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Katherine Bennell-Pegg visits WA as tour continues

Katherine Bennell-Pegg has visited school students and industry leaders during a week-long tour of WA.

The first astronaut to formally represent Australia discussed her career journey and gave tips to those considering a career in STEM.

It comes after Australian Space Agency head Enrico Palermo claimed at the SIAA Southern Space Conference last month that the former Northern Beaches resident had generated a “media reach” of 75 million, despite reports her training cost the agency $466,000.

While she is now eligible for missions to the ISS, there is no guarantee that she will ever go to space.

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As part of her Western Australia visit, Bennell-Pegg met the governor of Western Australia, participated in industry panels and gave a keynote speech.

She also toured the University of Western Australia and Curtin University and visited CSIRO’s Murchison Radio-astronomy Observatory, where she met with high school students from outback WA. The new trip came after she visited five states and territories as part of National Science Week in August.

Bennell-Pegg is the Australian Space Agency’s director of space technology and formally completed her astronaut training in Germany in April. She’s now technically eligible for future missions to the ISS.

She holds the distinction of being the first astronaut to qualify under the Australian flag. While both Paul Scully-Power and Andy Thomas previously travelled into space, both did so as US citizens.

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The now-Adelaide resident is a dual Australia–UK citizen and privately applied to join the European Astronaut Corp when it was advertised in 2021.

It was the first selection process since 2009 and she was one of only 25 people to complete the program from 22,500 eligible applicants.

As part of her course, Bennell-Pegg undertook “parabolic flights”, experiencing weightlessness and operating experiments in low-gravity, and centrifuge training, meaning she learned how to deal with the intense G-force of space flights.

“There’s no flight guaranteed for me,” she previously told the ABC. “That’s not unusual for astronauts when they graduate.

“For my class, I’m graduating with five others. All five of them will go to space by 2030, and I’m so excited to see them go up, and I’ll be cheering them on.

“And who knows, maybe one day I’ll see them up there too, but the decision for if or when I fly is a decision for Australia to take in the future when the time becomes right to take it.”

Space Connect reported in December how Bennell-Pegg was appointed an honorary group captain in the RAAF for her achievements.

She previously served as a reservist in the Army and said the skills she learned in Defence have helped her in her civil astronaut training.

Adam Thorn

Adam Thorn

Adam is a journalist who has worked for more than 40 prestigious media brands in the UK and Australia. Since 2005, his varied career has included stints as a reporter, copy editor, feature writer and editor for publications as diverse as Fleet Street newspaper The Sunday Times, fashion bible Jones, media and marketing website Mumbrella as well as lifestyle magazines such as GQ, Woman’s Weekly, Men’s Health and Loaded. He joined Momentum Media in early 2020 and currently writes for Australian Aviation and World of Aviation.

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