According to a statement to ZDNet UK, while earlier this month the date had been pushed back from April 2009 to June 2009, it's going back still further. But it could have been worse.
The report indicates that CERN had two plans:
CERN's head of communications, James Gillies, confirmed that "Plan A" was now the POR:
"The priority is to get collision data from the experiment. The LHC will run next year."
The repairs will also cost $21 million, an uncomfortably large sum for a single leak resulting from a poor soldering job.
The huge particle accelerator is located on the Swiss-French border. Those concerned about Apocalyptic scenarios are afraid of the creation of microscopic black holes, or strangelets, or even breaking through into another dimension and unleashing who-knows-what, much like the movie The Mist (pictured above).
Naturally, that's a science fiction move, but lawsuits and death threats preceded the initial September powering-up of the LHC.