The environmental toll of cremating the dead [View all]
Over the past four years, cremations have surpassed burials as the most popular end-of-life option in the United States, according to the National Funeral Directors Association. At the same time, companies have been springing up touting creative things you can do with a loved ones ashes, such as pressing them into a vinyl record, using them to create a marine reef, or having them compressed into diamonds.
Cremationalong with these creative ways to honor the deadis often marketed as a more environmentally friendly option than traditional embalmment and casket burial. Concern for the environment, in addition to economic considerations, may be driving some of the increase in popularity.
[For] some people, I bet thats part of it, says Nora Menkin, executive director of the Seattle-based Peoples Memorial Association, which helps people choose end-of-life options.
But while its true that cremation is less harmful than pumping a body full of formaldehyde and burying it on top of concrete, there are still environmental effects to consider. Cremation requires a lot of fuel, and it results in millions of tons of carbon dioxide emissions per yearenough that some environmentalists are trying to rethink the process.
The average U.S. cremation, for instance, takes up about the same amount of energy and has the same emissions as about two tanks of gas in an average car, Menkin says. So, its not nothing.
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