How to Go Green after Death with Environmental Funerals
How to Go Green after Death with Environmental Funerals

Description: We don't really stop to think of the materials that are used to manufacture items like caskets for traditional funeral services. Nowadays, we can choose greener funeral services. This article explains how to respect the environment.


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By Lee Smith

There are around 56 million deaths each year and this figure is expected to double by the year 2040. Death is part of life and so are funeral services.

However, did you know that around 60 million trees are cut every year just to build coffins and 16 percent of the UK's mercury emissions are caused by the gases emitted during cremations? Also, 1.6 million tons of concrete has been introduced into the soil just to cope with the construction of vaults for burial purposes.

We don't really stop to think of the materials that are used to manufacture items like caskets that are used in traditional funeral services. According to recent research, the quantity of metal used to make the caskets used in North America is equal to the amount of metal used to manufacture the Golden Gate Bridge.

Funeral service rituals sometimes require embalming. Since these embalming fluids are supposed to retard the process of decomposition of the body by inhibiting the growth of bacteria, they also inhibit the growth of bacteria and other important enzymes in the soil.

To prevent all this damage to the environment, we can now choose to opt for greener funeral services.

Green Burial Tips

One way of ensuring that a funeral is environmentally friendly is to use a biodegradable casket. If you use a coffin made of used paper, buried in a place where there are trees and shrubs, the body will slowly become a part of the environment.

An alternative method would be to cremate bodies before the embalming process. If your body is embalmed, the cremation process leads to air pollution due to the toxic gases released.

Headstones obstruct the growth of trees and lead to pollution. Thus you may choose to have a living memorial for yourself or your loved one in the form of a tree. If this became a practice, then it would be easier for the survivors of the decedent to cope with the loss because they would have a living substitute for the person who is no more. It would also lead to the planting of millions of trees. In England there are more than two hundred environmentally-friendly burial sites. With all that choice, you can select one close to your home.

Another novel environment-friendly option is to get your ashes mixed with reef material. The materials are then placed in the ocean. Eventually, everything becomes a new reef. This promotes the growth of organisms that grow on reefs and restores the ecological balance of the planet.

With so many options, it is now much easier to plan a funeral service and burial that will not harm the environment.

About the Author:

Environmental funerals need to be considered in order to protect the planet. Get more information about funerals at thefuneralplanner.co.uk. Article Source: Eulogy Site - http://EulogySite.com

Submitted: 08/25/10 (Edited 11/23/11)

Description: We don't really stop to think of the materials that are used to manufacture items like caskets for traditional funeral services. Nowadays, we can choose greener funeral services. This article explains how to respect the environment.

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