Burial, Cremation or Alkaline Hydrolysis for Your Pet?

We have discussed before, here, that one issue to consider as a key component of your Pet Trust drafting is the final disposition of your pet.


After you are long gone, eventually your pet will also die and someone or some entity will be responsible for following the final directives that you have set out in your Pet Trust or will.

We usually talk about two options after death; burial or cremation.

However, recently the web is a buzz about a new option…dissolving bodies in lye and flushing the brownish, syrupy residue down a drain.

BioSAFE Engineering LLC, located in the small town of Brownsburg, Indiana, is producing cylinders for a process called alkaline hydrolysis.


According to the BioSAFE website…


...Alkaline hydrolysis is a process of an elevated temperature and pressure to convert the proteins, nucleic acids, and lipids of all cells and tissues, as well as infectious microorganisms, to a sterile aqueous solution of small peptides, amino acids, sugars, soaps, and electrolytes. The alkali itself is consumed in the process by generating the salts of the hydrolysis products. The only byproducts of the process are the mineral constituents (ash) of the bones and teeth of vertebrates. These are soft enough after the organic matter has been degraded to be easily crushed (even by bare hands) and recovered as calcium phosphate powder (sterile bone meal).


   The WR2 Tissue Digestor™ consists of an insulated stainless steel pressure vessel with a manually or hydraulically clamped lid. The unit is supplied with a basket to contain bone remnants. All wetted parts are 316-L stainless steel alloy, and all vessels are ASME pressure rated and certified. All electrical components are built according to NEMA standards. The system is fully automated; allowing unattended operation after the unit is loaded...

What does this mean?


The equipment that they manufacture provides the access for a process that converts animal, human, and microbial tissues into a sterile, neutral, aqueous solution suitable for disposal to a sanitary sewer.

Apparently the time and cost for this procedure depends on the size and weight of the human or animal being processed.


The Associated Press recently reported in a story by reporter Norma Love that


..."No funeral homes in the U.S. — or anywhere else in the world, as far as the equipment manufacturer knows — offer it. In fact, only two U.S. medical centers use it on human bodies, and only on cadavers donated for research.


But because of its environmental advantages, some in the funeral industry say it could someday rival burial and cremation.


"It's not often that a truly game-changing technology comes along in the funeral service," the newsletter Funeral Service Insider said in September. But "we might have gotten a hold of one."


Currently, only the states of Minnesota and New Hampshire have legalized this process for humans.


Apparently, some 40 to 50 facilities use the cylinders developed by BioSAFE on human medical waste, animal carcasses or both. The users include veterinary schools, universities, such as the University of Florida (for cadavers) pharmaceutical companies and even the U.S. government.


The liquid residue from human tissue and animal carcasses can simple be poured down the drain.


I am not, in any manner, advocating the use of the process.


The thought of pouring my pet down the drain is a little appalling.


However, many people retain the ashes from a cremation of both humans and pets and place them on the mantle or a shelf.


I am not sure how much different this would be…a little decorative bottle, rather than an urn.


I don’t know…


It is your choice.


I am just presenting another viable option for your consideration.


Estate planning for your pet. Think about it, discuss it, make some decisions and then act on your plan.




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