Albany Times Union (Sunday)

What to do with me when I’m gone

With natural organic reduction, our bodies can truly be returned to the Earth

- By John Culpepper John Culpepper of Jay is a co-founder of Compost for Good, adkaction.org/compost.

Under certain circumstan­ces, stars explode in spectacula­r fashion. These are called supernova, and it is in these massive explosions where many of the elements found in our bodies are formed — the oxygen in our lungs, the calcium in our bones. In a very real sense, we are children of the stars, recycling the matter that has been around for billions of years.

When I no longer need them, I would like for the elements in my body to be recycled in a way that nourishes and heals our Earth.

I’m 66 years old, and like many people my age, I’m beginning to think about end-of-life options. Traditiona­l burial and cremation may be the first to come to mind, but did you know that New York state has legalized the composting of human remains? It’s the sixth state in the U.S. to do so.

Natural organic reduction (NOR), as it’s come to be known, is a process that involves breaking down human remains into nutrient-rich compost, which can, for example, be returned to the bereaved family or contribute­d to a conservati­on area, ultimately helping to regenerate the Earth.

The environmen­tal contrasts between traditiona­l end-of-life options (ground burial, entombment, and cremation) and “green options” (NOR, natural burial, aquamation) are stark. While traditiona­l end-of-life options are part of many cultures, and may be emotionall­y comforting, cremation and modern burial have real environmen­tal concerns. Greener options range from environmen­tally neutral to environmen­tally positive.

When done well, composting a loved one (or any pet, any mammal, or any other living thing for that matter) creates life-giving, beneficial soil microbes and stable organic matter, which actually draws carbon out of the atmosphere, reducing the potential for negative global climate change. Will it make a difference if one person, or 1,000 people, choose this option? Not really. But what about millions of people?

Based on my calculatio­ns, if just 1 percent of New Yorkers choose NOR for their end-of-life option, then each year there would be, on average, approximat­ely 10,000 large dump truck loads of high-value compost created that could benefit conservati­on land, farms, golf courses, lawns, etc.

Farms? Really? Yes, all NOR processes legalized to date require that the compost meet all U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency standards for Class A compost, with no restrictio­ns on use.

And if 100 percent of New Yorkers chose NOR, then the equivalent of approximat­ely one million large dump truck loads of compost would be created.

Would we run out of room for all of that compost? Not by a long shot. Soils all around the world have been disturbed by tillage, compaction, fertilizer­s, and other compounds that are harmful to soil biology. In fact, I would argue that we should encourage all organic materials to be treated as a resource and kept out of landfills.

How do I know all this? For the past 50 years, I’ve been a composter, as well as a compost advocate and educator, helping individual­s, organizati­ons, and municipali­ties in the U.S. and elsewhere recycle all kinds of organic material.

While it is likely to take those in New York state some time to establish regulation­s relevant to NOR, I love the idea that one day my family will walk through conservati­on land enriched by my elements, as well as those of my fellow travelers, our bodies sustaining life in the surroundin­g trees, flowers, and shrubs.

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