At FDP Mold Remediation, we aim to handle mold remediation work responsibly while reducing unnecessary waste, chemical use, and disruption where practical. Our priority is to complete remediation work correctly, using appropriate containment, removal, cleaning, drying, and moisture-awareness practices.
Mold remediation is not always a waste-free process. Some affected materials may need to be removed when they cannot be properly cleaned or saved. Even so, we work to avoid unnecessary demolition and focus on the steps needed for the condition of the property.
We use remediation and drying equipment in a practical way based on the size of the affected area and the scope of work. Equipment such as air scrubbers, HEPA filtration units, dehumidifiers, and fans may be needed depending on the project. We also maintain our equipment so it can operate properly and avoid unnecessary delays or repeat work.
Because moisture is often connected to mold concerns, we pay attention to visible and accessible moisture conditions during our work. When cleaning methods involve water, we aim to avoid unnecessary over-wetting of materials.
If we see signs of an active moisture source, such as a plumbing leak, roof leak, HVAC condensation issue, drainage concern, or humidity problem, we explain the concern to the customer. Some moisture issues may need to be corrected by a plumber, roofer, HVAC technician, or another qualified trade.
FDP Mold Remediation does not treat mold remediation as a spray-only service. Proper remediation may involve containment, removal of affected materials, HEPA cleaning, filtration, drying, and moisture control.
When cleaning products are appropriate, we choose and use them based on the affected material, job conditions, product label directions, and safety requirements. We aim to avoid unnecessary chemical use and use products only when they have a clear purpose in the remediation process.
We try to reduce unnecessary waste where practical. When materials can be cleaned, saved, or left in place without affecting the remediation process, we avoid unnecessary removal. Contaminated or damaged materials may need to be disposed of separately based on the project conditions. Packaging, paper, cardboard, plastic, or metal materials that are not contaminated may be recycled where practical and accepted locally.
Mold remediation requires vehicles, equipment, tools, containment materials, PPE, and disposal supplies. Our transport approach focuses on realistic ways to reduce unnecessary trips and improve efficiency.
We aim to plan routes carefully, organize equipment before arriving on site, and coordinate project steps to reduce avoidable return visits when possible.
We believe responsible remediation includes clear communication. Customers should understand what is being removed, what may be cleaned, what moisture concerns were noticed, and what steps may be needed after remediation.
We aim to explain the remediation process in plain language. This includes discussing containment, removal, HEPA cleaning, drying, disposal, and any visible or accessible moisture concerns that may affect the project.
We also aim to avoid scare tactics or unnecessary work. Recommendations should be based on the condition of the property, the affected materials, and the scope of the project.
FDP Mold Remediation is committed to practical environmental responsibility during mold remediation work. That means reducing unnecessary waste where possible, avoiding unnecessary chemical use, and helping customers understand moisture conditions that may contribute to mold concerns. To discuss a mold concern or schedule service, contact FDP Mold Remediation.

