The French also want to aim for the Moon.

France indeed joined on Tuesday the future exploration program of our satellite driven by the United States, by signing the “Artemis agreements” which notably envisage creating “safety zones” to protect extraterrestrial resources.

France thus becomes the 20th country (after in particular Canada, Japan, the United Kingdom, Ukraine, Israel, the United Arab Emirates, Brazil, etc.) to join this new wave of peaceful space exploration, specifies the National Center for Space Studies (CNES), the French space agency.

Its CEO Philippe Baptiste signed in Washington, in the presence of NASA administrator Bill Nelson, the text of the declaration known as the “Artemis agreements”.

The American program of the same name aims to return astronauts to the Moon around 2025, more than 50 years after the historic moon landing of the Apollo 11 mission. To eventually establish a lasting human presence there.

A springboard to more distant flights

The text also provides for the construction of a station which will be assembled in lunar orbit from 2024, the Lunar Gateway, a future springboard for more distant manned flights.

The Artemis Accords are a set of bilateral agreements with the United States, which build on the 1967 international treaty governing outer space.

The signatory countries adhere to a dozen principles applying to their future activities on the Moon, but also on Mars or asteroids: transparency of missions, interoperability of systems, assistance to personnel in the event of distress, sharing of scientific data, preservation historic sites… A more controversial measure provides for the possibility of delimiting “safety zones” to avoid “harmful interference” by a third party, in particular to protect the exploitation of resources, such as lunar water.

And this while the 1967 treaty prohibits any “national appropriation” of these resources.

China and Russia stand apart

“According to our analysis, the Artémis agreements are not in contradiction with the 1967 treaty”, explains however Pascale Ultré-Guérard, deputy director of programs in the strategy department at CNES.

In addition, according to her, the text makes it possible to "cement" France's commitment to lunar exploration.

For example, the Esprit communication and refueling module of the Lunar Gateway is to be designed in France by Thales Alenia Space.

The text, unveiled by the United States in 2020, has however not been signed by either China or Russia, who plan to build their own lunar station together.

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