The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Tsukuba start-up launches ashes into orbit for space funeral service

- The Yomiuri Shimbun

A start-up in Tsukuba, Ibaraki Prefecture, has launched a new funeral business: space burial.

In early April, Space NTK Co. successful­ly sent into space some of the cremated remains of 10 people and pets mounted on a rocket of the U.S. space company SpaceX.

“I want to make my daughter’s dream of ying in the sky come true.” Teruaki Nagakura, a 54-year-old company employee in Nabari, Mie Prefecture, had this wish a er his 7-year-old daughter died of a brain tumor in 2009. So he entrusted some of his daughter’s ashes, which he had kept at home, to the company.

e remains were stored in a special container, which in turn was placed into a metal box.

e box was loaded into the upper part of the rocket, which was launched from Florida on April 1. e upper part was detached from the main body of the rocket. According to the company, the detached section with the metal box will orbit at an altitude of about 500 to 600 kilometers for several years and then burn up when it reenters the Earth’s atmosphere.

Nagakura also put some of his own hair into the box, along with that of his wife and one of his daughter’s grandmothe­rs. “We can have a family trip in space,” he said.

Space NTK President Tomoko Kasai originally ran a company o ering more convention­al funerary services. When she was a child, her mother told her, “When people die, they become stars and watch over people on the ground.” is vividly remembered remark led her to start the space burial business in 2017. In the autumn of 2020, Kasai concluded a contract with SpaceX to use its rockets, with help from acquaintan­ces as well as through such e orts as attending internatio­nal conference­s to establish connection­s.

Companies in the United States and other countries have also o ered similar space funeral services.

Kasai watched the rocket’s launch in Florida. “I was deeply moved to witness the moment when Japan’s space funeral service began,” she said. “ere is no better memorial service than to be able to remember the deceased every night as they shine in the night sky.”

e cost of a space burial is ¥550,000, including tax, for a partial burial of up to 50 grams of remains. e next launch for the company’s space burial is planned for January next year.

“We want to make a space burial a new option for natural burial,” Kasai said. (May 8)

 ?? Yomiuri Shimbun photos ?? Above: Tomoko Kasai, president of Space NTK Co., holds a container in which cremated human or pet remains may be placed, in Tsukuba, Ibaraki Prefecture.
Right: A special container used for a space burial
Yomiuri Shimbun photos Above: Tomoko Kasai, president of Space NTK Co., holds a container in which cremated human or pet remains may be placed, in Tsukuba, Ibaraki Prefecture. Right: A special container used for a space burial

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