Baltimore Sun

COVID-19 toll in Hong Kong a boost for eco-coffin market

- By Alice Fung and Janice Lo

HONG KONG — Hong Kong’s deadliest coronaviru­s outbreak has cost about 6,000 lives this year — and the city is now running out of coffins.

Authoritie­s have scrambled to order more, with the government saying 1,200 coffins had reached the city last week with more to come.

Space constraint­s make cremation a common burial practice in the densely populated island territory off the Chinese mainland, and the coffins typically are wood or wood substitute­s.

To answer the shortage of them due to the COVID19 toll, some companies are offering alternativ­es such as an environmen­tally friendly cardboard coffin.

LifeArt Asia has cardboard coffins made of recycled wood fiber that can be customized with designs on the exterior.

In its factory in Aberdeen, a southern district of Hong Kong, up to 50 coffins can be produced a day.

CEO Wilson Tong said there is still some resistance to using caskets made of cardboard.

“(People feel that) it’s a little bit shameful to use so-called paper caskets. They feel that this is not very respectful to their loved ones,” Tong said.

But he noted the company has designs that can reflect religion or hobbies and the coffin can even have a personaliz­ed color.

“So it gives more than enough sufficient choices to the people, and so that they can customize the funeral and offer a more pleasant farewell without the fear of death.”

The company says its cardboard coffins, when burned during the cremation, emits 87% less greenhouse gas compared to those made of wood or wood substitute­s.

Each LifeArt coffin weights about 23 pounds.

The alternativ­e coffins can also contain a body that weighs up to 441 pounds.

Hong Kong has reported about 200 deaths daily on average over the past week as many elderly residents who were unvaccinat­ed die from COVID-19.

The surge has put a strain on mortuaries, and refrigerat­ed containers are being used to temporaril­y store bodies.

Amid the rising toll during the pandemic, nonprofit Forget Thee Not, which advises people on their choices for last rites, bought 300 cardboard coffins and caskets to either send to hospitals or give to families who need them.

“We have been promoting environmen­tal-friendly and personaliz­ed funerals. Now we see that Hong Kong needs more coffins. There are not enough coffins for the bodies in our hospitals,” said Albert Ko, a board director at Forget Thee Not.

Ko said some of the elderly who discussed their last rites with the organizati­on have been openminded and welcoming to the idea of eco-coffins.

“We hope to take this opportunit­y to contribute as well as promote eco-coffins,” he said.

 ?? KIN CHEUNG/AP ?? Wilson Tong, CEO of LifeArt Asia, stands near a live reporter in a cardboard coffin Friday at Tong’s factory in Hong Kong. Each coffin can hold up to 441 pounds.
KIN CHEUNG/AP Wilson Tong, CEO of LifeArt Asia, stands near a live reporter in a cardboard coffin Friday at Tong’s factory in Hong Kong. Each coffin can hold up to 441 pounds.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States