Cost $ 90,000 to be frozen in Australia

Australia will become the third country in the world after the United States and Russia to freeze corpses for preservation. This facility will specialize to serve those who want to revive in the future.

Southern Cryonics is planning to build a $ 500,000 frozen body facility in Holbrook, New South Wales. Once the facility is completed, Australia will become the third country in the world after the United States and Russia to freeze at $ 90,000 per person.

Matt Fisher, spokesman for Southern Cryonics, says there is nothing to ensure future resuscitation of frozen bodies, but there are still plenty of people interested in trying this.

Picture 1 of Cost $ 90,000 to be frozen in Australia
The body is transferred to a liquid nitrogen chamber at -196 degrees Celsius for permanent storage.

Currently in Australia only Neural Archives organization specializing in brain freezing, not allowed to freeze the human body. Fisher says his organization is lobbying the government to enact legislation to regulate frozen human bodies.

In order to freeze the body, a team of specialists will be present as soon as the customer is about to die. As soon as the person is declared dead, they suck out the blood from the body, then replace it with a cold salt solution before adding antifreeze to prevent ice crystals from forming. Next, the body is transferred to a liquid nitrogen chamber at -196 degrees Celsius for permanent preservation.

"The technology to revive a person lying in liquid nitrogen from frozen temperatures has not existed and no one has tested." You need two technologies to survive the preservation process, including the technology that cures the disease. You die and the technology overcomes all the damage caused by freezing, " Fisher said.

One of the world's largest providers of freeze- drying services is the Alcor Life Extension Foundation in Arizona. Currently, nearly 1,000 people are enrolled in this service.

About 150 Americans choose to keep their bodies in liquid nitrogen and 80 people choose to preserve their own brain, according to data provided by the BBC. Meanwhile, up to 1,000 survivors chose corpse preservation companies to be mummified shortly after their deaths.