A metal processing company in Meppel,
Drenthe, has raised almost €10m for charity since 2011 by recycling metal
gleaned from crematoria, the AD said in Friday.
OrthoMetals imports metal left
after cremations from some 750 locations in Europe and the US, sorts it out and
then sells it on to smelters to be reused by the car and aviation
industries.The metal comes not only from coffin handles but screws and
artificial hips and knees.
The profit made on metal collected from Dutch
cremations goes to a special charity set up by the crematoria themselves, the
paper said. It is collected twice a year in unmarked lorries.
‘You don’t want to
arrive at a crematorium where a service is underway and start loading in the
containers full of metal,’ director Jan-Willem Gabriels told the paper.
The AD
said the Dutch firm is the only company in the world to focus solely on
recycling crematoria waste. It was founded in 1997 by Gabriels’ father who
discovered that the metal left after a cremation was thrown away. ‘We do our
work with respect but we don’t handle every artificial hip with kid gloves,’ he
said. ‘It is a company after all.’

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.