The Guardian (USA)

From cradle to compost: the disruptors who want to make death greener

- Kari Paul

Americans are looking for greener ways to die, and a new wave of deathcare startups are rising to the occasion.

After death, bodies are typically handled in one of two ways: embalmed and buried in a casket, or incinerate­d and turned into ashes. But both of these options have contribute­d to the environmen­tal crisis – with fossil fuelintens­ive cremation emitting chemicals such as carbon monoxide into the air, and burials taking up large swathes of land.

As interest in alternativ­es rises, startups aiming to disrupt these practices are gaining steam. New York in January became the sixth state in the US to legalize human composting, also known as “natural organic reduction”, which uses heat and oxygen to speed up the microbial process that converts bodies into soil.

The growth in demand comes in part due to Covid-19, experts say. The pandemic brought death to the forefront of the public consciousn­ess and exposed concerns about its environmen­tal destructio­n, as places like Los Angeles had to suspend air pollution rules to allow an influx of bodies to be processed.

Human composters are pitching themselves as part of the solution – and trying to dismantle the funeral industry in the process. The potential to alter an age-old practice has brought together former Silicon Valley types, celebrity investors and missiondri­ven entreprene­urs as interested in lofty green goals as they are in changing our relationsh­ip to death.

Providers say they are seeing unpreceden­ted demand. The human composting startup Return Home has seen 20 people from California, where human composting is not yet legal, transport loved ones to the company facilities in Washington state – including five who drove with bodies in tow.

“The fact that we are now seeing so many California­ns flocking to Return Home in order to pre-purchase services for themselves and their loved ones is proof-positive that [our technology] is the future of funeral services,” said Micah Truman, the company’s CEO and founder.

Founders paint a picture of an industry that is both collegial and competitiv­e, where entreprene­urs connect at meetups and through group chats but often find themselves looking over their shoulders for people entering the industry with less altruistic views. This is especially true as old guards of the funeral industry seek to cash in on the new trend, Truman said.

“It’s interestin­g because to create disruption, we are going to have to have outsiders coming in,” he said. “Because everyone in the funeral industry is so invested in existing technologi­es, you need outsiders to help with thinking outside the box – no pun intended.”

An industry poised to explode

Natural organic reduction is a relatively new process, recognized throughout the industry as having been pioneered by a woman named Katrina Spade. In her graduate thesis in 2013, Spade investigat­ed methods farmers had been using to compost animals and found they could be applied to human bodies. When remains are placed in a container with natural materials like straw and wood chips, the microbial process that converts bodies into soil can be accelerate­d. Composting a human currently takes eight to 12 weeks, and is estimated to use just one-eighth the energy required for cremation.

In the ensuing years, Spade worked with lobbyists, lawmakers and investors to legalize natural organic reduction in Washington in 2019. By December 2020, her company Recompose had made it available to consumers for $7,000 – in line with the median cost of cremation, at $6,971, and the median cost of a funeral with burial, at $7,848, not including cemetery plot costs, which can run upwards of several thousand dollars.

In the years since, at least three

companies have sprung up in Washington alone, some of which have secured millions in funding from venture capital firms. And with more states catching on, entreprene­urs say the industry is livelier than ever.

At least six states have legalized the process so far, and California, the most populous US state, will allow human composting in 2027 after a law passed last year goes into effect, opening up the potential for millions of new customers.

“In Washington, where human composting has been legal for some time, the industry is concentrat­ed and hyper-competitiv­e,” Truman said. “But I’m sure everyone is going to be doing pushups and getting ready to go to California as soon as it opens.”

The commercial­ization of alternativ­e deathcare is already creating tension in an industry built on a fraught product.It’s difficult to get people to talk about death, much less invest in it. This has left deathcare entreprene­urs and advocates for greener death grappling to balance altruistic goals with the demands of startup culture, according to Caitlin Doughty, a mortician and author of several books about death and the funeral industry.

“There is a newer disconnect between the fundamenta­l idea of ritual around death in human composting versus a bizarre appeal to Silicon Valley that is emerging,” she said. “It is a fascinatin­g developmen­t.”

With the traditiona­l funeral market worth $20bn, it is no surprise new technologi­es have piqued the interest of tech investors. A 2019 survey from the funeral directors’ associatio­n found that nearly 52% of Americans expressed interest in green-burial options, and experts have estimated that the emerging market opened by legalizati­on efforts in Massachuse­tts, Illinois, California and New York could create a market value in the $1bn range.

There is also a growing market in Gen Z and millennial­s, who have been called the “death positive” generation – more willing to discuss afterlife plans at younger ages and try green alternativ­es. Startups are rising to the occasion with social media outreach: Return Home has more than 617,000 followers on TikTok, where its employees answer questions like “what happens to hip replacemen­ts in the human composting process?” and “how does it smell during the process?”

Human composting is not the only alternativ­e deathcare option that is seeing increased interest. Others include aquamation, a process legal in 28 states by which the body is turned into liquid and then powder. Green burial, in which bodies are interred without embalming or a casket and allowed to decompose naturally over time, is legal in almost all states, but laws vary as to where the body can be buried.

But of all the alternativ­e options, human composting seems to have gotten the most attention, said Doughty.

“I do see the composting space as being uniquely competitiv­e in a way that I haven’t seen with [other processes] like aquamation or even cremation,” she said. “It seems uniquely positioned at a nexus of climate change policy and new technology that appeals to the Silicon Valley ethos.”

A focus on ethics

The environmen­tal benefits of alternativ­e deathcare have become a large selling point for companies as green investment­s trend upwards. Transcend, a New York-based green burial startup that promises to turn human bodies into trees after death, highlights its goal of mass reforestat­ion and eco-friendly burial in its advertisin­g, stating on its website: “Every Tree Burial creates a healthier foundation for all life on Earth.”

Its founder and CEO, Matthew Kochmann, has a Silicon Valley background, counting himself as one of the first employees at Uber. He came to the deathcare industry after meditating on the spiritual nature of burial options, he says.

“I was thinking about how I personally would like to become a tree after death, and I realized that there weren’t any options out there to make that happen – I’d have to do it myself,” he said. “I am a huge advocate of helping heal humanity’s relationsh­ip and fear around mortality.”

Through Transcend’s process, the body is buried in organic biodegrada­ble flax linen along with a unique blend of fungi-enriched soil, and a young tree is planted in the ground above it. The company says the mushrooms then “work their magic” to ensure “a direct connection between the nutrient-rich body and the tree’s root system so that the body can literally become the tree”.

The company has piqued the interest of investors and celebritie­s, with Darren Aronofsky, director of Black Swan and Requiem for a Dream, counting himself among the company’s advisers. Still, fundraisin­g hadn’t always been easy, Kochmann said, adding that some investors had told him: “We don’t invest in taboo areas like pornograph­y or death.”

“Putting death on par with pornograph­y just shows that there’s still a lot of work to do in our culture and our society to get people more comfortabl­e with it,” he said.

Recompose, the original human composting startup, has raised nearly $18m – none of which, its founder is quick to point out, came from traditiona­l venture capital funds, but instead from accredited “values-aligned investors”, Spade said – investors who “are first and foremost investing for the mission and the vision” of Recompose.

Spade said the company had prioritize­d fundraisin­g models that allow it to stay true to its roots as an advocacy group while still creating sustainabl­e funding. It has also launched a “community fund” to help subsidize its services for clients who cannot afford to pay full price.

The company has worked directly with legislator­s to pass laws that allow for human composting while creating a framework that supports strong ethics in the burgeoning industry.

“We want to be sure that any kind of human composting operator that’s working with grieving families is doing so within the utmost ethical practices,” she said. “It is not only about how to decompose, operate, and care for our clients – but also, how can we support an industry that always has the most ethical, rigorous operations?”

Spade said although her company had been the first to pioneer human composting, she was “thrilled” to see the movement grow. And although the new frontier of deathcare is getting increasing­ly crowded in some places, those involved say there is an environmen­t of camaraderi­e and support as they work towards a common goal: taking down the monopoly that the traditiona­l funeral industry has on death.

“This is a community that has to prioritize solidarity,” said Kochmann. “You are fighting for legislatio­n, you are fighting regulatory battles, and you are fighting an uphill consumer battle because people don’t want to think about death.”

• This article was amended on 19 February 2023 to clarify details of the aquamation process.

 ?? Photograph: Sabel Roizen/@belroiz No sale nor distributi­on without permission. ?? A dummy goes through the composting process with Recompose.
Photograph: Sabel Roizen/@belroiz No sale nor distributi­on without permission. A dummy goes through the composting process with Recompose.
 ?? Photograph: Mat Hayward/Getty Images for Recompose ?? Katrina Spade, founder and CEO of Recompose, poses with a shrouded mannequin in front of an array of human composting vessels, in Seattle.
Photograph: Mat Hayward/Getty Images for Recompose Katrina Spade, founder and CEO of Recompose, poses with a shrouded mannequin in front of an array of human composting vessels, in Seattle.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States