rocket (larger horizontal rocket in the background),
Skylark sounding rocket (front centre-left), and a model of the
Ariane 4 orbital rocket (to the right from Skylark) at
Euro Space Center (far left) visiting the European Space Research and Technology Centre
ESTEC on 3 February 1967 observing the Sun on
STS-9 '' spacecraft rocket '' module at ISS '' landing on
Titan near
ISS and Philae'' '' module at
ISS at
Jupiter and
ESM approach the Moon '' space telescope rocketAfter
World War II, many European scientists left Western Europe to work with the United States. Although the 1950s boom made it possible for Western European countries to invest in research and specifically in space-related activities, Western European scientists realised solely national projects would not be able to compete with the two superpowers. In 1958, only months after the
Sputnik shock,
Edoardo Amaldi (Italy) and
Pierre Auger (France), two prominent members of the Western European scientific community, met to discuss the foundation of a common Western European space agency. The meeting was attended by scientific representatives from eight countries. The Western European nations decided to have two agencies: one concerned with developing a launch system,
ELDO (European Launcher Development Organisation), of which Renzo Carrobio di Carrobio became the first Secretary General from 1964 to 1971, and the other the precursor of the European Space Agency,
ESRO (European Space Research Organisation), led by
Pierre Auger. The latter was established on 20 March 1964 by an agreement signed on 14 June 1962. From 1968 to 1972, ESRO launched seven research satellites, but ELDO was not able to deliver a launch vehicle. Both agencies struggled with the underfunding and diverging interests of their participants.
Foundation The ESA in its current form was founded with the ESA Convention in 1975, when ESRO was merged with ELDO. ESA had ten founding member states: Belgium, Denmark, France, West Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom. These signed the ESA Convention in 1975 and deposited the instruments of ratification by 1980, when the convention came into force. During this interval the agency functioned in a
de facto fashion.
First science missions ESA launched its first major scientific mission in 1975,
Cos-B, a satellite monitoring
gamma-ray emissions in the universe, which was first worked on by ESRO. ESA collaborated with
NASA on the
International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE), the world's first high-orbit telescope, which was launched in 1978 and operated successfully for 18 years. A number of successful Earth-orbit projects followed, and in 1986 ESA began
Giotto, its first deep-space mission, to study the comets
Halley and
Grigg–Skjellerup.
Hipparcos, a star-mapping mission, was launched in 1989 and in the 1990s
SOHO,
Ulysses, and the
Hubble Space Telescope were all jointly carried out with NASA. Later scientific missions in cooperation with NASA include the
Cassini–Huygens space probe, to which the ESA contributed by building the
Titan landing module
Huygens.
First launch vehicles As the successor of
ELDO, the ESA has also constructed rockets for scientific and commercial payloads.
Ariane 1, launched in 1979, carried mostly commercial payloads into orbit from 1984 onward. The next two versions of the
Ariane rocket family were intermediate stages in the development of a more advanced launch system, the
Ariane 4, which operated between 1988 and 2003 and established the ESA as the world leader in commercial space launches in the 1990s. Although the succeeding
Ariane 5 experienced a failure on its first flight in 1996, it has since firmly established itself within the heavily competitive commercial space launch market with 112 successful launches until 2023. In 1998, ESA started developing the
small-lift launch vehicle
Vega.
First astronauts Astronauts from the future ESA member states have been joining
Soviet space missions since 1978. The first
ESA astronaut to fly to space was
Ulf Merbold who joined the
STS-9 mission of the American
Space Shuttle in 1983, that carried the first European-built
Spacelab laboratory module. The experience gained during the Spacelab programme was later instrumental in developing the
International Space Station (ISS). Since then, ESA astronauts have been joining Space Shuttle flights, as well as Russian
Soyuz flights to the
Mir space station. During the 1980s and 1990s, ESA was considering developing its own crewed spacecraft
Hermes and a small space station
Columbus MTFF. These plans were later abandoned and instead, ESA joined the ISS programme with
Columbus being repurposed as one of the station's laboratory modules and ESA astronauts flying to the station on American and Russian spacecraft.
ESA in the 2000s The beginning of the new millennium saw the ESA become, along with agencies like
NASA and
JAXA, one of the major participants in
space research. Although ESA had relied on co-operation with NASA in previous decades, changed circumstances, such as tough legal restrictions on information sharing under
ITAR, led to decisions to rely more on itself and on cooperation with
Roscosmos. The agency continued its contribution to the International Space Station (ISS) programme with
European astronauts joining assembly flights as well as
long-term missions to the station. In 2008, ESA added its laboratory module
Columbus to ISS and started launching the
ATV cargo spacecraft. During the 2000s, ESA was considering cooperation with Russia on the proposed
Kliper and
CSTS crewed vehicles, but neither of these was developed. Notable deep space missions during the 2000s included the agency's first Moon, Mars, and Venus orbiters:
SMART-1,
Mars Express, and
Venus Express. ESA's
Huygens probe, launched together with the NASA's
Cassini mission in 1997, reached its destination in 2005 when it successfully landed on
Titan, marking the farthest landing from Earth a spacecraft has ever made. The comet orbiter
Rosetta launched in 2004 and performed multiple deep space flybys and observations during the decade, but wouldn't reach its destination until 2014. ESA has launched multiple major astronomy missions in the 2000s: the
gamma ray observatory
INTEGRAL, the
infrared observatory
Herschel, the
cosmic microwave background mapper
Planck, and
Corot, a milestone in the search for
exoplanets. Notable
Earth observation missions launched during the decade included
Envisat, Double Star, GOCE, SMOS, and the experimental
PROBA series. ESA also contributed to the meteorological constellations
Meteosat and
MetOp and tested technologies for the future
Galileo satellite navigation system with two
GIOVE satellites. During the 2000s, ESA pursued the
Aurora programme which planned to launch a series of increasingly ambitious missions culminating in a crewed landing on Mars. The programme was eventually abandoned with only the
ExoMars series of
astrobiology space probes to
Mars remaining active. ExoMars, as well as the plans for human spaceflight to
LEO, the
Moon, and Mars, were later incorporated into the new
Terrae Novae programme established in 2016.
ESA in the 2010s In 2010, ESA added the
Cupola observation module to
ISS and
European astronauts continued joining
long-term missions to the station. The
ATV cargo spacecraft continued resupplying ISS until its last flight in 2015. In 2012, ESA committed to providing the ATV-derived
European Service Module for NASA's crewed lunar spacecraft
Orion. In 2014, ESA's
Rosetta probe arrived at its destinatination, the Jupiter-family comet
67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko. It became the first spacecraft ever to orbit a comet and its lander
Philae performed the first ever landing on a comet. In 2016, ESA launched its second Mars orbiter mission, the ExoMars
Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO), as the first
ExoMars mission within the newly established
Terrae Novae programme. When the spacecraft arrived at Mars later the same year, it released the
Schiaparelli lander, which failed on landing. TGO, however, entered the Martian orbit and after 11 months of
aerobraking began its scientific observations, focused mostly on the
atmosphere of Mars. In 2018, ESA and
JAXA launched the joint mission
BepiColombo, which is expected to arrive at Mercury in 2026. Notable astronomy missions launched in 2010s were the
astrometry telescope
Gaia, which produced the largest and most precise 3D catalogue of astronomical objects ever made, and the
exoplanets-characterising telescope
CHEOPS. ESA also launched
LISA Pathfinder, a technology demonstrator for the future
gravitational wave observatory
LISA. In 2010, ESA launched the
cryosphere-monitoring satellite
CryoSat-2, a replacement for
CryoSat-1 which had been destroyed in 2005 due to a failure of its Russian launch vehicle. Another major
Earth observation satellite mission of the decade was the
magnetic field-observing
Swarm, launched in 2013. The 2010s saw the first launches of two major European
satellite constellations, to which ESA contributed alongside other European institutions, the
satellite navigation system
Galileo and the
Earth observation programme
Copernicus with its
Sentinel satellites. The first operational pair of
Galileo satellites was launched in 2011. The radar satellite
Sentinel-1A, first dedicated mission of the Copernicus Programme, was launched in 2014, followed by the optical imaging satellite
Sentinel-2A in 2015, the
oceanography satellite
Sentinel-3A in 2016, and the air pollution-monitoring
Sentinel-5p in 2017. The
small-lift launch vehicle
Vega, developed by the Italian company
Avio, had its first flight in 2012 and then flew 22 times until 2024 when it was replaced by the more powerful
Vega-C.
ESA in the 2020s After the
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the cooperation between ESA and
Roscosmos was mostly severed. This led to a delay in the
ExoMars programme and ending of
Soyuz launches from the Guiana Space Centre. Furthermore, the
space policy of the second Trump administration brought uncertainty into many joint ESA-NASA programmes including major science missions and human spaceflight. The ministerial council held in November 2025 reacted to the changed international situation by including security and defence in ESA's mandate, as well as confirming many priorities of the long term, autonomy-focused "Strategy 2040" proposed earlier in 2025 and approving a record budget of €22.1 billion. In early 2026, ESA established the new Resilience, Navigation, and Connectivity Directorate focused on security and defence technologies. In early 2020s, ESA has added two major components to the ISS. The
Bartolomeo platform was connected to the
Columbus module in 2020 to increase its capacity for external payloads. The
European Robotic Arm was launched in 2021 together with the
Nauka module. ESA continued contributing
European astronauts to regular
ISS expeditions, and also started paying private companies for short-term astronaut flights to the station. ESA also started supporting European companies in developing uncrewed
space capsules for resupplying the ISS and
future space stations via the
LCRS initiative, as well as the Indian
ISRO in developing their crewed
Gaganyaan spacecraft. The ESA-built
European Service Module of the
Orion spacecraft flew on its
first uncrewed test flight in 2022 and in 2026, it brought
Artemis II, the first beyond-
low Earth orbit crewed spaceflight since 1972, around the Moon. The
BepiColombo mission, launched in 2018, has completed all its nine
gravity assist manoeuvres at Earth, Venus, and Mercury, in preparation for the planned 2026 insertion into Mercury orbit. The
heliophysics mission
Solar Orbiter, launched in 2020, continues to perform periodic Venus flybys which gradually increase its
orbital inclination, allowing it to observe the Sun from outside the
Solar system plane. The
Juice mission, launched in 2023, has so far completed two gravity assist manoeuvres at Earth and Venus on its way to enter an orbit around Jupiter in 2031. Two European orbiters,
Mars Express and
TGO, continued their operations around Mars, providing scientific insights into the planet's surface and atmosphere. In 2025,
Mars Express received a software update, which could allow it to stay operational until 2030s. The
Hera mission, launched in 2024 as the first space mission of the optional
Space Safety Programme, flew by Mars in 2025 on its way to perform a post-impact survey of the asteroid
Dimorphos which had been impacted by NASA's
Double Asteroid Redirection Test mission. The Space Safety Programme was established in 2019 by substantially expanding the former Space Situational Awareness (SSA) programme. Since then, it prepared an extensive series of space missions and ground-based projects focused on mitigating the dangers of
near-Earth asteroids,
space weather, and
space debris, which was fully endorsed by ESA member states. The long-awaited
NASA-ESA-
CSA space telescope, the
James Webb Space Telescope, finally launched in 2021 and started operating in its
halo orbit around the Sun–Earth
L2 point in 2022. The first half of 2023 saw the launch the
Euclid space telescope designed to better understand
dark energy and
dark matter by accurately measuring the
accelerating expansion of the universe. The experimental
PROBA-3 mission, launched in 2024, successfully demonstrated high-precision
formation flying for
coronagraphy observation of the Sun. The successor to the
Vega launch vehicle,
Vega C, launched successfully for the first time in July 2022, delivering the
LARES 2 satellite and six
CubeSats to Earth orbit. The successor to the
Ariane 5 launch vehicle,
Ariane 6, had its maiden flight in July 2024, followed by the first commercial launch in March 2025 and the first launch of the 4-booster variant Ariane 64 in February 2026. In the 2020s, ESA started supporting aspiring European
commercial launch providers with substantial development funding and launch contracts through the Boost! programme, the Flight Ticket Initiative, and the
European Launcher Challenge (ELC). == Facilities ==