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Explosive Rules, Storage Regulations & Compliance Guide

A complete guide to Pakistan’s petroleum and explosive regulations — Petroleum Act 1934, Petroleum Rules 1937, storage standards, inspection requirements, and government compliance obligations for licensed businesses.

Legal Framework

Pakistan's Petroleum & Explosive Regulations

The Form M license is issued by Pakistan’s Department of Explosives under the Petroleum Rules 1937 for the non-bulk storage of petroleum products and dangerous chemicals. Non-bulk means storage in drums, jerry cans, bottles, or sealed packages — as opposed to large tanks (which fall under Form L). Almost every paint manufacturer, chemical trader, solvent importer, and small-to-medium industrial facility in Pakistan operates under a Form M license.

Petroleum Act 1934

The Foundation Law

Documents Required

Complete Application Package

Petroleum Classification

Petroleum Classes Under the Act

ClassFlash PointExamplesLicense Required
Class IBelow 23°C (closed cup)Petrol, Acetone, Toluene, NaphthaDPL mandatory above small quantities
Class II23°C – 65°CKerosene, White Spirit, XyleneDPL above prescribed limits
Class III65°C – 93°CDiesel, Furnace Oil, LubricantsDPL above larger thresholds
Class IVAbove 93°CBitumen, Heavy Oil, AsphaltLighter regulation
Excludedn/aSome non-petroleum chemicals fall under separate corrosive/oxidiser rulesCase-specific licensing
ClassFlash PointExamplesLicense Required
Class IBelow 23°C (closed cup)Petrol, Acetone, Toluene, NaphthaDPL mandatory above small quantities
Class II23°C – 65°CKerosene, White Spirit, XyleneDPL above prescribed limits
Class III65°C – 93°CDiesel, Furnace Oil, LubricantsDPL above larger thresholds
Class IVAbove 93°CBitumen, Heavy Oil, AsphaltLighter regulation
Excludedn/aSome non-petroleum chemicals fall under separate corrosive/oxidiser rulesCase-specific licensing

Compliance Obligations for Licensed Businesses

Inspections

Government Inspection Requirements

Initial Grant Inspection

Before License Issued

Annual & Ad-Hoc Inspections

Ongoing Compliance

Storage Regulations & Safety Standards in Pakistan

Pakistan’s Petroleum Rules 1937 set out detailed construction and operational standards for any premises licensed for petroleum or chemical storage. Compliance is not optional — it is verified at every inspection, and non-compliance can result in license suspension, storage sealing, and prosecution.

Mandatory Construction Standards (Storage Godown)

  • Walls: Cement-concrete (C.C.) block construction with RCC columns; wood is prohibited
  • Floor: Concrete with a 2-foot deep sump for spill containment
  • Ventilators: Cross-ventilation 6 inches above ground and 1 foot below roof, fitted with copper-wire gauge mesh to prevent flame propagation
  • Doors: Angle-iron frame with G.I. sheet; must open outward for emergency egress
  • Roof: Non-combustible material; spark-resistant

Mandatory Safety Standards (Operational)

  • Firefighting equipment per Petroleum Rules 1937 — sand buckets, extinguishers, hydrant where required
  • Trained guard on duty round the clock, conversant with firefighting techniques
  • No natural gas main, electric transformer, or ignition source within 50 feet
  • Strict no-smoking, no-naked-flame zones with signage
  • Earthing for static electricity dissipation

Legal Consequences of Non-Compliance

  • Sealing of storage premises by the Explosives Department
  • Seizure of stored chemicals and stock
  • Monetary penalties under the Petroleum Act 1934
  • Criminal prosecution for serious violations
  • License revocation and disqualification from future applications

Common Compliance FAQs

What happens if my godown construction does not match the approved plan?
The Explosives Inspector will not grant the license. You will need to demolish and rebuild the non-conforming portion — costing time and money. This is why we strongly recommend that construction is done by our team, so the approved plan and the built structure are identical from day one.
Yes. Ad-hoc inspections without prior notice are legal and routine. Licensed premises must be ready for inspection at any time — guard on duty, fire equipment in place, stock records up to date, and only licensed chemicals stored in licensed quantities.
While not always mandated by the Explosives Department, fire and public liability insurance is strongly recommended and may be required by your local authority or industrial estate. Insurance premiums are typically reduced for DPL-compliant facilities, since the risk is professionally managed.

Stay Fully Compliant — Talk to Our Experts

From regulation interpretation to inspection preparation — we keep your DPL license safe.

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