How to Green Your Funeral


By Sami Grover, Treehugger

What’s the Big Deal?
Worldwide, more than 50,000,000 people pass away each year. Traditional burial and cremation practices can have significant negative environmental impact, but green funerals and eco-burials are one way to lessen the impact. While death can be a difficult subject, keeping ethical beliefs and environmental convictions in mind while tending to end-of-life arrangements can create a meaningful send-off–not to mention a lower-impact one. After all, if you gotta go, why not go green?

1. Seek Good Advice

Not long ago, the idea of green burial was unheard of by most funeral directors, and today, for a variety of practical and emotional reasons, many people still resist te idea. However, there are signs that the industry is awakening to the concept, especially since many people with environmental sympathies wish to leave the world as they have tried to live in it. A growing number of products and services can help them do just that. Key points to think about include:

– Funeral Director: Ask your funeral director about more sustainable options, or seek out a funeral home that offer green practices (more on this below).

– Green Burial: Likewise, green burial specialists can help you explore greening your final resting options.

– Literature on Green Funerals: Read one of the books that can guide you through the process. (See our “Where to Get this Stuff” section below for suggestions.)

2. State Your Intentions

If you are reading this guide with an eye to what happens to your remains when you are gone, it would make sense to talk to your loved ones about it or make arrangements ahead of time. Death can be a difficult process and, unless prompted, those left behind may not think to consider the environment in making arrangements. Even if they do, they may not have a grasp on what are the best and greenest courses of action to take.

– Define Your Wishes: Add a clause in your will or create an advanced funeral wishes document that stipulates your green funeral concerns. Consider including a copy of this guide with your instructions.

3.Cremate Your Remains

On the face of it, cremation doesn’t seem like a particularly green idea. Burning anything creates pollution, especially if there are toxic substances present (via embalming, for example), and returning nutrients to the ecosystem via decomposing matter is a core tenet of environmental thinking. That said, modern crematoriums have made significant reductions in emissions. Plus, as many cemeteries, particularly in the U.S., have rules and regulations stipulating the use of concrete vaults, coffins, and other such requirements that use significant resources and space, becoming one with nature isn’t as straightforward and simple (or quick) as it may seem. Cremation, therefore, may make more sense from a green perspective, after all. If it seems like the right choice to you, you can ask the crematorium about what they are doing to reduce emissions. A previous TreeHugger post also discusses more about efficient and green cremation.

4. Bury Your Remains

Ultimately, our remains are part of the food chain. Unfortunately, many of the trappings of modern burial–such as embalming, hardwood coffins, and concrete vaults–are designed to delay the natural process of decomposition. Though these ideas have become modern standards, the truth is that anything we can do to return to the earth more easily will lessen our impact on the environment. See our previous article, The Green Goodbye, which explores new trends in eco-burials. Key ecological points include:

– Preservation: Embalming slows the decomposition process. For those whose tradition does not designate embalming as part of the burial practice, consider skipping this step, and opt for a closed casket and rapid burial.

– Coffins: Cardboard, bamboo, or jute coffins; shrouds; or biodegradable urns are all dignified ways to unite with nature more rapidly.

– Green Burial Grounds: The Green Burial Council and other organizations are taking strides to develop and identify sustainable burial and cremation practices, locations and companies.


Photo credit: Getty Images

5. Leave a Living Marker

It can be important for mourners to have somewhere to go to remember their loved ones long after the funeral is over. Natural or living memorials can be wonderful alternatives to quarried headstones or marble mausoleums. Consider planting a tree or a bush that will carry on in honor of the deceased. Online memorials are also becoming increasingly popular. For inspiration, New York’s New School and the The U.S. Forest Service have explored visions of the living memorial through their project, Land-markings: 12 Journeys through 9/11 Living Memorials.

6. Give Gifts of Sympathy

Cut flowers have a short shelf-life; besides, flower-farming can be a resource-intensive endeavor. It’s already common practice to ask for donations to charity in lieu of flowers; after all, what better way to remember the dead than to create a better world for the living? From organizations that provide solar power to the developing world to others that provide bicycles for AIDS caregivers, charity-giving is a magnificent way to honor the passions of deceased friends or relatives. Out roundup of green non-profit organizations offers several causes worthy of support.

7. Deliver a Just Tribute

So much of what we hold dear about a person includes their ideals and convictions. It is fitting, then, to commemorate the life of a departed fellow TreeHugger with a memorial ceremony that touches on the subject of the environment. We are not suggesting a 10-hour lecture on Gaia Theory, but a joyful remembrance of a passionate green life well-lived. With more and more faiths and denominations from Catholicism to Judaism and beyond embracing stewardship of the environment, it shouldn’t be hard to find a minister with sympathies for your cause. Green funeral providers and any funeral director will also be able to offer advice on how to create a unique, personalized ceremony.

8. Green Your Funeral Service

As with any event, much of the environmental impact is in the details. Even if you don’t opt for any of the ideas above, you can still make a funeral greener by incorporating the following practices into the gathering.

– Programs: Use recycled paper for programs or hymn sheets.

– Flowers: Source any flowers from organic, local growers.

–Procession: Make arrangements for carpooling from location to location during the funeral.

–Refreshments: If the deceased was an environmentalist, the chances are they enjoyed local, organic food. If refreshments are being served, it makes sense then to look closely at where they come from. TreeHugger’s How to Green Your Meals provides helpful tips and guidelines for selecting the refreshments of your choice.


Photo credit: Getty Images

Hard Core

1. The Ultimate Recycling

We’ve already suggested that using biodegradable coffins or urns, and avoiding concrete vaults, can help reduce our impact by returning our remains to the earth. However, some folks are taking this even further by finding safe ways to literally compost human remains.

2. Return to the Woods

The woodland burial movement, which started in the UK, is widely credited with the birth of interest in natural funerals in general. Not only do woodland burials involve low impact ceremonies, they also aid in the return of a piece of land to a natural forest. Trees and native wildflowers are often planted above a grave, and because the location becomes dear to the families of the deceased, chances are good that the site will remain protected for years to come.

3. Keep it Private

We should make it clear that we do not advocate excluding anyone from a funeral, but in the end, the bigger a ceremony, the more travel and resources are needed to make it happen. Those seeking the ultimate in green funerals may wish to consider keeping it private, having no event at all, or using the internet to host a memorial. We would recommend utmost tact in how this is communicated to friends and family, should you choose to go down this route.

4. Stay home

Institutions and burial places will often have rules as to what is, or is not, permitted on their property. Your particular green burial plans may clash with such directives, or you may just want to hold the ceremony somewhere dear to you or the deceased. In that case, it is worth knowing that in many countries it is perfectly permissible to bury a person on private land. We’d recommend checking with the authorities first.


Photo credit: Getty Images

By the Numbers

Approximately 56,600,000 people die each year around the world .

50 million trees are cut down in India each year for funeral pyres. This releases 8 million tons of carbon dioxide.

There are now more than 200 green and woodland burial sites in the UK.

Up to 16% of all mercury emissions in the UK come from crematoria because of the fillings in teeth. This percentage is expected to increase to 25% by 2020.

1.6 million tons of reinforced concrete is buried in the USA each year in the construction of vaults.

Getting Techie

1. Embalming, which apparently became popular in the United States during the Civil War, is still a significant source of groundwater pollution today. Arsenic gave way to the less toxic formaldehyde as the favored embalming solution around the turn of the last century. However, formaldehyde poisoning can still be fatal and it is classified as a human carcinogen by the US Environmental Protection Agency. Some estimates say that one million gallons of formaldehyde are buried in embalmed bodies each year in the United States. Almost all of this will eventually make its way into our water supplies. Efforts are underway to gradually replace formaldehyde with glutaraldehyde, which is considered less toxic.

2.Cremation causes nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide, heavy metals and particulates to be released into the atmosphere when a body is cremated. If a body has mercury-amalgam fillings, the mercury will almost certainly become air pollution unless the fillings are removed first. Burning a body inside a coffin also creates significantly more pollution than burning the body by itself. Modern crematoriums often have ‘clean smokestacks’ that ameliorate the associated emissions, at least to some degree, and the cremation industry has claimed that reports of pollution have been greatly exaggerated.


Photo credit: iStockPhoto

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Reader Comments

It is amazing how much I have just learned. This makes me more determined to go “Green”. This site is extremely informative and I will be sending it to my two sons to give them a better understanding. Thank you.

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this is what i love for myself
but i am in peoria i like to no if we have this here this is the way it was ment to be if it was good for our jesus it good for me

We have done green burials here in the Sierras of California and thankfully living in a rural area families can bury on their own land. And now I make burial boxes sans screws and nails.

Thanks for this great article! This is the way to go people! Want to do this while at the same time offering a compassionate and ecologically sound alternative to the modern funeral experience by creating, promoting, and generating life out of our beloveds memory. See more @ www.thespiritree.com.

Type your comment here.
Dad is on his emd of life journey, however, he is 23 stone, and I wonder if the green alternative can cope with his weight? We have a local crematorium which can meeet his needs. However, I would love to have his funeral in the way he wishes.

He wants his ashes scattered everywhere he has fond memories and some of them with his wife, who is buried locally. He may have been born a Catholic, but wants no lAST RIGHTS and now wants his last wishes to be honoured i.e. humanistic sevice.