A French sailor with an uncommon mission is bringing his IMOCA 60 to the Vendée Arctique 2026, and Nico D’Estais carries far more than just racing ambitions across the North Atlantic. Since childhood, he has dreamed of competing in the world’s toughest offshore events. That dream has matured into something larger: a platform for social change.
D’Estais campaigns as ambassador for Café Joyeux, a French enterprise that employs and trains people with mental and cognitive disabilities across 31 locations in France and internationally. The café group also operates as Europe’s first fair-trade specialty coffee brand, with profits directed entirely toward supporting employment for people with disabilities. For D’Estais, sailing isn’t separate from this work—it amplifies it. Every mile logged aboard Café Joyeux generates awareness and funding for the organisation’s hiring initiatives.
His boat, a 2011-vintage IMOCA 60 previously raced as Macif, SMA, and Banque Populaire X, represents serious racing credentials. At 18.28 metres in length with a 29-metre mast and 8 tonnes displacement, the VPLP-designed hull carries 250 square metres of upwind sail and 530 square metres downwind. It’s the machinery required for a 12,000-kilometre journey to the Arctic Circle and back.
D’Estais joined the Café Joyeux programme in 2022, and the support from that team provides what he calls invaluable strength when racing alone in remote waters. That human connection—the knowledge that his sailing serves a wider purpose—separates this campaign from purely competitive efforts. New Zealand sailors understand the rigours of solo offshore racing and the mental resilience required across months at sea. D’Estais carries the additional weight of representation: every storm endured, every waypoint reached, extends the reach of an organisation working to change how societies value inclusion.
The Vendée Arctique 2026 will test both his seamanship and his determination to prove that professional offshore racing and purposeful social enterprise can share the same hull.











