Happy New Year 2026

Institute

The entire ENSTA community wishes you all the best for 2026!

ENSTA is kicking off 2026 by celebrating the first anniversary of its transformation.

At the crossroads of societal and industrial challenges, France's oldest engineering Institute continues to look to the future with boldness and conviction.

Since January 2025, ENSTA has expanded its academic and scientific scope within the Institut Polytechnique de Paris, bringing together the areas of excellence of the Paris-Saclay and Brest campuses. It thus confirms its key role in the competitiveness and strategic autonomy of France and Europe, at the heart of sectors of sovereignty such as defense, mobility, energy, the sea, digital technology, and health.

ENSTA wishes you a happy, inspired, and successful 2026.

L'ENSTA vous souhaite une belle année 2026
ENSTA wishes you a happy New Year 2026

Our latest news

Company | Innovation
What if we put wind turbines in the sky?

Generating renewable electricity at an altitude of 1,000 meters using airships—held to the ground by a cable—equipped with wind turbines: this is the bold challenge taken up by Venturix. Founded by engineer Guillaume Desrocques, the start-up, winner of...

What if we put wind turbines in the sky?

Generating renewable electricity at an altitude of 1,000 meters using airships—held to the ground by a cable—equipped with wind turbines: this is the bold challenge taken up by Venturix. Founded by engineer Guillaume Desrocques, the start-up, winner of...

Institute | Training
"DG sur écoute" : interview with Estelle Iacona

In an interview with Thotis, Estelle Iacona, Director General of ENSTA since 2025, outlines the school's main priorities one year after the merger between ENSTA Paris and ENSTA Bretagne.

"DG sur écoute" : interview with Estelle Iacona

In an interview with Thotis, Estelle Iacona, Director General of ENSTA since 2025, outlines the school's main priorities one year after the merger between ENSTA Paris and ENSTA Bretagne.

Research
Metal recycling: towards greener and more efficient methods

With nearly 7% of global CO₂ emissions linked to the metallurgy industry, metal recycling is clearly essential to reducing the sector's footprint. But how can metal waste be transformed into high-performance materials capable of meeting the needs of the...

Metal recycling: towards greener and more efficient methods

With nearly 7% of global CO₂ emissions linked to the metallurgy industry, metal recycling is clearly essential to reducing the sector's footprint. But how can metal waste be transformed into high-performance materials capable of meeting the needs of the...