Keep calm and do the science

Charles 4 Comments
Charles

A cryomator. Pic source

 

Well-meaning ignorance fuels lots of heated debate in Funeralworld. Broadsides of stats are exchanged, but how many of them are verifiable? In one thing we can trust: probably no one’s yet done the science. 

Take the following press release from the respected news agency Reuters: 

Globally, cremation emits over 6.8 million metric tonnes of carbon dioxide every year, accounting for around 0.02 percent of world carbon dioxide emissions, experts estimate.

Typical. Authoritative-sounding stats undermined by the last two words. Substitute ‘some people guess’. 

What follows, though, will interest those who have been following the freeze-dry saga and its two players, promession and its successor, cryomation. We’ve always been fans of the Cryomation people here at the GFG.

Suffolk-based Cryomation Ltd has developed a technology which freezes a body using liquid nitrogen until it is brittle, removes metal elements and turns the remains into a powder which could be composted, buried in a natural graveyard or scattered.

Having proven the technology, the firm is now seeking 1.5 million pounds to build the first unit.

We believe this to be correct.

“The cryomation process has been talked about for far too long but never been delivered,” said Paul Smith, business development manager at parent company IRTL.

Right, Paul. Yes, we can read between the lines!

“Our technology (..) can remove moisture at a cost-effective rate and at a suitable speed to make it a viable alternative to cremation with lots of environmental benefits,” he added.

Excellent. And the first part of the next sentence certainly rings true:

A report last year by Dutch research group TMO said resomation and cryomation had the lowest environmental impact of all funeral methods and burial had the highest.

What?!? Burial’s the worst of the lot??

Indeed, burial is not a “green” option. It takes up space underground, the decaying process emits the greenhouse gas methane and caskets use a lot of steel, copper, bronze or wood.

Think what we could do with all that underground space. As for methane, is this, someone please tell us, a graveyard myth? If it’s a myth it certainly once had me fooled but I think, am I right? that it’s been exploded. Does it actually pose any risk at all? If it does, the solution lies in ensuring that buried dead people enjoy aerobic decomposition by burying them nearer the surface. As for caskets, well, we needn’t bother ourselves with them, we’re mostly good ole toe-pincher people over here. 

The effect of formaldehyde-based embalming chemicals when they leak into the soil and air through burial is also thought to be potentially damaging but needs more research.

Thought to be, eh? We’ll wait for them to finish their ‘more research’ if you don’t mind. Uttering hunches while they’re at it rather negates the point of doing it, yes? Surely it can’t be that flipping difficult to discover what happens to formaldehyde when it seeps into the earth. 

If any reader can help us out with some verifiable facts in these areas, you’ll be doing us all a great kindness. 

Full story here

 

Resomation: all that is left. Pic source

 

 

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Ru Callender
11 years ago

I’m a big fan of the possibilities for both new processes, but it is a terrible shame that in the desperate rush to win the high ground Resomation has resorted to talking bollocks. As you rightly point out, this myth about graves taking up valuable space is just that. What is taking up valuable space is out of town retail ‘villages’. Bodies do not have to be embalmed, wood can be sustainable and the low tech nature of the whole process wins every time. Such a shame they couldn’t just stick to bugging up their product, rather than dissing the… Read more »

Cynthia Beal
11 years ago

Hi Charles, Just found this – I really should visit more often! Anyhow, I’m responding to the charge that burial is more environmentally negative than the above programs. Of course, you know how I feel about THAT. However, my obvious predisposition aside, I think I’ve got a couple of objective points I can put out there that might be useful. 1) Any process has within it what is known as “embodied energy.” This is the footprint of the total costs of using the process, and when the process requires a machine-based technology as compared to a natural process that comes… Read more »

Cynthia Again
Cynthia Again
11 years ago

Oh yes, another bit I noticed — formaldehyde, as far as I can tell, is not a by-product of natural burial. It’s a funeral component and has nothing to do with burial. With respect to burial, formaldehyde doesn’t “leak into the air” as the reporter states; that’s patently absurd. And, as I’ve said many times, I’m not so sure it has a negative impact when buried as it rapidly converts to base elements (water, carbon, etc.) almost immediately. I keep asking people to refrain from citing it as a leachate danger until studies prove it, but that’s like whistling in… Read more »

Ethan
Ethan
6 years ago

Seems like none of the science has ever been done on any of the freezing and breaking up corpse type options – unlike resomation which definitely exists and has been done but even now, years on, would benefit from some good comparative data rather than that rather flawed TMO data. The Law Commission needs to get its science head on though. Someone has been fooling them. There is no evidence that Promession or Cryomation are being used or developed anywhere in the world. See this published by the Law Commission this month: A MODERN FRAMEWORK FOR dDISPOSING OF THE DEAD:… Read more »