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'Space is for everyone': Europe seeks to hire first astronaut with physical disabilities

12:18 PM Jun 26, 2021 | Team Udayavani |

Paris: For the first time, the European Space Agency has specifically sought out people with physical disabilities hoping to become the continent’s next generation of space travelers.

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This is a first-of-its-kind effort to determine what adaptations would be necessary to space stations to accommodate them.

The European Space Agency says it was “blown away” by the record number of applicants — more than 22,000 — including more women than ever and some 200 people with disabilities for its recruitment drive aimed at more astronaut diversity. The agency acknowledged that it still has work to do on gender balance. Just 24% of the applicants were women, up from 15% at the last hiring drive in 2008.

“But I’m also happy for ESA because it shows that space is for everyone, and that’s something I’d like to convey,” ESA head Josef Aschbacher told Reuters

The hiring campaign didn’t specifically address ethnic diversity, but stressed the importance of “representing all parts of our society.” The agency received applications from all 25 member nations and associate members, though most came from traditional heavyweights France, Germany, Britain and Italy.

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The competition is fierce. Just four to six people will be chosen as Europe’s next astronauts, with a reserve team of about 20. The candidates will undergo intensive screening over the next year, with a final decision expected in late 2022.

“We’ve all been astonished” at the number of applicants, ESA Director General Josef Aschbacher told a news conference. “It’s a very strong expression of interest and enthusiasm that people have across Europe for space.”

The European agency has sent only two women into space to date — Claudie Haigneré and Samantha Cristoforetti — but wants that number to grow.

While 5,419 women applied for the new ESA program, “the numbers also show there is more to be done to achieve gender balance in the space sector,” said David Parker, its director of human and robotic exploration.

Globally, 65 of the more than 560 people who have explored space were women, most of them Americans.

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