Scientists say the global supply of helium will be gone in 30 years. Should we really be using it for Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade balloons?

“ When it ’s gone , it is lost to us forever . ”

That ’s what University College London chemist Andrea Sellasaid regarding helium , the constituent that is used to bring the Macy ’s Thanksgiving Day Parade balloons to biography each year .

As many families gather by their telecasting screens — or , for some in New York City , Manhattan sidewalks — this Thursday morning , they will bear looker to one of the United States ’ most revered holiday traditions .

Helium Shortage

Snoopy and Woodstock from the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.

Snoopy and Woodstock from the Macy ’s Thanksgiving Day Parade .

Knowingly or not , they will also bear witness to the reality that human desire often trumps the wiseness of control . When the balloon fill in their November 27th route , over 300,000 three-dimensional feet of helium — the spatial equivalent of two million gallons of water — will have been used , and will thus not be available for future use .

This might not seem like a liberal deal , but when we take into account the multitude of helium ’s uses and the fact that Earth ’s helium supplying will belike be depleted inapproximately 40 years , the Macy ’s balloons become a bit , well , intemperate .

Paddington Bear Balloon

Paddington Bear at the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.

What Helium Does And Why You Should Care

First of all , a primer on everything that helium does besides bring a multiple - story Spider Man to life-time and make a six - yr - honest-to-god ’s day : remember the Apollo space vehicles ? Liquid atomic number 8 and hydrogen powered them , and helium was decisive in keeping those elements coolheaded . Ever had an MRI ? Helium facilitate cool its superconducting attracter , which tending in the detection of tumors . Been to the grocery store late ? Every time your teller scans your boxful of Cheerios , he or she is doing so with helium - neon throttle lasers , which scan barcodes and separate the teller a given item ’s appropriate price . Do n’t want atomic reactor to get too live ? Guess what : you ’ll want some helium .

In other words , helium is a key ingredient across multiple industry and is life-sustaining in the organisation of public spirit . It is also something that is so expensive to recycle that once it ’s been released , untilrecentlywe really have n’t nettle stress to capture it .

Likewise , helium can not be unnaturally produced . The lighter - than - air element is a byproduct of radioactive decay and accumulates in natural accelerator pedal deposit . The United States happens to have a lot of these natural gas deposits , which means it cater the largest portion of the cosmos ’s helium supply — hovering right around 35 percent of it , with most of the component ’s global supplying housed right in Texas .

As you might imagine , the United States ’ comparative abundance of helium made for a key plus in times of state of war : the country make a national helium reserve in the former 20th century , which helped supply gas to US airships during World War II , and later provided coolant for ballistic capsule during the Cold War - stimulate outer space race .

These endeavor proved to be a bit expensive , though , and so in the 1990s — a period that saw maturate civilian requirement for helium and the Bureau of Land Management ( BLM ) , the federal agency in charge of bring off the reserve , freaking out about being $ 1.6 billion in debt — the United States government passed the 1996 Helium Privatization Act ( HPA ) to care it .

When Nature Becomes A Political Problem

Over the course of around a decade , this act would sell the reservation ’s helium in an attempt to pay for the reserve ’s amass costs , stipulating that “ the amount of helium sold off each class should be a straight lineage with the same amount being sold each twelvemonth , irrespective of the world-wide requirement for it,”The Independentreported . What this intend is that the securities industry value of helium has been artificially gloomy , which over time has had the effect of discouraging others from entering the helium purification marketplaceandencouraging its continued exploitation for literally empty ends , one being the vast space within Macy ’s parade balloon .

Paddington Bear at the Macy ’s Thanksgiving Day Parade .

In 2013 , the BLM was legally obligated to turn off the helium tap , and the nonrenewable element ’s note value began to take over its market price — mean that atomic number 2 was more expensive to reflect the world of shorter supply . Helium - using industry experienced shortages and keep company panics — with little labs suffering most due to market volatility — and the federal administration again intervened to avert what some have call a “ helium drop-off . ”

This intercession , a competitive auction for helium , render its own exercise set of political problems , namely that the BLM ’s remaining helium was buy by justtworefiners , thereby encourage similar quasi - monopolistic control of the scarce resource , but in unlike paw and for dissimilar ends , likeprice - gouging .

For now , interior retailers like Macy ’s are apparently capable to give these helium price hiking — indeed , this year they are sum yet another balloon to their setup . It ’s the smaller industriesthat are suffering , and have to make do with less .

Said the UK ’s Rutherford Appleton Laboratory researcher Oleg Kirichek tothe Guardian , “ It costs £ 30,000 a sidereal day to lock our neutron light beam , but for three days we had no helium to run our experiments on those beams … in other words we ware £ 90,000 because we could n’t get any helium . ”

“ Yet , ” Kiricheck added , “ we put the poppycock into political party balloons and allow them float off into the upper atmosphere , or we practice it to make our interpreter go squeaky for a laugh . It is very , very stupid . It makes me really angry . ”

Of course , the annual parade and its helium - filled balloons are more diagnostic of a global nonstarter to adequately price and distribute the value of scarce imagination than they are its cause , but to Cambridge University chemist Peter Wothers , it ’s still deserving talking about . “ I suspect the amount that is used in party balloon is quite modest compared to the other main use of it , ” Dr. Wothers aver . “ But it ’s a rather lilliputian use of something we should be valuing a little bit more . ”