Washington state considers legalizing composting human remains
Marie Donlon | January 07, 2019
Human composting may soon be a legal alternative to burial and cremation for residents in Washington state, depending upon a bill slated for vote in late January.
Human composting, also called recomposition, breaks down human remains in soil. According to experts, it would sustain the soil, helping to grow trees and other vegetation.
The process places unembalmed human remains in a composting chamber to decompose surrounded by organic materials, including straw and woodchips. Occasionally, air pulls into the chamber to hasten the process, encouraging microbes to move faster. After one month, what is left is typically one cubic yard of compost.
Traditionally, burial and cremation are the options most exercised by those making decisions about their loved one's remains. Yet, burial involves harmful products like embalming liquid, while cremation often requires fossil fuel use.
Conversely, human composting uses one-eighth of the energy of cremation and saves over one metric ton of carbon dioxide per person, according to a report from human composting company Recompose. That report also states that human composting is a safe alternative to burial and cremation.
Calling the potential legislation historic, as Washington state would be the first in the nation to allow human composting, Democratic state senator Jamie Pedersen is an advocate for human composting and is sponsoring the bill.
“It’s amazing to me that in the year 2019, we still have only two ways of disposing of bodies, and those are ways we’ve used for centuries,” Pedersen said. “In all other ways, technology is changing everything.”
The bill comes at a time when attitudes about funerals and death are being re-examined against environmental impact, with over 50% of respondents expressing an interest in green funeral services, according to a 2017 National Funeral Directors Association survey.
If passed, the bill will also allow residents of Washington to use the process of alkaline hydrolysis, otherwise known as water cremation, to break down the human body with a combination of lye and water, turning human remains into dust. Alkaline hydrolysis is already permitted in 15 other states.
Despite the religious arguments that a bill on human composting is likely to invite, Pedersen is confident the bill will pass. The legislature is expected to reconvene later in January.
Will let new credence to "pushing up daisies!"
What about the prions? If human prions become widespread in soil, then prion diseases will balloon, and good luck stopping that....This is the worst idea I have ever seen...This is only part of the reason we don't use human waste as fertilizer.....Using human waste as fertilizer may turn out to be the cause of Alzheimer's....Cremate the remains, save your children....
https://www.washingt onpost.com/lifestyle /home/would-you-use- human-waste-in-your- garden/2017/08/22/43 556b90-82b4-11e7-b35 9-15a3617c767b_story .html?noredirect=on& utm_term=.310f95f358 0d
https://www.scienced aily.com/releases/20 08/06/080623093029.h tm
https://www.nebiosol ids.org/prions-tses- alzheimers-and-bioso lids/
In reply to #2
https://www.scienced irect.com/science/ar ticle/pii/S221112471 5004374
Embalming with dangerous chemicals is not required for burial, generally only for those who wish to display the body for some number of days.
In reply to #4
There's quite a difference in burying somebody in a casket in a graveyard and composting their remains and sprinkling them in your garden....
..."United States. The cremation rate in the United States has been increasing steadily with the national average rate rising from 3.56% in 1960 to 48.6% in 2015 and projections from the Cremation Association of North America forecasting a rate of 54.3% in 2020."...
https://en.wikipedia .org/wiki/List_of_co untries_by_cremation _rate
In reply to #5
Yeah, I am all into composting stuff from the kitchen and yard, but bodies, not so much.
Seems to be too many potential problems with body composting for the sake of saving a metric ton of CO2 that plants like so much.
In my opinion, burials are a waste of perfectly good real estate. I couldn't even tell you what graveyards my grandparents are buried in, let alone visit the gravesites. Both my parents were cremated and scattered in various places like Buzzards Bay and the Chesapeake Bay. And my dad would have appreciated the send off given to a portion of their remains into St. Leonard Creek near Lusby, Maryland by a long-time friend of theirs.
Its interesting, how in this day and age, proponents of the 3rd Reich, are still coming up with pleasant propaganda to " humanely " dispose of bodies.
Soylent Green, anyone?
In reply to #7
That was my first thought as well!