Overview
European space activities are distributed across ESA (intergovernmental, 22 member states), the EU (Galileo, Copernicus programmes), and national agencies (CNES France, DLR Germany, ASI Italy, etc.). France conducted 7 orbital launches in 2025 (via Arianespace from French Guiana). ESA's science missions, including Solar Orbiter, Euclid, and JUICE, are among the most ambitious in the world. See the Launch Schedule for upcoming European launches.
Key Programmes
Galileo: The EU's independent global navigation satellite system with ~30 satellites at 23,222 km altitude.
Copernicus (Sentinel): The world's largest Earth observation programme with 7+ satellite families providing free, open data on land, ocean, atmosphere, climate, and emergency monitoring.
Eutelsat OneWeb: The largest European commercial LEO constellation (648 satellites), now part of the Eutelsat Group. 440 next-generation replacement satellites on order. See OneWeb Tracker.
IRIS²: The EU's planned sovereign multi-orbit secure connectivity constellation, combining LEO and MEO assets, targeting initial services by 2030.
Launch Capability
Europe's primary launch vehicle is Ariane 6, which made its maiden flight in 2024 from Kourou, French Guiana. Vega-C provides smaller payload access. The commercial sector includes Rocket Factory Augsburg (RFA ONE) and multiple micro-launcher developers. The UK's SaxaVord Spaceport aims to provide a European vertical launch capability from British soil.