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Shuttle Delayed Due to Cloudy Skies

PunkOfLinux writes "The shuttle won't be coming down until Tuesday, due to a decision by NASA that the weather was not good enough for re-entry. After the first two attempts, at around 4:45 and 6:25 this morning, NASA called off today's landing."

7 of 208 comments (clear)

  1. NASA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Lets hope it doesn't again - Need Another Seven Astronauts

  2. Look on the bright side by Farkov · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Maybe the rain would put out the fire :)

    1. Re:Look on the bright side by ryanov · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I don't see how this is off-topic at all. Off-COLOR maybe, but not off-topic.

  3. don't mod this down! Peak oil in 5 years! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    This is not a joke. We're running out of oil and the oil companies are admitting it. At least let the truth get told and stop modding it down!

    http://www.thebulletin.org/article.php?art_ofn=mj0 5cavallo

    Oil: Caveat empty

    By Alfred J. Cavallo
    May/June 2005 pp. 16-18 (vol. 61, no. 03) © 2005 Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

    Without any press conferences, grand announcements, or hyperbolic advertising campaigns, the Exxon Mobil Corporation, one of the world's largest publicly owned petroleum companies, has quietly joined the ranks of those who are predicting an impending plateau in non-OPEC oil production. Their report, The Outlook for Energy: A 2030 View, forecasts a peak in just five years.

    In the past, many who expressed such concerns were dismissed as eager catastrophists, peddling the latest Malthusian prophecy of the impending collapse of fossil-fueled civilization. Their reliance on private oil-reserve data that is unverifiable by other analysts, and their use of models that ignore political and economic factors, have led to frequent erroneous pronouncements. They were countered by the extreme optimists, who believed that we would never need to think about such problems and that the markets would take care of everything. Up to now, those who worried about limited petroleum supplies have been at best ignored, and at worst openly ridiculed.

    Meanwhile, average consumers have taken their cue from the market, where rising prices have always been followed by falling prices, leading to the assumption that this pattern will continue forever. In truth, the market price of crude oil is completely decoupled from and independent of production costs, which average about $6 per barrel for non-OPEC producers and $1.50 per barrel for OPEC producers. This situation has nothing to do with a free market, and everything to do with what OPEC believes will be accepted or tolerated by the United States. The completely affordable market price--what consumers pay at the gasoline pump--provides magisterial profits to the owners of the resource and gives no warning of impending shortages.

    All the more reason that the public should heed the silent alarm sounded by the ExxonMobil report, which is more credible than other predictions for several reasons. First and foremost is that the source is ExxonMobil. No oil company, much less one with so much managerial, scientific, and engineering talent, has ever discussed peak oil production before. Given the profound implications of this forecast, it must have been published only after a thorough review.

    Second, the majority of non-OPEC producers such as the United States, Britain, Norway, and Mexico, who satisfy 60 percent of world oil demand, are already in a production plateau or decline. (All of ExxonMobil's crude oil production comes from non-OPEC fields.) Third, the production peak cited by the report is quite close at hand. If it were twenty-five years instead of five years in the future, one might be more skeptical, since new technologies or new discoveries could change the outlook during that longer period. But five years is too short a time frame for any new developments to have an impact on this result.

    Also noteworthy is the manner in which the Outlook addresses so-called frontier resources, such as extra-heavy oil, "oil sands," and "oil shale." The report cites the existence of more than 4 trillion barrels of extra heavy oil and "oil sands"--producing potentially 800 billion barrels of oil, assuming a 20-25 percent extraction efficiency. The Outlook also cites an estimate of 3 trillion barrels of "oil shale." These numbers have figured prominently in advertisements that ExxonMobil and other petroleum companies have placed in newspapers and magazines, clearly in an attempt to reassure consumers (and perhaps stockholders) that there is no need to worry about resource constraints for many decades.

    However, as with all advertis

  4. Hybrid technology? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    OK, thanks for the warning. I guess what you're saying, beneath the trollishness, is that the next Shuttle had better use hybrid gas-electric technology, to bide the time until hydrogen fuel-cell technology matures sometime after 2010.

  5. Re:And by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    I for one don't find that post interesting.

  6. Re:Shoulda gone Canadian by ryanov · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Actually, chalk one up to the engineers who designed the plane so that people could get out twice as fast enough, considering only half the exits worked. ;)

    Realistically, in most of the major crashes, quite a few extra "exits" are created by the crash.