Build a Compliant, Scalable Alkaline Hydrolysis Operation
Alkaline hydrolysis (also known as “aquamation” or “water cremation”) is one of the fastest-growing segments in deathcare. But it’s also one of the most operationally complex to run well.
Running an alkaline hydrolysis facility requires more than performing the process. It requires clear procedures, trained people, wastewater controls, safety practices, chain-of-custody, documentation, and municipal communication. If those systems are not built early, growth starts exposing gaps.
FP360 helps alkaline hydrolysis operators build the foundation behind a compliant, scalable facility.
Our alkaline hydrolysis cremation consultants work with operators, municipalities, investors, and industry suppliers to move from informal practices to inspection-ready systems that can support daily operations, staff turnover, regulatory review, and future expansion.
When you partner with FP360, we help you:
- Support discharge, effluent, FOG, sampling, and municipal coordination, including direct work with municipal water representatives to clarify requirements, organize technical information, support permit discussions, address gaps, and move roadblocks toward resolution
- Prepare your facility for inspections, partner review, investor due diligence, expansion, and the rising expectations that come with a maturing industry
- Develop SOPs, work instructions, deviation management, and change control processes that convert tribal knowledge into repeatable, documented standards
- Build alkaline hydrolysis environmental, health, safety, wastewater, and compliance infrastructure before gaps become violations or expensive operational issues
- Establish chain-of-custody, traceability, and record keeping systems strong enough to withstand audits, family inquiries, staff turnover, and business growth
- Design role-based training programs so your operation performs consistently, regardless of who is on shift
FP360’s water cremation compliance experts help you build the systems that make the operation clearer, stronger, and more defensible before scrutiny forces the issue.
Where We Engage
Our capabilities focus on the core components of the operating model: workflow, compliance, workforce, technology, and strategy. We engage where performance breaks down, risk accumulates, systems become informal, or growth starts to outpace operational structure.










