More to Death Edition3 2014 | Page 6

Most truly concerned greenies agree that their coffin should be British, even if this means that it is generally twice the price. Imported coffins bring with them a high carbon footprint, no matter how this may be ‘offset’ by the manufacturers or importers. Then there is the consideration over the ‘Fair Trade’ element of the far flung producers and worries over their employees’ working conditions. green minded is that they are lined, up to the rim, with non-degradable plastic, thus entombing most conventionally buried bodies to an eternity in a plastic wrap. There are some that claim too that the level of formaldehyde in their board is now insignificant and that their chipboard is green and recycled – laudable though this may be, it can be a distraction from the rest of the coffin, its fixings, glues, lining and varnish. RECYCLED - The recycled coffins include cardboard, SOLID papier-mâché and ones made from paper pulp board. We like these, but note that the paper pulp ones are not suitable for cremation as the china clay used in paper manufacture is causing residue problems. They are great for burial though and cardboard coffins are hugely refined and improved since the early days. MDF and CHIPBOARD - Then there are the MDF and chipboard boxes. The manufacturing process of these has been under toxic scrutiny for many years. Unfortunately it is difficult for all other coffins to compete economically against these as their trade price is a fraction of most others and many funeral director businesses like the healthy mark up (up to 1,000%!) they can sometimes cheekily charge on these £50 coffins. It is interesting to note that these coffins, with their fake wood-effect exteriors, are the default coffin used by the majority of funeral directors across the whole industry. What is of most concern to the WOOD - Solid wood coffins, once the mainstay of the industry back in the day of local craftsmen and available elm, have been mostly replaced by foreign imports or at least coffins produced from timber grown abroad. However there are artisan suppliers, mainly working in soft pines, still going or even starting up in the UK. There is even one in Doncaster who is making coffins from reclaimed window frames and pallets, saving this useable wood from a different kind of burial. SHROUDS - There are those for whom a coffin is unnecessary, choosing either to swaddle their dead in a favourite blanket or to purchase a purpose made shroud, complete with integral carrying handles and rigid framework. One of the shroud manufacturers has recently created a charging board that allows their shrouds to be used at the more flexible crematoria. image courtesy of www.bellacouche.com