Dubai Telegraph - Stiff business: Berlin startup will freeze your corpse for monthly fee

EUR -
AED 3.871903
AFN 71.610071
ALL 98.242663
AMD 407.884718
ANG 1.899392
AOA 962.461144
ARS 1051.095582
AUD 1.630814
AWG 1.900149
AZN 1.783965
BAM 1.957637
BBD 2.127897
BDT 125.938188
BGN 1.954674
BHD 0.397158
BIF 3111.81036
BMD 1.054174
BND 1.41819
BOB 7.281834
BRL 6.104518
BSD 1.053894
BTN 88.951199
BWP 14.466645
BYN 3.448937
BYR 20661.816286
BZD 2.124294
CAD 1.482475
CDF 3021.263967
CHF 0.937477
CLF 0.037271
CLP 1028.431472
CNY 7.626213
CNH 7.635
COP 4724.54567
CRC 538.284734
CUC 1.054174
CUP 27.935619
CVE 110.368576
CZK 25.289956
DJF 187.667008
DKK 7.459129
DOP 63.738607
DZD 141.158446
EGP 52.233176
ERN 15.812615
ETB 130.635816
FJD 2.398089
FKP 0.832078
GBP 0.831691
GEL 2.87266
GGP 0.832078
GHS 16.940898
GIP 0.832078
GMD 74.846496
GNF 9082.662124
GTQ 8.138676
GYD 220.486918
HKD 8.204275
HNL 26.6111
HRK 7.519698
HTG 138.466153
HUF 406.349426
IDR 16768.856012
ILS 3.944195
IMP 0.832078
INR 89.033084
IQD 1380.595634
IRR 44386.008591
ISK 145.708273
JEP 0.832078
JMD 166.837361
JOD 0.747514
JPY 164.942961
KES 136.220052
KGS 91.05589
KHR 4280.590799
KMF 491.770599
KPW 948.756471
KRW 1474.347044
KWD 0.324243
KYD 0.878224
KZT 522.490336
LAK 23151.726967
LBP 94374.666839
LKR 307.898951
LRD 194.4434
LSL 19.290503
LTL 3.112702
LVL 0.637659
LYD 5.147855
MAD 10.525978
MDL 19.090916
MGA 4937.657213
MKD 61.587798
MMK 3423.917006
MNT 3582.084216
MOP 8.448529
MRU 41.895728
MUR 49.704017
MVR 16.297895
MWK 1827.423631
MXN 21.582195
MYR 4.72162
MZN 67.308645
NAD 19.290503
NGN 1770.685769
NIO 38.782901
NOK 11.744719
NPR 142.322239
NZD 1.799127
OMR 0.407434
PAB 1.053889
PEN 4.015769
PGK 4.175503
PHP 62.022327
PKR 292.71559
PLN 4.322273
PYG 8230.724205
QAR 3.841924
RON 4.975915
RSD 117.086218
RUB 104.862986
RWF 1446.964781
SAR 3.959512
SBD 8.837548
SCR 14.351622
SDG 634.090166
SEK 11.584218
SGD 1.416283
SHP 0.832078
SLE 23.933098
SLL 22105.512983
SOS 602.268061
SRD 37.271911
STD 21819.279647
SVC 9.221654
SYP 2648.644405
SZL 19.298202
THB 36.829162
TJS 11.234396
TMT 3.68961
TND 3.328539
TOP 2.468978
TRY 36.287735
TTD 7.155715
TWD 34.276459
TZS 2804.103809
UAH 43.446279
UGX 3867.629615
USD 1.054174
UYU 44.772229
UZS 13497.667019
VES 47.912484
VND 26773.391792
VUV 125.153691
WST 2.942823
XAF 656.576285
XAG 0.034754
XAU 0.000412
XCD 2.848958
XDR 0.793949
XOF 656.576285
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.385359
ZAR 19.271466
ZMK 9488.827738
ZMW 28.902123
ZWL 339.443695
  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.21

    -0.23%

  • BCC

    -2.2000

    140.35

    -1.57%

  • NGG

    0.2500

    62.37

    +0.4%

  • SCS

    -0.1000

    13.27

    -0.75%

  • AZN

    -0.2500

    65.04

    -0.38%

  • GSK

    -0.7200

    34.39

    -2.09%

  • RBGPF

    61.8400

    61.84

    +100%

  • CMSD

    -0.0050

    24.725

    -0.02%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    24.55

    -0.24%

  • RIO

    -0.1900

    60.43

    -0.31%

  • BTI

    0.0700

    35.49

    +0.2%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3200

    6.79

    -4.71%

  • BCE

    -0.3700

    26.84

    -1.38%

  • RELX

    -0.1700

    45.95

    -0.37%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    8.68

    -0.81%

  • BP

    0.4800

    29.05

    +1.65%

Stiff business: Berlin startup will freeze your corpse for monthly fee
Stiff business: Berlin startup will freeze your corpse for monthly fee / Photo: Handout - TOMORRROW BIOSTASIS/AFP

Stiff business: Berlin startup will freeze your corpse for monthly fee

Becca Ziegler is only 24, but she already has her death planned out: her corpse will be deep-frozen to minus 200 degrees Celsius (minus 328 degrees Fahrenheit) with liquid nitrogen.

Text size:

Ziegler, a US tech firm worker based in Berlin, has signed up with Tomorrow Biostasis, a startup in the German capital that offers to cryogenically freeze a person's body after they die.

When the time comes, a team of medics will pump her full of a chemical solution to stop ice crystals from forming in her body and then transport her mortal remains to a storage facility in Switzerland.

The hope is that one day, medical technology might be advanced enough to bring her back to life. Many experts dismiss this gamble on the future as far-fetched, but Ziegler has decided to give it a shot.

"I'm kind of curious to see what the future would be like and, in general, I like life," said the Californian, who works in educational technology.

"So if I could buy myself more time, that sounds really appealing."

Once a fringe pursuit reserved for eccentric billionaires, cryogenic freezing -- also known as cryonics -- has become more accessible in recent years.

Several companies offering cryopreservation have sprung up in the United States and elsewhere, with around 500 people worldwide thought to have been frozen so far.

A persistent myth has it that Walt Disney, the creator of Mickey Mouse, is one of them, but this has been debunked, with BBC reporting in 2019 there is "zero evidence" for this.

Tomorrow Biostasis, founded in 2020, is thought to be the first such company offering the service in Europe. It offers to freeze your body after you die and store it for a membership fee of 50 euros a month.

A lump-sum payment of 200,000 euros ($216,000) -- or 75,000 euros if you opt to have just your brain frozen -- is also due at the time of death, a cost that can be covered by a life insurance payout.

- Liquid nitrogen -

"One of the main goals of this company is to bring the cost down... so that cryopreservation becomes available to whoever chooses to do it," said Emil Kendziorra, one of the co-founders of Tomorrow Biostasis.

Kendziorra, 38, from the western German city of Darmstadt, studied medicine and originally worked in cancer research but said he became frustrated with the slow pace of developments in the field.

"The one big advantage of cryopreservation is that it is something that you can do right now," he said.

When a client dies, Tomorrow Biostasis promises to dispatch a specially equipped ambulance and a medical team that starts cooling the body using ice and water as soon as possible.

The body is then infused with a "cryoprotectant" and transported to the facility in Switzerland where it is stored in a pod surrounded by liquid nitrogen and cooled to around minus 200 degrees Celsius.

Tomorrow Biostasis says it currently has around 700 paying members, and by the end of last year had cryopreserved four people.

The typical customer is aged 30 to 40, healthy, works in technology and is more likely to be male than female, said Kendziorra.

- No guarantees -

No one has ever been brought back to life after being cryopreserved, but proponents say recent advances in technology have made the prospect more plausible.

In an experiment almost a decade ago, scientists said they were able to cryopreserve the brain of a rabbit and recover it in near-perfect condition.

And this year, researchers at China's Fudan University reported using a new technique to freeze human brain tissue so that it regained normal function after thawing.

Nonetheless, some scientists voice deep scepticism about the bet on a future return to life.

Holger Reinsch, head of the Cryo Competence Center at the ILK Dresden research institute for refrigeration technologies, said bringing a person back to life is still a remote prospect.

"We are rather critical of the concept of cryonics... I personally would advise you against such an endeavour," he said.

"The magic limit for the life-sustaining cryopreservation of tissue structures is a frog's heart the size of a fingernail, and this has not changed since the 1970s."

Even Kendziorra admitted that there are no guarantees.

"I think there's a good chance for it, but do I know for sure? Absolutely not."

But whatever happens in the future, Ziegler is confident she will not regret her decision.

"In some ways it's weird," she conceded. "But on the other hand the alternative is to be put in a box in the ground and get eaten by worms."

H.Nadeem--DT