(d) "This year around 1m Japanese will be born, and around 1.3m will die. By 2040 annual deaths may approach 1.7m. Call it peak death. * * * [om Japan, death is] a rare growth sector. A huge funeral fair in Tokyo in December, with nokan competitions using volunteers posing as corpses, gave a sense of the scale of the ¥2 trillion ($20 billion) industry. There are niches: stationery companies sell books for 'ending notes'—instructions for post-death practicalities, but also [books] for innermost feelings that Japanese tend to keep to themselves and that atomised families make difficult to express in life"
(i) The peak death is wordplay on peak oil.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peak_oil
I tended to believe peak oil until a few years ago, which turns out to be false alarm, thanks to technological advances leading to shale oil and gas.
(ii) atomize (vt): "DIVIDE, FRAGMENT <an atomized society>"
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/atomize
(e) "Aeon, a retail and financial-services conglomerate, has branched out from arranging funerals for employees past and present, and opened its first outlet for the general public in the shopping centre next to its Tokyo headquarters. Fumitaka Hirohara, the head of Aeon Life, its funeral business, claims it was the first place to offer free coffin trials, in 2011 (much to the initial surprise of passing shoppers)."
(i) Æon Group
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Æon_Group
(ii) aeon (or eon; Latin, from Greek aiōn)
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/aeon
(f) "the funeral business turns out to be not so different from others in Japan: eking out thin margins in a competitive world. * * * In the boom years up to the early 1990s funeral firms charged what they wanted and few [customers] complained. * * * Mr [Yukihiro] MASUDA 増田 進弘 says, firms need to keep prices low (a funeral package can now cost less than ¥500,000) and to differentiate their products. His company, WillLife, offers an eco-friendly send-off. The coffins are made of robust cardboard from the packaging industry (which the parent company is in). Even though they need as much paraffin—70 litres—for cremation as the usual wooden versions, the company plants trees in Mongolia as a carbon offset. Still, Mr Masuda laments that plywood coffins from China can cost just a third as much as his cardboard ones. The 'China price,' a fixture of life in Japan as elsewhere, applies in death, too."
(i) "WillLife" may or may not be misspelled. The company's own spelling:
WiLLife ウィルライフ株式会社/ WiLLiFE KK
http://www.willife.com/aboutus/
, where KK is acronym of kabushiki kaisha 株式会社, which, though, Japanese actually pronounce "kabushiki gaisha" where the syllable "ka" is softened to "ga." I find this website via (ii) immediately below.
(ii) Hiroki Yanagisawa, Stylish Cardboard-Made Coffin And Table. Edgy Japan, June 14, 2016
wwww.edgyjapan.jp/2010/06/20100614-1.html
("a corrugated board called, Tri-Wall * * * Mr Yukihiro Masuda, the CEO or WillLiFE, a subsidiary of Tri-Wall Japan * * * Ecoffin is made from Tri-Wall (inner-part) and kanbatsuzai (outer part) (trees, which need to be chopped down (called thinning) from a forest for its sustainable growth)" )
(A) Tri-Wall Japan is part of
Tri-Wall
www.tri-wall.com/aboutus/index.html
("The name 'Tri-Wall' came into existence in the early 1950's when Abe Goldstein, a small box maker in New Jersey, USA, invented the manufacturing process for a new, heavy-duty corrugated material he dubbed 'Tri-Wall Pak®' ")
(B) corrugated fiberboard
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corrugated_fiberboard
(Double and triple-wall corrugated board is also produced for high stacking strength and puncture resistance)
* The corrugated fiberboard in US is called simply "cardboard."
(C) But what does double- and triple-wall cardboard look like?
Jim Sutton, Build a Table from a Cardboard Box. Jim's Graphics, undated.
www.jimsgraphix.com/recycle/table_1.htm
(D) The word kanbatsuzai is defined in (c).
(iii) paraffin (n; etymology): "chiefly British : KEROSENE"
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/paraffin
(iv) Google (cardboard coffin) and you will see coffin made of nothing but cardboard -- no wood cover.
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