Water official Ted Joynt said, so far, all the readings were in the appropriate ranges for commercial water use.
Once the Aquagreen Dispositions system gets rid of the liquid waste, the company dries the remaining bones, and presses them into a powder in a process widely described as flameless cremation.
"It brings your body back to its natural state," Mr Hilton said. "It's the same way as being buried in the ground, but instead of taking 15, 20 years to disintegrate, it does it in a quicker process. And it's all environmentally friendly."
The system takes about two hours to dissolve "organic material" from the body, leaving the bones for drying and crushing.
The body is placed in a pressurised tube in a solution of water, potash and salt as it dissolves.
Mr Hilton said the machine sounds like a dishwasher, and used about the same amount of electricity.