When I die, I want to be composted and used to plant a tree.
It’s not legal in Ontario to compost humans. Not yet, anyway. But I am hopeful because the provincial government opened up a consultation on regulating both composting (natural organic reduction), and alkaline hydrolysis (water cremation). Comments are being accepted until Friday, April 17, at 11:59 p.m.
Full disclosure. I started the Good Green Death Project a few years ago after losing both my parents. Neither cremation nor burial felt right for my final remains; composting did. Although we incorporated the Good Green Death Project as a non-profit this year, it remains a citizen-driven effort, with a bit of seed money from two first-prize pitch winnings from the KW Awesome Foundation and the Eco Market.
We are encouraged by their community support, as well as a provincewide survey of 1,500 people we commissioned in October 2017 from Oracle Research. Turns out I’m not the only one who wants to be composted and become a tree after I die. Overall support was 57 per cent, and more than 70 per cent in people aged 18 to 51. Toronto and the Greater Toronto Area also showed more than 70 per cent in favour of composting as an option; southwest Ontario, which includes Waterloo Region, was 54 per cent.
The feedback and concerns I get from my presentations and correspondence echo my own. We want our last act on Earth to be a kind one.
We’re concerned that cremation uses a considerable amount of fossil fuels and emits greenhouse gases, as well as particulates and potentially mercury from dental fillings. We don’t want a “traditional” burial where the body is embalmed, and placed in an expensive casket made of exotic wood that’s lined with synthetic materials and has a toxic finish.
We don’t want a concrete liner in the gravesite that is used to prevent collapse of the gravesite — a hazard for lawn mowers. We don’t want to take up expensive land in perpetuity with a headstone.
Cremation and burial are only two of the many rites and practices from around the world to deal with our dead. I will leave it to you to explore some of them in the TED.com article, Fascinating funeral traditions from around the globe.
So what about composting?
First of all, the Good Green Death Project is NOT proposing that we toss dead bodies into a big leaf pile in the back forty. (Although agriculture and “body farms” know how good nature is at composting.)
Natural organic reduction (a.k.a. composting) involves placing a shroud-wrapped body into an enclosed vessel with natural materials such as wood chips, straw, sawdust and alfalfa pellets. Carbon, nitrogen, moisture, temperature and oxygen are monitored and managed to optimize the composting process. In about four to seven weeks, the resulting material is “unrecognizable visually, chemically, or microbiologically as human remains,” says Lynne Carpenter-Boggs, lead researcher at Washington State University.
It is compost: about one and a half to two cubic yards of it.
And what better purpose than to plant a tree using your composted remains?
To date, Washington State is the only jurisdiction in the world that has legalized natural organic reduction, effective May 1, 2020. This is the result of the tireless work of Katrina Spade and her benefit corporation Recompose. Both Colorado and California have bills before their legislatures as well. Can we make Ontario next?
Perhaps the last thing we want to think about now is our own mortality, but it’s a reality we all eventually have to face. Maybe we need to think of pre-planning as our last gift to our loved ones left behind who won’t have to guess what we would have wanted.
The Bereavement Authority of Ontario has an excellent Guide to Deathcare you can download to understand your options. As well, you can check out the Green Burial Society of Canada and Natural Burial Association for greener options that are already available.
There is no doubt the death-care industry is changing. That change is being driven by people concerned about cost, environmental impact and finding an option that is personally meaningful. If the purpose of the Good Green Death Project fulfils that for you, now is the time to share that with our provincial government.
Whether you celebrate Halloween, All Hallows Eve, Samhain or Dia de Muertos (Day of the Dead) at this time of year — or celebrate nothing except for the abundance of tiny chocolate treats — at some point you will think about death and dying. Whether it’s your eventual mortality or that of an aging family member, we all gotta kick the bucket, buy the farm, bite the dust, meet one’s maker, go belly up, become worm food, pass away, be at peace, cash in one’s chips, croak, push up daisies, depart this mortal coil … it’s really quite astonishing how many euphemisms we have for death.
My interest in our death and dying practices was triggered by the demise of both my parents in the last 10 years. When you find yourself a senior member of your clan, it’s time to have “that talk” with your loved ones.
However, what I’m really looking for are more eco-friendly alternatives to what is available now. Full disclosure, I’m one of the Instigators of the Good Green Death Project, a volunteer, citizen-driven initiative, funded solely by the kindness of strangers and whatever funeral director Ellen Newman, my co-instigator, and I can afford to contribute from our bank accounts.
Traditional casket burial means taking valuable resources such as exotic woods treated with toxic finishes, and metals, and burying them in expensive, diminishing urban land forever, or close to it. Concrete grave liners are often used to prevent collapse of the gravesite, making cemetery maintenance, such as lawn mowing, easier. Embalming, although not legally necessary, is associated with health risks to death care workers.
Fire cremation, moving up quickly as the method of disposition of choice, is not better, environmentally speaking. About 40 gallons of fossil fuels plus electricity are required for the roughly 120 minutes it takes to cremate one human body. Ageing crematoriums, not equipped with state-of-the-art scrubbers, release greenhouse gases, particles, toxic multisyllabic chemicals that can bioaccumulate in our environment, and heat and steam. Mercury — not safe at any level of exposure — from dental fillings is also released.
The new kid on the block is water cremation, a.k.a. resomation or alkaline hydrolysis, which uses heat, water and lye to dissolve the body and flush the relatively benign remains into municipal sewer systems leaving your bones to be dried, ground and given to your loved ones in an urn.
This leaves green burials (legal) and recomposition (patent-pending) as the best current options, in my opinion. As much as I’d like to be dumped on a coral reef or shot out into space like Star Trek’s Gene Roddenberry, both require too much fossil fuel to get me to my final resting place.
Green burial is defined as a non-embalmed body buried in a simple shroud or casket that is also untreated to allow natural decomposition. Parkview Cemetery in Waterloo, as of this year, has 108 designated green burial sites. Kitchener’s Williamsburg Cemetery has a green section but does not restrict embalmed bodies, and Cambridge has plans for a scattering garden in 2019 in Parklawn Cemetery and is looking to Waterloo’s Parkview Cemetery as a model for the future.
Recomposition, or individual composting, is my pet project. The body would be placed in a specially designed enclosed vessel with sawdust and some soil with the optimum balance of carbon, nitrogen, moisture and oxygen to gently return the body to earth. No fossil fuels or electricity are required. The process is expected to take about a month and the resulting nutrient-rich compost would then be used to plant a memorial tree or scattered in a dedicated pollinator-friendly meadow. My dream is to create protected conservation burial forests, where the living can practise Shinrin-yoku or forest-bathing and hear the voices of the ancestors of many in the rustling of the leaves. Sure, it’s a little poetic and corny, but doesn’t it beat the rows of silent granite in your average cemetery? And who doesn’t want to be a tree after they die?
Recompose is working on becoming a reality in its hometown of Seattle, and we’re closely following their work. Founder Katrina Spade has been developing and fine tuning what the final process will be, and also to make this alternative method of human disposition legal in Washington State.
I know you’re supposed to open with a joke, but I’ll leave you with this terrible one I remember from childhood. I apologise in advance. Q: What is Beethoven doing now? A: Decomposing.
Susan Koswan is a University of Waterloo grad with a sustainable business management certificate from Conestoga College. She lives in Kitchener and can be reached at [email protected].