It may soon be legal for the dead to push daisies,
or any other flower, in backyard gardens across Washington state. The
state legislature recently passed a bill that, if signed by the
governor,
allows human bodies to be composted — and used for mulch.
As the nation ages, U.S. funeral practices are changing. Rates of cremation surpassed 50 percent in 2016, overtaking burials as the most popular choice. The Census Bureau, in a 2017 report, predicted a death boom: 1 million more
Americans are projected to die in 2037 than they did in 2015. Human
composting, its supporters say, is an eco-friendly option that can meet
this growing demand. A Seattle-based company called Recompose plans to
offer a service called “natural organic reduction” (it has two patents
pending) that uses microbes to transform the departed — skin, bones and
all.
There is something wonderful about common sense floating to the surface.
A concept worth considering but one which certainly needs more testing. I can see those microbes get out of grandma’s plot and start eating away Rover and Baby Claire.
ReplyDeleteisn't non-embalmed burial - in a shroud or wooden casket, not a metal or stone container - the functional equivalent, over time, of composting?
ReplyDeleteThe question is whether burial in just a shroud is legal in a given locale. Another question is whether burial in wooden casket legal in the same locale.
DeleteI know traditional Jewish burials emphasize biodegradability so there’s that.
The issues here are 1. using proprietary microbes to hasten decomposition, 2. the location of the expedited decomposition, 3. What happens when those proprietary microbes that hasten decomposition get unleashed into the general environment.
“Moma, moma, remember when I fell when we went to see Grandma? Now there’s a hole in my hand.”