On Sunday, California Governor Jerry Brown passed AB 967, an innocuously named bill for a not-so-innocuous law. The bill, proposed by assembly member Todd Gloria, a San Diego democrat, will make it legal for Californians to liquefy their corpses after death in a bath of caustic juice.
The process, referred to as water cremation (or aquamation, resomation, bio-cremation, or flameless cremation), has been proposed as a much more environmentally friendly way to dispose of a body after death. The bill is sponsored by Qico, Inc., a sustainable cremation company that specializes in this form of corpse disposal, and it will go into effect by at least July 1, 2020.
A lot of people view water creation as a more respectful option and were glad a lot of people will be able to have it, Jack Ingraham, the CEO of Qico, tells Inverse. We think this is a trend for the future. I think within 10 years to 20 years, cremation will be thought of as a water-based process, and the entire flame process will be replaced.
Unfortunately, no actual liquid is returned to the survivors, only the remaining calcium, or the bones. These are crushed into the ashes returned to the family, Ingraham says, who adds that the process also results in about 20-30 percent more ashes being returned to the family. So while you cant drink Uncle Frank, you will get more of his ashes.
These days, the only mainstream options available are burial or cremation, both of which arent especially green; coffins take up a lot of valuable space and are made of slowly biodegrading wood, and cremation requires reaching temperatures of up to 1800 degrees Fahrenheit, which isnt exactly energy efficient. Then theres the option of sending a dead body to space in a rocket, which is not green, for obvious reasons.
Aquamation, in contrast, dissolves a body, DNA and all, in a vat of liquid into a relatively unharmful solution of slightly alkaline water that can be neutralized and returned to the Earth. California is the latest state to make the procedure legal, joining 14 others.
https://www.inverse.com/article/37446-aquamation-water-burial-california
Ah, if only California wasn't so expensive to live in.
And sunny.