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Around 160 000 new little colleagues arrived at ESA’s European Astronaut Centre (EAC) in Cologne, Germany, today. Known as the home of Europe’s astronaut corps, EAC has now also become a home for honey bees. Their arrival marks the first step of a new initiative that is bringing a touch of nature closer to daily life at the centre.
Employees launched a beekeeping club and installed four beehives between the office building and the astronaut training hall. What started as a simple idea among colleagues is gradually growing into a shared project – one that blends curiosity, care and a commitment to sustainability.
Over the coming months, members of the club will learn how to care for the bees, keep them healthy and eventually harvest honey, all while ensuring a safe and respectful coexistence with their new neighbours.
“We’re only at the very beginning, but we expect the bees to settle in well at EAC,” says Lucy Day, secretary of the beekeeping club. “Taking care of them will bring people together and visitors will be able to observe them safely. It’s exciting to see where this will lead and we’re hoping to harvest our first honey by the end of the summer,” she adds.
The initiative is open to all employees and is supported by ESA’s Sustainability Fund. It reflects ESA’s commitment to reducing environmental impact and protecting ecosystems. At a local level, the project supports pollinators and helps strengthen biodiversity around EAC, including the nearby protected natural area where the bees will forage.
Like astronauts, bees are explorers in their own right, working together and navigating their environment with precision. Their presence at EAC is a reminder that exploration does not only look outward to space, but also inward, towards understanding and protecting the delicate systems that sustain life on Earth.
Looking ahead, the club is already thinking about how this initiative could grow, from installing a camera to observe the hives more closely to perhaps even sending some ESA honey to space one day. “We’ll take care of every step here at EAC, from the bees themselves to analysing and processing the honey,” Lucy adds. “I’m especially curious to discover what kind of honey we’ll produce: its flavour, colour and consistency, and the flowers the bees will visit.”
Still in its early days, the project shows that even the smallest contributions can make a difference. Or, in the spirit of ESA astronaut Sophie Adenot’s Epsilon mission, highlighting how small yet meaningful contributions come together to form a whole: be(e) the little thing that changes everything.
Credits: ESA - L. Day