 "Within nine years the National  Helium Reserve will be depleted, according to an article in Science  Daily. It quotes Dr. Lee Sobotka, of Washington University in St. Louis: 'Helium  is non-renewable and irreplaceable. Its properties are unique and unlike  hydrocarbon fuels (natural gas or oil), there are no biosynthetic ways to make  an alternative to helium. All should make better efforts to recycle it.' (The  St. Louis Post-Dispatch has a local  article with quotes from Dr. Sobotka and representatives of the  balloon industry.) On Earth, Helium is found mixed with natural gas, but few  producers capture it. Extracting it from the atmosphere is not cost-effective.  The US created a stockpile, the National Helium  Reserve, in 1925 for use by military dirigibles, but stopped  stockpiling it in 1995 as a cost-saving measure."
"Within nine years the National  Helium Reserve will be depleted, according to an article in Science  Daily. It quotes Dr. Lee Sobotka, of Washington University in St. Louis: 'Helium  is non-renewable and irreplaceable. Its properties are unique and unlike  hydrocarbon fuels (natural gas or oil), there are no biosynthetic ways to make  an alternative to helium. All should make better efforts to recycle it.' (The  St. Louis Post-Dispatch has a local  article with quotes from Dr. Sobotka and representatives of the  balloon industry.) On Earth, Helium is found mixed with natural gas, but few  producers capture it. Extracting it from the atmosphere is not cost-effective.  The US created a stockpile, the National Helium  Reserve, in 1925 for use by military dirigibles, but stopped  stockpiling it in 1995 as a cost-saving measure."Jan 15, 2008
Within nine years Helium Reserve will be depleted - Sad clowns to follow
 "Within nine years the National  Helium Reserve will be depleted, according to an article in Science  Daily. It quotes Dr. Lee Sobotka, of Washington University in St. Louis: 'Helium  is non-renewable and irreplaceable. Its properties are unique and unlike  hydrocarbon fuels (natural gas or oil), there are no biosynthetic ways to make  an alternative to helium. All should make better efforts to recycle it.' (The  St. Louis Post-Dispatch has a local  article with quotes from Dr. Sobotka and representatives of the  balloon industry.) On Earth, Helium is found mixed with natural gas, but few  producers capture it. Extracting it from the atmosphere is not cost-effective.  The US created a stockpile, the National Helium  Reserve, in 1925 for use by military dirigibles, but stopped  stockpiling it in 1995 as a cost-saving measure."
"Within nine years the National  Helium Reserve will be depleted, according to an article in Science  Daily. It quotes Dr. Lee Sobotka, of Washington University in St. Louis: 'Helium  is non-renewable and irreplaceable. Its properties are unique and unlike  hydrocarbon fuels (natural gas or oil), there are no biosynthetic ways to make  an alternative to helium. All should make better efforts to recycle it.' (The  St. Louis Post-Dispatch has a local  article with quotes from Dr. Sobotka and representatives of the  balloon industry.) On Earth, Helium is found mixed with natural gas, but few  producers capture it. Extracting it from the atmosphere is not cost-effective.  The US created a stockpile, the National Helium  Reserve, in 1925 for use by military dirigibles, but stopped  stockpiling it in 1995 as a cost-saving measure."