Ian Dungavell, the chief executive of Friends of Highgate Cemetery Trust, said: “There are a lot of safeguards for grave owners.
“If a relative objects, that grave would be protected for 25 years.”
He also said: “Because we’re a heritage cemetery, we don’t want to destroy what people come to see.
“Elegant graves, with a nice monument, would be left as they are.
“There are many graves where there is no monument, so no heritage is destroyed.”
Grave reuse has always been allowed in Church of England graveyards, as well as with special acts of parliament.
Professor Nick Hopkins, law commissioner for property, family and trust law said: “Some of the laws date back to the 1850s, or earlier, so it’s time they were reviewed.
“There was a government study in 2007, which estimated we’d run out of grave space in around 30 years.”
He also said London would run out of grave space sooner because of the high population – and that a plan needs to be put in place now to ensure grave space remains available in the future.