"Going" Green in the EU ... (Full Version)

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FirmhandKY -> "Going" Green in the EU ... (7/11/2010 5:46:34 PM)

'Ecological' plan sees dead put in dunny
July 08, 2010 2:28PM
    * Corpse plan hailed as 'ecological'
   * Suggests flushing human remains into sewage
   * Critics brand procedure 'disturbing'

UNDERTAKERS could dissolve corpses in chemicals then flush the remains into the sewage system under plans being studied by European bureaucrats.

The controversial method has been hailed as a much more ecologically sound method of dealing with the dead.

But critics have branded the procedure, driven by a Scottish company, as "disturbing" and claim it shows no respect for the recently departed.

The process is called chemical hydrolysis and has been used in the destruction of cattle found to have mad cow disease.

The body is placed in a silk bag, itself placed within a metal cage frame. This is then loaded into a Resomator.

The machine is filled with a mixture of water and potassium hydroxide, and set to 180C.

The end result is a small quantity of green-brown liquid containing amino acids, peptides, sugars and salts.

Soft, porous white bone remains are easily crushed, and can then be returned to the next of kin.

The liquid can be recycled back to the ecosystem by being applied to a memorial garden or forest or simply put into the sewage system.

Sandy Sullivan, managing director of Resomation, said:

"(People) like the environmental benefits and the thought of going the water route, as opposed to burial or fire."

Is this to be the new "Green" sacrament?  [8D][:D]

Firm




SL4V3M4YB3 -> RE: "Going" Green in the EU ... (7/11/2010 5:49:54 PM)

There are worse ways to deal with a corpse, say sticking it in the ground and expecting it to disappear immediately or burning what you can and grinding down what you can't




Lucylastic -> RE: "Going" Green in the EU ... (7/11/2010 5:50:42 PM)

wont be long before it changes into "Soylent green" and fed to aminals... ??? now theres a consiwacy to work on
[:D]




pahunkboy -> RE: "Going" Green in the EU ... (7/11/2010 5:54:15 PM)

Or just put it in cement for the roads.




Arpig -> RE: "Going" Green in the EU ... (7/11/2010 6:06:01 PM)

Sounds like a sensible method to me





DomKen -> RE: "Going" Green in the EU ... (7/11/2010 9:36:46 PM)

Better than pumping the corpse full of toxins and burying it in an overpriced box.




willbeurdaddy -> RE: "Going" Green in the EU ... (7/11/2010 10:57:59 PM)

Burn em and generate electricity from it.




LadyEllen -> RE: "Going" Green in the EU ... (7/12/2010 12:21:41 AM)

http://www.resomation.com/index_files/Page347.htm

A funeral involving resomation is exactly the same as one involving cremation until the point at which the coffin is committed from view. The coffin is placed in a special chamber and, instead of fire, resomation uses a water and alkali based method which uses the same chemistry as in natural decomposition but is much quicker.



Why Choose Resomation?
 
 
 

The resomation process takes roughly the same time as cremation and the funeral ceremony will be the same. However, it uses less energy than cremation and produces significantly less CO2 and avoids putting mercury and other harmful contaminants into the atmosphere.


What is left after the process?

After resomation, bone remains are left behind in the form of pure white ash. As with cremation these remains can be placed in an urn and returned to the loved ones. Relative to cremated ash, resomated ash is fine and pure white as can be seen in the photographs on the right of the page. 
http://www.ecogeek.org/content/view/1529/

So far, the process is only available in the United States, where more than 2,000 resomations have been performed so far, but the Glasgow-based company is only a year old, and Sullivan tells me that they are close to having the process specified as legal in the United Kingdom (bureaucracy at work!).




flcouple2009 -> RE: "Going" Green in the EU ... (7/12/2010 5:12:28 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY
But critics have branded the procedure, driven by a Scottish company, as "disturbing" and claim it shows no respect for the recently departed


The "dead" don't care.  Funerals are for the living not the dead.




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