6 August 2025

'Definitely the best way to go': Canberra woman wants to legalise human composting

| By James Coleman
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Tui Davidson

Earthly Remains founder Tui Davidson. Photo: Tui Davidson.

Burial and cremation are the tried and tested options for sending off your loved ones when they throw off this mortal coil.

But Canberra woman Tui Davidson is advocating for another, cheaper, more “sustainable” option to be made available to local families – one she expects is not far away.

It’s composting, also known as “terramation”. Yep, the breaking down of the human body by the same means as your kitchen waste, and within as little as 60 days.

“No one in Australia is doing it yet, but it is done overseas,” she says.

Several US states allow it, as does Sweden, and the UK Government is currently “welcoming” proposals to regulate new end-of-life methods that include it.

Ms Davidson, under the name of her company Earthly Remains, will head to Tasmania to present on it during an industry discussion at the Beaker Street Festival on 16 August, and she reckons it’s “definitely the best way to go”.

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Here’s how it works.

“You have a vessel with some wood chips and some organic matter like lucerne or alfalfa, and you place the body on top of it and seal up the vessel, providing some aeration so there’s air going in, as well as an outlet for gases coming out,” she explains.

The vessel is rotated every few days, reaching temperatures between 50 and 70 degrees Celsius. About 30 days later, only harder materials like the bones and teeth remain intact. These are extracted and ground down to a fine powder before everything is returned to the vessel for another 30 days.

By the end of the total 60 days, you effectively have a “useful soil amendment”. In other words, garden mulch.

“You certainly wouldn’t want to be putting it on your veggie patch, but for planting trees and rose bushes, absolutely!” Ms Davidson says.

“If you think about it – and I’m sure you can still go to a gardening shop and buy this stuff – my grandfather used to put blood and bone on the garden.”

Human composting

Human composting is legal in several US states. Photo: Recompose, US.

Ms Davidson doesn’t have a “background in science or composting or the funeral industry” but she does have personal experience – while they were both teenagers, she watched her sister pass away before her eyes, “slowly and painfully”, to a very rare brain infection caused by measles.

“That was 40 years ago now, but … that meant that I had an early experience with death.”

She revisited the topic in 2018 when a friend’s dad – who had worked all his life as an urban planner and had a “serious commitment to the environment” – died.

“I realised the industry’s quite complacent and isn’t interested in change because they’re happy making their money, but something needs to be done.”

Ms Davidson’s first venture into the funeral space was Tender Funerals, Australia’s first not-for-profit funeral service that strives to make funerals more affordable.

Gregory Andrews

A cardboard coffin being painted for use by Tender Funerals. Photo: James Coleman.

Her research initially brought her to water cremation, where the body is dissolved using nothing but water, alkaline solution, heat and pressure in a process that can take as little as four hours.

“But the more I looked into it, the more I realised I didn’t feel that was a very sustainable option for Australia, as a drought-affected continent.”

However, the more she investigated terramation, the more she “loved it”.

“It harnesses the body’s natural energy. It’s very good environmentally, and it’s just the most natural process there is. Nobody wants to think about the way your body breaks down after you die, or the fiery cremation, but if you had to think about it, I think this is definitely the best way to go.”

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There’s more, too.

“Some people say, ‘No, that’s it – I don’t need to see my person again, do what you want with the soil’. But then others who find it difficult to let go get an extra month of grief time with their person, where they can go and sit next to them and have a cup of coffee or read the newspaper with them, or just sit there and feel that warmth,” Ms Davidson says.

“There’s actually a really beautiful societal role there in healing from grief as well.”

So far, she’s found the ACT Government “sympathetic” to the idea and says public consensus is turning in its favour too.

“Rather than go, ‘Oh, that’s terrible’, the general public is starting to absolutely recognise the groundswell of interest in environmentally sustainable options.”

Garden mulch

Human remains turned into mulch through ‘terramation’ by Seattle-based company Recompose. Photo: Recompose.

She says it will all come down to the cost, and as with Tender Funerals, she aims to make it as affordable as possible.

In the US, human composting costs between $5000 and $7000 ($7700 to $10,800 AUD), but Ms Davidson envisions a community collaboration with government, or a partnership with regenerative landcare groups (where they receive the remains if the family chooses).

“I’d be delighted to be out there running a government facility for them – I’d just prefer it to be done as a not-for-profit or as a community collaboration,” she says.

How far away is it from becoming an option?

“I think someone will be doing it in Australia within a year.”

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What we see in “human composting” is a manifestation of moral relativism, particularly in how it redefines the sacredness of the human body based on contemporary secular values rather than eternal theological truths and traditional cultural values.
Traditional Christian burial treats the body as a sacred entity. Human composting, however, treats it as disposable organic matter—valuable only for ecological reuse. This shift reflects a relativistic prioritisation of environmental efficiency over traditional cultural dignity.
Thus, human composting is not just an alternative burial method but a symptom of a relativistic worldview that discards eternal truths for temporal trends.

Eternal truths in a book that may or may not have been written 2000 years ago, and edited and adjusted forever in a day since.

Sure, whatever you say…….

However, treatment with dignity does not need to be independent of a choice to recognise that, in a physical sense, the body is nothing but organic matter once it is dead.

That is an undeniable scientific truth, no matter what Christian spin you want to throw on top about ‘eternal truths’.

Mike Van Der Zwart2:54 pm 11 Aug 25

Ms Davidson envisions a community collaboration with government, or a partnership with regenerative landcare groups (where they receive the remains if the family chooses). Ms Davidson is a legend for suggesting this way to run the service. So much societal improvement could be made with more civic and government collaboration. The quest for profiteering and opportunistic greed too often spoils well intentioned gestures.

A couple of years back, while renovating the bathrooms, I concocted my very own temporary outdoor toilet, consisting of a plastic chair, with a hole sawn in, and a largish self-watering pot, that had a few inches of soil in it. Needless to say, my wife saw is as a disgusting prospect, so I was the only one who used it. I was genuinely surprised at how quickly I filled up that pot, When it filled up, my wife forbade me from putting it into her compost bin, which she used for growing edible plants, I said I wouldn’t, but then dug it anyway. I have not gone back to check on it, nor did she ever work out that that’s where I got rid of the soiled soil.

I remember reading a long time ago that the crematoriums in Stockholm, Sweden are all connected to the electricity generating system so that your burning body helps keep the lights on!

Shhh! Don’t tell Capital Retro!

Capital Retro3:57 pm 10 Aug 25

I know some people who are composting but still breathing.

Do you have to be dead to qualify for this?

I am all for this terramation and what better jurisdiction to start in with the ACT and a government that leads the way in progressive thinking. Ray Martin in his excellent and recent TV series on life and death “The Last Goodbye” travelled all over Australia and overseas looking at the many different ways peoples from various cultures say their final goodbyes. He travelled to the US where body composting is practiced and even attended a vertical burial at an upright cemetery in Victoria.

I just hope those bloody Greens and that horrid Jo Clay with their hangers on don’t get involved, lecturing us and causing trouble with their extreme and party spawned ideas. This is something that would just get these wreckers going, sticking their noses in where they are not wanted so they can get their faces in the media, delaying government business and holding out for more like they did with Labor’s plans for a $10 billion housing investment scheme to build more social and affordable housing. Who knows where we will end up with their thinking; special DIY terramation composting facilities at our local garden and hardware centres and feeding our dead to the local zoo big cats and other predators to save money as one respondent put it, with a “zoo somewhere asking for people’s dying pets and horses to humanely euthanise and feed their zoo animals”.

This is akin to putting your loved one in the box-trailer, with your garden refuge and taking them out to Corkhill Bros.

The only difference is marketing, and you needing to pay a $10,000 fee.

Totally safe to be spread in your vege garden. I’d prefer the natural burial where your planted a couple of feet down and a tree is planted over top of you. With our acidic soils, the remains will dissolve totally over time.

Yes there are better ways Canberran but death tends to be a hard conversation to have. We only have two end of life options for body disposal in Australia, burial and Cremation. Thankfully we have people like Tui Davidson and others bringing their knowledge of the many other options available overseas, which are more environmentally sustainable and cheaper.
There is a new Southside Crematorium in the pipeline with legitimate community opposition to it, including environmental concerns. Our city is expanding rapidly and I think these conversations need to be had!

This means having the dead literally rolling in their graves. LOL I was all for this until I started reading how it’s done….it sounds too complicated.

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