Los Angeles Times

New burial option: Composting

- By Melody Gutierrez

SACRAMENTO — California will begin allowing an alternativ­e burial method known as human composting in 2027, under a bill signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom on Sunday.

Assembly Bill 351 by Assemblyme­mber Cristina Garcia (D-Bell Gardens) will create a state regulatory process for natural organic reduction, a method in which human remains naturally decompose over a 30to-45-day period after being placed in a steel vessel and buried in wood chips, alfalfa and other biodegrada­ble materials. The nutrientde­nse soil created by the process can then be returned to families or donated to conservati­on land.

Supporters say it’s an eco-friendly alternativ­e to traditiona­l end-of-life options. Cremation, for example, is an energy-intense process that produces carbon dioxide emissions, while traditiona­l burial uses chemicals to embalm bodies and a nonbiodegr­adable coffin to store them.

California will join Washington, Colorado, Oregon and Vermont in allowing human composting.

“With climate change and sea-level rise as very real threats to our environmen­t, this is an alternativ­e method of final dispositio­n that won’t contribute emissions into our atmosphere,” Garcia said in a statement.

It was Garcia’s third attempt to approve human composting in California after previous attempts failed in 2020 and 2021. Her office said for every person

who is composted versus buried or cremated, the environmen­tal effect is immediate. The companies that offer human composting say that for every person who chooses the option over burial or cremation, it will save the equivalent of 1 metric ton of carbon from entering the environmen­t.

“This new law will provide California’s 39 million residents with a meaningful funeral option that offers significan­t savings in carbon emissions, water and land usage over convention­al burial or cremation,” said Katrina Spade, chief executive of Recompose, a Seattle company that was the first funeral home in the country to build a human composting facility. “Our end-of-life choices matter in the effort to heal this planet.”

The California Catholic Conference opposed the bill, saying the process “reduces the human body to simply a disposable commodity.”

“The practice of respectful­ly burying the bodies or honoring the ashes of the deceased comports with the virtually universal norm of reverence and care toward the deceased,” said the group, which is the public policy voice of the Catholic Church in California.

Newsom signed the bill without comment.

Human composting is slightly less expensive than a casket funeral, but at about $5,000 to $7,000, it is more costly than cremation. The soil created by the human composting process could be used on private land with permission and otherwise would be subject to the same restrictio­ns as scattering cremated remains in the state.

“This is a question of consumer choice, and California­ns should have access to a death care option that is natural, carbon neutral and a sustainabl­e alternativ­e to cremation or burial,” said Tom Harries, co-founder of Earth Funeral, which offers the burial option. “Earth Funeral looks forward to bringing soil transforma­tion to California so that anyone can make this choice for themselves or to honor their loved ones.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States