be fit for World Cup opener: De la Fuente
-
UK PM slams violence over police handcuffing of dying student
-
EU wants to favour European firms for AI, cloud in sovereignty push
-
England captain Stokes defends Archer's IPL-enforced absence from Test side
-
Deadly drone strike on Kuwait airport as Iran, US trade fire
-
EU eases spending rules to tackle energy shock
-
Polish qualifier Chwalinska reaches French Open semi-finals
-
Romania wants to boost air defence after drone strike blamed on Russia
-
French content creators gear up to influence presidential election
-
France hits Shein with 22 mn euros in new fines over consumer violations
-
DRC coach prepared to play friendly behind closed doors
-
Ukraine drones hit Saint Petersburg as 'Russian Davos' opens
-
CBS News fires '60 Minutes' veteran Scott Pelley
-
Robots, supply strain: five hot topics at Computex
-
Pope Leo prepares to visit polarised, secular Spain
-
Formula One ace Leclerc extends contract with 'second family' Ferrari
-
Hundreds flee as South Africa anti-migrant mobs go door-to-door
-
Drone strikes close Kuwait airport as Iran and US clash in Gulf
-
Ukraine drones hit Saint Petersburg as flagship economic forum opens
-
Iran World Cup squad to reach Mexico early Sunday
-
Indian stars push to end elephants in Bollywood
-
OECD cuts 2026 global growth forecasts over Mideast war fallout
-
'Blind spots': drone alert lays bare Lithuania poor shelter access
-
French UFC fighter Gane blocking out politics before White House bout
-
England aim to erase Ashes scars against New Zealand
-
50 years after Olympic glory, Comaneci's homecoming sparks hope of new path to perfection
-
'No hiding' as Haiti thrash New Zealand in pre-World Cup friendly
-
Military seeks prison time for Indonesian soldiers in acid attack
-
'Animalistic horror': Russia puts war art on display
-
German alleged rape victim battles time limit on abuse cases
-
As crises balloon, so do EU nations' deficits
-
Japan's samurai spirit still burns in cooler conditions
-
Solomons PM says to review secretive security pact with China
French astronaut to fly to commercial space station under deal
Two French astronauts are to blast into space next year, one of whom will stay on board the world's first commercial space station, under a new deal sealed between France and the US company Vast.
"This confirms France's space ambitions," President Emmanuel Macron said on X late Monday after announcing the deal on the sidelines of a Paris conference.
Under the deal, Thomas Pesquet and Arnaud Prost will embark on separate missions that will last around two weeks each, the California-based Vast said in a statement.
Prost's first trip to space is planned to be to the Haven-1 commercial space station, which Vast has been developing.
After years of delays, the company insists the station is scheduled to finally be deployed next year.
Prost would serve as test engineer on the first crewed mission to the station.
"This astronaut mission to a private space station is a world-first," France's space agency CNES said.
- Aiming for Moon -
The other astronaut Pesquet will launch on a private Vast mission to the International Space Station, which will mark his third stay on the orbital laboratory.
Pesquet will be the commander of the mission, which is not scheduled to launch before mid-2027.
The 48-year-old told AFP on Tuesday that he welcomed the opportunity to return to space.
However, "for me, the long-term goal is the Artemis mission to the Moon", he added.
The European Space Agency announced last year that three European astronauts -- German, Italian and French -- would participate in NASA's Artemis mission aiming to return to the Moon by 2030.
Pesquest said he believed "the very first opportunity for the Moon will be in 2029".
"So having a mission in mid-2027 has absolutely no impact" on his lunar hopes, he added.
Both newly announced Vast missions will launch on the Falcon 9 rockets of billionaire Elon Musk's SpaceX.
However the ISS mission will need to be approved by a panel of the space station's partners, which include NASA, the European Space Agency, Russia's Roscosmos, Japan's JAXA and the Canadian Space Agency.
If the mission is approved, it would be "a major first: no non-American has ever commanded a US capsule," the CNES said.
Vast was founded in 2021 by cryptocurrency billionaire Jed McCaleb with the aim of launching the first commercial space station with Haven-1.
The company aspires to eventually replace the ISS with Haven-2, a larger version of the first model.
After being continuously inhabited for more than a quarter of a century, the ISS mission is scheduled to end in 2030.
R.Braegger--VB