Remi Chauveau Notes
Paris Air Show 2025 is a global celebration where aerospace innovation, inclusive leadership, and imagination converge—lifting communities, rewriting futures, and proving that flight is as much about humanity as it is about altitude.
Science 🧬

šŸ‘Øā€šŸš€ Paris Air Show 2025: A Sky Full of Futures

20 June 2025


šŸŽ¶ Soundtrack for a World in Motion

To echo the spirit of the Paris Air Show 2025—where innovation lifts off, voices rise, and the future is co-piloted by everyone—there’s no better anthem than ā€œSuperwomanā€ by Karyn White. Originally released in 1989, this soulful powerhouse flips the script on expectations with the unforgettable line: ā€œI’m not your Superwoman.ā€ It’s not just a song—it’s a declaration of strength, dignity, and the right to be seen beyond stereotypes.

In the context of this year’s show—where women in aerospace are not just participating but leading, where engineers like Allan Petre are inspiring a generation from Seine-Saint-Denis to NASA, and where startups are rewriting the rules of flight—this track becomes more than background music. It’s the heartbeat of the movement. šŸ’ŖšŸ›«šŸŒ

So press play, turn it up, and let this anthem carry you through the clouds and beyond. Because being a Superwoman doesn’t mean doing it all—it means doing it your way.

šŸŽ¶šŸŒøšŸ’«šŸ”„šŸ›«šŸ‘©ā€šŸš€šŸŒ šŸ”Š Superwoman by Karyn White



For over a century, the skies above Le Bourget have told the story of humankind’s boldest dreams.

But this year, at the 55th International Paris Air Show, those dreams aren’t just being shown—they’re being reimagined.

With more than 2,500 exhibitors, 150+ aircraft, and innovations that push the edge of physics and imagination, the world’s premier aerospace event is serving more than aviation excellence.

It’s serving a future in motion. šŸŒāœØ


šŸ—“ļø June 16–22, 2025

šŸ“ Le Bourget Airport, Paris

šŸ”— siae.fr/en

šŸ’¬ X: @salondubourget


šŸ’« Women in Aerospace: Propelling Possibility

This year, the initiative Women in Aerospace isn't tucked away in a corner—it’s a centerpiece. Across vibrant Orbitalks and career lounges, women are leading on the mic, in the sky, and in the cockpit. Talks tackle inclusion, policy, deep space exploration, and mentorship for future engineers and mission leaders.

From fiery engineers and mission analysts to test pilots and space scientists, women aren’t being ā€œincludedā€ā€”they’re engineering the next era. And with each new launch and lunar vision, they’re showing that aerospace belongs to everyone.

🪐 Allan Petre: From 93 to NASA

One voice lighting up the show is Allan Petre—a young aerospace engineer who turned childhood stargazing into a mission at NASA. Born in Paris’s 93rd district and now shaping planetary science in Los Angeles, he’s not just an engineer—he’s a symbol. A graduate of CNAM and ISAE-ENSMA, Forbes 30 Under 30 honoree, and invited by President Macron to speak on youth and science, Allan carries an orbit of ambition and humility that resonates far beyond the hangars. His story is rocket fuel for a generation that dares to dream across borders. šŸ‘Øā€šŸš€šŸ”„

šŸš€ Start Me Up: Space Gets Audacious

The Start Me Up zone is buzzing. With 130+ aerospace startups spanning hydrogen propulsion, AI avionics, orbital debris cleanup, and smart composites, innovation is contagious. From African nano-sat teams to European quantum telemetry firms, young companies are putting bold ideas on the runway and letting them lift off.

Live demos and investor matches in Hall 5 feel less like a trade fair and more like a global garage of genius. For many, this is where their first orbital pitch meets its launch window.

šŸ›°ļø New Horizons in Space & Aeronautics

This year, we’re witnessing a new chapter in how humankind reaches—and uses—space. Reusable rockets are no longer experimental. Mega-constellations of satellites are quietly redrawing the skies. India’s DRDO unveiled the next-gen Tejas Mk-2 and battle-ready UAVs. France, Germany, and the UAE are showing off innovations in electric aviation, sustainable fuels, and supersonic training crafts.

Space isn’t just about escape—it’s about data, defense, climate monitoring, and next-gen communication. And for the first time, these conversations feel as grounded as they are visionary.

āœˆļø Dassault: Defense Meets Design

Legacy took on a fresh coat of future at the Dassault exhibit. From the classic elegance of the Mirage 2000 to the commanding presence of the Rafale, Dassault’s presence struck a chord between national pride and aerospace mastery.

But it’s not just aircraft on display—it’s the future of defense intelligence. Through Dassault SystĆØmes' immersive 3D UNIV+RSES platform, visitors glimpsed how fighter jets are now ā€œborn digitalā€ through AI-driven virtual twins. Defense, cybersecurity, and rapid deployment are no longer add-ons—they’re integral flight systems. šŸ›”ļøšŸ§ 

šŸš€ Final Reflection: The Future Is Already Boarding

Paris Air Show 2025 isn’t just a milestone on the calendar—it’s a signal flare for the world we’re building. It’s where inspiration becomes blueprint, and orbit stops being metaphor and becomes destination. It’s not just jets that take off here—but ideas, voices, and entire communities: the young engineer in Dakar, the woman astronaut from Lyon, the founder in Seoul, the dreamer from Seine-Saint-Denis.

And as the last sonic boom settles and the sky over Le Bourget softens to blue, what lingers isn’t just the roar of engines—it’s momentum. It’s the hum of courage, inclusion, and a new kind of elevation—one powered not only by thrust, but by collective vision. Whether you're fine-tuning spacecraft telemetry in Los Angeles or soldering your first drone in your backyard, this world is yours to design.

Einstein once said, ā€œImagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited, whereas imagination embraces the entire world.ā€ šŸ§ šŸŒ And this week, imagination didn’t just embrace the world—it launched it.

So here’s to a new altitude. One not defined by hierarchy, but by horizon. One where science dances with soul, and engines hum with equity.

To infinity… and beyond! šŸš€āœØšŸ˜„

#AerospaceForAll šŸŒāœˆļø #SkyIsNotTheLimit šŸš€āœØ #LegacyInTheMaking šŸ§ šŸ”„ #WomenLiftOff šŸ‘©ā€šŸš€šŸŽ€ #From93ToNASA šŸŒŒšŸ‡«šŸ‡·

Brainy's Startup Nation Nook

šŸ’”Legacy in the Making
Here’s the kicker: several of the most exciting startups in the Start Me Up zone are led by first-generation founders from underrepresented regions—visionaries who see aerospace not just as a means to fly, but as a tool to solve real-world challenges back home. Take FarmX, for instance—a startup using precision agriculture and satellite data to help smallholder farmers in drought-prone regions optimize water use and crop yields. Or Resilient Cities, which is developing smart infrastructure systems that use aerospace-grade sensors and predictive modeling to protect vulnerable urban areas from flooding and heatwaves. These aren’t just tech demos—they’re lifelines. They show how aerospace innovation can be rooted in empathy, designed for resilience, and scaled for impact. That’s not just lift-off. That’s legacy in the making. šŸŒšŸš€āœØ

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