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United States

Oregon Has Legalized Human Composting (vice.com) 95

Oregon is now the third state in the US to allow a deathcare option that's gaining popularity for its environmental benefits: human composting. From a report: Gov. Katie Brown signed House Bill 2574 into law on Tuesday, adding natural organic reduction to the range of approved after-life options in the west coast state. Sponsored and developed by Rep. Pam Marsh (D - Southern Jackson County), the bill met Oregonians' growing interest in sustainable alternatives to traditional deathcare. "This is a hard issue for people to think about; it's not a decision that any of us get to avoid," Marsh told Motherboard over the phone. "It has an appeal, certainly not to all consumers, but to many of us who are really looking for ways to think about how our footprint on the earth continues after life is gone."

The move heeds a growing call from environmentalists across the country to clean up the end-of-life industry. The most common methods of body disposal come with hefty environmental impacts: traditional burials, in which a corpse is embalmed with formaldehyde and placed in a casket underground, permanently occupy large swaths of land and have been found to leach toxins into nearby soil and waterways. Cremation -- in which a body is burned into ash -- is an energy suck and emits damaging pollutants and carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, contributing to global warming.
The move follows Washington passing a similar law in 2019 and Colorado last month.
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Oregon Has Legalized Human Composting

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  • Tie one end of a bungie cord to me. Strap the other end to a hydrogen filled dirigible, covered in fireworks. Douse me with gasoline. Send up the dirigible until the bungie cord is fully stretched out. Light me on fire, release the straps, and watch my flaming corpse rocket into the air and blow up the dirigible.

    It's a simple request, really. And who doesn't love fireworks?

  • by awwshit ( 6214476 ) on Friday June 18, 2021 @05:05PM (#61499914)

    How long does it take and can cadaver dogs still find human remains?

  • This is my plan (Score:5, Interesting)

    by sarren1901 ( 5415506 ) on Friday June 18, 2021 @05:21PM (#61499942)

    I use to want to go the cremation route but when I started hearing about this I was sold with almost no convincing. I mean, I know my cadaver is just an empty shell once I die but wouldn't it be cool to be composted, then the dirt that's left behind used to plant a tree with a little placard with my name.

    It will help the environment while at the same time letting me checkoff the vanity box one last time when I die. Sounds good to me.

    • Re: (Score:1, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Good for the environment? I doubt all those pharmaceutical laden bodies are good for the environment or the safety of your plants or that the rain leeching them into the groundwater is going to be good for us either.
    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      The cremation route is safer. Just like consuming human flesh, not disposing of it carefully is a general health problem. Infectious agents, generally speaking it is safer all round to combust it, any infectious agents eliminated, a matter of good habit. We can take greater risk with DNA we do not share infectious agents with. Time it with the sunrise, symbolic like, so using mirrors, the rising sun, the solar oven sends you off to the new world. The solar crematorium located with nice views to the east for

    • by randjh ( 7163909 )

      I have no guilt about going the cremation route. For a first-world urban dweller, I'll bet my carbon footprint is in the lower 50%. Non-driver, don't travel, recycle where I think it makes sense.

      I'm willing to splurge a bit on my exit.

  • Eeeewww. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by goombah99 ( 560566 ) on Friday June 18, 2021 @05:23PM (#61499948)

    I'm still getting use to the idea that my garden compost from the counting comes from the sewage plant. I probably contributed to my own compost I guess. But growing tomatoes in Grandma is just sickening.

    • And yet, some of the the water molecules that you drink every day in your Coca Cola will have been peed out through many creatures, almost certainly including some molecules that have been drunk from a warthog's blood by a leech.

      Don't drink Coca Cola. Trust me.

      • People still choose to swim in oceans, despite the well-known fact that ocean water is 1% rain, 99% fish pee.

        And the rain is mostly just evaporated fish pee.

      • by antdude ( 79039 )

        Don't eat, drink, breathe, etc. :P

        • Don't eat, drink, breathe, etc. :P

          Watch it sunshine, with an attitude like that you'll die and start producing methane. If you do that we'll send the green police round to get you, and where will you be then?

    • by gtwrek ( 208688 )

      Doesn't even make me a little squeamish harvesting my tomatoes from something like this. Other, perfectly acceptable fertilizers (Think worm-tea, chicken manure, milorganite) come from things normally thought of as "waste". And it's much better from the chemical concoctions being applied to traditional commercial crops...

  • by tippen ( 704534 ) on Friday June 18, 2021 @05:25PM (#61499952)
    They should follow Louisiana's example. If you've never been on a cemetery tour in New Orleans, it's fascinating!
    • Veritable above-ground "hydrocarbon storage facilities" to be sure... even the non-Catholics know not to cremate that shit unless you want a grease fire.

  • by wakeboarder ( 2695839 ) on Friday June 18, 2021 @05:38PM (#61499992)

    until stuff like bacteria gets recycled back into the food supply. Let's keep people a little deeper in the ground or burn them up.

  • by Thaelon ( 250687 ) on Friday June 18, 2021 @05:39PM (#61499996)

    The worst part about this is the Rep referring to people as 'consumers'. What you do with your body after death is a personal matter.

    • The worst part about this is the Rep referring to people as 'consumers'. What you do with your body after death is a personal matter.

      Technically, you are being consumed. It just take a while.

  • Need a law? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Friday June 18, 2021 @05:39PM (#61500004) Homepage

    This is basically the oldest, most basic, primitive method of a funeral. It's basically "Just take my dead body and bury it." Yeah, they heat it up to 131 to kill most diseases and mix in some wood and 'good bacteria', but that is about it. The fact it needs a new law is how conservatives convince people that government regulation.

    The truth is you should need a toxic waste disposal license to buy a person the traditional way - with cancer causing formaldehyde, in a box full of expensive metal, plastic, and toxic varnishes.

    • Re:Need a law? (Score:4, Informative)

      by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Friday June 18, 2021 @06:04PM (#61500062)
      No, the article says "green burial" (just bury the body in a safe place) was already a thing, but composting is different, they put the body into a cylinder with wood chips and moisture and turn it like a rock tumbler and whammo, after a few weeks, you're soil.
    • The fact it needs a new law is how conservatives convince people that government regulation.

      Please complete the sentence.

      • No thats the current extent to which the left compulsively projects.

        As pointed out, "green" burials were already allowed. Clearly its been the left limiting burial practices.
    • Put your body on an Ant mound. Ants will bury the flesh, and leave a nice clean skeleton that can be placed in the family closet. And they will not touch mercury or gold fillings, pacemakers or implants. Microwave bones to be sure (TB in hipbones) Job done. Second way is American vultures. They do a good job too. Third way is drill a vertical hole and drop body 30 feet down. Record GPS location. Plant Forrest above. Fourth way. Export body to India, where your kidneys and organs will be recycled. Fifth wa
      • there was a Mexican cartel in or around Tijuana which was doing option 5 to its enemies a few years ago
  • It is every citizen's final duty to go into the tanks, and become one with all the people.

    -- Chairman Sheng-ji Yang, "Ethics for Tomorrow"

    • Do you want to know something that is absolutely crazy? I posted the same thing at 6:43, I never saw your post because I was looking up the reference. We posted the exact same thing at almost the same time.

  • "It is every citizens final duty to go into the tanks and become one with all people" - Chairman Yang

    https://alphacentauri.fandom.c... [fandom.com]

  • Me? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 18, 2021 @05:45PM (#61500014)

    I want my body dumped 10 miles into the woods and picked apart by coyotes and vultures.

  • Soylent Green

  • Are they planning on having the meat and produce labeled - grown using human bodies for fertiliser.
  • Milwaukee sells their human shit as "Milorganite". Oregon can call their dead body compost "Soil Soylent".
  • by dyfet ( 154716 ) on Friday June 18, 2021 @06:01PM (#61500058) Homepage

    In Jersey, this has been offered as a "service" by various local "businessmen" for many decades....

    1st rule of Jersey; no witnesses.
    2nd rule of Jersey; see first.

  • Yeah, no. (Score:2, Funny)

    by eaglesrule ( 4607947 )

    Compost is for kitchen waste.

    My ass is going to have its molecular bonds broken down in a nice cheerful exothermic reaction; the bigger, the better. Preferably alongside drunken brawls, blackjack, and hookers.

    Have some dignity, for crying out loud.

    • Back of the envelope calculation says that for a 170 pound corpse at 25 C, we need around 108 MJ of endotherm to boil the water out before you can begin to think about combustion. That's 30 kWh, or around $6.30 at my local utility rate of $0.21/kWh. Or 2.8 liters of Diesel fuel (0.7 gal at $4.15/gal locally), or $3.07, liberating around 7.5 kg fossil CO2, added to extraction, refining, and transport burdens. At 18% body fat, we get 18416 g fat * 38.93 kJ/g combustion exotherm (lab conditions rather than
    • by pjt33 ( 739471 )

      Have you managed to find an undertaker who can get a hydrogen bomb on the black market?

      • At some point exothermic reactions stop being 'cheerful' and become terrifying. So, no nuclear explosions at the wake. Besides, think of the hookers, you insensitive clod!

  • by peterww ( 6558522 ) on Friday June 18, 2021 @06:33PM (#61500122)

    "Hey! Here’s another place we can put some low-cost housing: CEMETARIES!!! There’s another idea whose time has passed! Saving all the dead people up for one part of town?! What the hell kind of a medieval, superstitious, religious, bullshit idea is that?! Plough these motherfuckers up, plough them into the streams and rivers of America, we need that phosphorous for farming! If we’re going to recycle, let's get serious."
    - George Carlin

    • "Hey! Here’s another place we can put some low-cost housing: CEMETARIES!!! There’s another idea whose time has passed! Saving all the dead people up for one part of town?! What the hell kind of a medieval, superstitious, religious, bullshit idea is that?! Plough these motherfuckers up, plough them into the streams and rivers of America, we need that phosphorous for farming! If we’re going to recycle, let's get serious." - George Carlin

      One of the greatest comedians ever. Also, becoming one of the greatest prophets ever.

      Think if he were still with us. His rants would be legendary in this fucked-up world.

      A 3-hour podcast with Joe Rogan would last a week, and end with "I'm just gettin' fucking started."

      • One of the greatest comedians ever. Also, becoming one of the greatest prophets ever.

        Eh?

        Apart from the phosphorus thing, exhuming bodies moving cemeteries out of the way is not a new thing.

        • George made the specific point/prediction of recycling fresh humans. Which IS a new thing.

          Dismissing that as a "phosphorus thing", is like being excited for a Girl Scout cookie called Soylent Green.

    • I actually like the idea of cemeteries - it uses religious people's superstitions, to leave a small area from being turned into a parking lot.

      Yes the use of formaldehyde, caskets, and grave stones are psychotic with our current unsustainable overpopulation; but if my body could be dumped in shallow hole (after organ donation and/or scientific study/medical student training) in a cemetery, and a slow growing tree planted over it (no plaque) - then that area could be a net good. Being a cemetery, that tree is

      • Wouldn't really be feasible without significant changes to cemeteries. First they'd have to space the graves really far apart, or in a few years they'd have to cut down trees. Second they'd have to impose restrictions on what kinds of trees, or they could end up killing each other, shading out saplings, etc. You'd have to bequeath a pretty good chunk of cash for the maintenance of the tree, both through its first 5-10 years and afterwards. And of course they'd need to be trimmed and sometimes removed if the

        • Yeah, cemeteries would need "forest" areas, and that'll probably not happen because there's less money or tithes to be made from that.

          Indigenous trees don't need any maintenance - they've existed for millions of years before hominids even evolved.

          The problem with just planting a tree without the religious people considering the area "consecrated", is that after you're dead it can just be cut down for a quick buck.

  • where the real human garbage is.
  • The hippies already have a head start on composting.

  • I mean, after I've been told I've already destroyed enough bathrooms (restrooms, loos, WCs, whatever).
  • by darmou ( 34207 ) on Friday June 18, 2021 @07:06PM (#61500188) Homepage

    I'm dying to find more about this option to be more sustainable in death.

  • BULLSHIT! (Score:2, Funny)

    by Gravis Zero ( 934156 )

    Oh sure, everyone's happy when Oregon does it but when I do it then it's "premeditated murder". Is there no justice in this nation?!

  • by holophrastic ( 221104 ) on Friday June 18, 2021 @07:28PM (#61500222)

    I'm not so interested in feeding the insects. I prefer mammals. Seems easier too.

    There are coyotes just across the street.

    No prep necessary. No transportation. No digging.

    Just toss me into the field. I'll be gone in thirty minutes. You'll know, from the howls.

    And I'm in a major city, outside a metropolis, albeit at the edge of the suburbs.

  • by zenlessyank ( 748553 ) on Friday June 18, 2021 @07:37PM (#61500248)

    Just have to find someone who doesn't mind cleaning it when done.

  • Most states require that death certificates can only come from funeral homes, and in many cases the minimum charge is about $10,000. This ghoulish and corrupt death-government complex should be annihilated.
    • And the deceased should care about a death certificate why? Seems to me that if the government refuses to issue one then the deceased can't be considered dead and it's up to the government to prove they are if they want to eg. cut off SSI payments or levy an inheritance tax on the estate. I have a power of attorney set up if I'm ever incapacitated and can't handle my own affairs, and if I'm not officially dead then the transfers of all my assets to beneficiaries is just... me gifting stuff to people. If the

      • ..because without the death certificate, your loved ones dont get your life insurance policy payout.. the one you took out to make sure they would be ok after you pass... dumbass
  • "And in the early to mid 21st century, class, the environmental fads got out of control, with people letting their bodies rot away instead of being traditionally buried."

    "But what did they have against carbon sequestration?"

    "They were idiots. Moreover, when nanotech became capable of reinvigorating dessicated brain cells, many of our ancestors were techno-resurrected. But not them."

    "Sounds like we dodged a bullet."

    "Yes, Timmy. We did."

  • by codeButcher ( 223668 ) on Saturday June 19, 2021 @07:33AM (#61501218)
    Reminds me of Joe Jenkins describing in his Humanure Handbook how he also adds the odd dead animal to his compost heap. Facinating read, with some references to studies. And quite opinionated. (It can be read online for free.)
  • So.. how do I do this? Do I go to the morgue or Home Depot?

  • Hmm... It seems there are quite a number of members of Congress who are already composting, not to mention the president.

  • by Big Nemo '60 ( 749108 ) on Saturday June 19, 2021 @02:49PM (#61501924) Journal

    Regardless of quotes from TV shows, any conceivable self-sustaining (i.e. not depending from a constant flow of supplies from Mother Earth) human environment in outer space will need something like this (among many other things).

    (Personally I love the idea here and now; but I am afraid I am too old to see it happen where I live, in time for my departure)

  • Oregon is going to become a mecca for gang and mob killings because human remains detection canines won't be able to distinguish between a composted human and one that was buried for nefarious reasons.

You can write a small letter to Grandma in the filename. -- Forbes Burkowski, CS, University of Washington

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