Civil Defense Approved · ISO 9001:2015

Warehouse Fire Safety in the UAE: An In-Depth Engineering Guide

Warehouses concentrate exactly the conditions that make fire hard to control: goods stacked high in vertical flue spaces that act like chimneys, large undivided volumes that let fire and smoke spread, high ceilings that push detectors and ceiling sprinklers far above the seat of any fire, and a fire load that can range from cardboard to expanded plastics. The result is a building type where ordinary office provisions are not enough — and where the two decisions that matter most, the commodity classification and the storage height, drive almost everything else: sprinkler type, water-supply duration and fire-pump sizing. This guide is written for facility owners and managers as well as fire-protection engineers. It explains why warehouses are higher-risk, walks through system selection and sprinkler design under NFPA 13, compares early-detection technologies for high volumes, and ends with a practical compliance checklist. Throughout, remember the governing rule in the UAE: the final requirements — every threshold, density, duration and interval — are set by the applicable edition of the UAE Fire and Life Safety Code of Practice and confirmed by your emirate's Civil Defence authority after a project-specific site assessment.

Warehouse Fire Safety in the UAE: An In-Depth Engineering Guide

Why warehouses are higher-risk than ordinary occupancies

A warehouse fire behaves very differently from a fire in an office or shop. Four characteristics combine to make storage occupancies one of the most demanding categories in fire protection:

  • Storage height and vertical flue spaces. The gaps between pallets and racks form vertical flue spaces that act as chimneys — drawing air in at the base and channelling flame and hot gas upward. In high-piled rack storage, a fire — especially in plastics — can grow extremely fast and reach ceiling height within minutes, often faster than ceiling-only sprinklers can keep up.
  • High and variable fire load (commodity). What is stored matters enormously. Plastics — especially expanded and unexpanded Group A plastics — burn far hotter and faster than wood, paper or other ordinary (Class I–II) goods. Plastic pallets dramatically raise the hazard compared with wooden ones.
  • Large undivided open volumes. Big open floor plates with few fire-rated divisions let a fire and its smoke spread across the whole building, and make compartmentation harder to achieve.
  • High ceilings. Tall roofs place ceiling sprinklers and spot detectors a long way above any fire starting at floor or mid-rack level, slowing detection and reducing the effectiveness of ceiling-only suppression.

Because of these dynamics, the protection strategy for a warehouse is engineered around the goods and the racking — not simply the floor area.

System selection: what is typically needed

The UAE Code ties required provisions to building characteristics such as area and storage height, and references the NFPA family (NFPA 13/14/20/22/72) alongside EN/BS standards (EN 671 hose systems, EN 54 detection). The table below is a qualitative map of provisions to typical triggers. Treat the areas and heights as indicative only — the exact thresholds depend on the Code edition and emirate, and the final scope is set by Civil Defence after a site assessment.

ProvisionWhen typically needed (confirm exact triggers with the UAE Code edition & Civil Defence)Primary governing / referenced standard
Portable fire extinguishersAll warehouses; type and travel-distance/rating by hazard and contents (e.g. Class A for ordinary stock, Class B near flammable liquids, clean-agent/CO₂ near electrical/electronics)NFPA 10 (BS EN 3 in EN system); UAE Code
Fire hose reelsSmall warehouses (commonly cited up to ~500 m²) as primary first-aid firefighting; also supplementary in larger buildingsEN 671-1/-2/-3; UAE Code
Automatic sprinkler system (ceiling)Mid-size and larger warehouses (commonly cited above ~500 m²) and/or high-piled storage; mandatory above storage-height thresholds (often ~7.5 m for high racking — confirm)NFPA 13 (storage chapters); UAE Code; FM Global DS / VdS CEA 4001 where used
In-rack sprinklersTall/high-bay racks, high-hazard commodities (Group A plastics), or where ceiling sprinklers/ESFR cannot protect storage due to height or obstructionsNFPA 13 (in-rack provisions); FM Global in-rack data sheets
ESFR (early-suppression fast-response) sprinklersHigh-ceiling warehouses with eligible commodities/configurations where suppression (vs control) and avoiding in-rack piping is preferred and ESFR criteria are metNFPA 13 (ESFR provisions)
Wet riser / standpipe & landing valvesLarge warehouses (commonly cited above ~3,600 m²) and/or multi-storey/height-triggered, for fire-brigade useNFPA 14; UAE Code (landing valve 65 mm)
Private fire hydrants / fire mainsLarge-footprint sites and per Civil Defence site-coverage rules; external firefighting waterUAE Code; NFPA 24 (private mains) where referenced
Fire pump set + jockey pumpWherever the town/main supply cannot meet the required system flow & pressure (most sprinklered/hydrant warehouses)NFPA 20; UAE Code
Dedicated fire water storage tankWhere a reliable pressurised supply of required duration is not otherwise guaranteedNFPA 22; UAE Code
Automatic fire detection & alarmAll warehouses; technology selected for ceiling height & volume (see detection table)NFPA 72 / EN 54 / BS 5839-1; UAE Code
Gaseous clean-agent suppressionEnclosed high-value/electronic rooms within the warehouse (server, control, battery, archive) where water is unsuitableNFPA 2001 / ISO 14520; Kigali Amendment for agent choice
Emergency lighting & exit signage, smoke/heat ventingAll warehouses; means-of-egress and smoke control per occupancy/areaUAE Code; relevant NFPA/EN egress & smoke-venting standards

Explore the underlying systems in more detail: sprinkler systems, fire pumps, hose reels & cabinets, fire alarm & detection, fire suppression systems and portable extinguishers.

Sprinkler design considerations under NFPA 13

For a warehouse, the sprinkler system is the heart of the protection scheme — and its design is governed by the storage chapters of NFPA 13. Two inputs drive everything: commodity classification and storage height. Get these wrong and the whole design can be invalid.

Commodity classification

NFPA 13 classifies stored goods as Class I, II, III and IV in increasing combustibility, plus Group A, B and C plastics — with Group A plastics the most hazardous. Encapsulated loads (plastic sheet wrapped over the top and sides of a pallet) stop water reaching the burning fuel, so they call for increased water flow and reduced stacking height. Misclassification — particularly under-rating plastics, expanded plastics, encapsulated loads or lithium batteries — is one of the most common and serious errors in warehouse fire protection, because it directly undersizes the water demand.

Storage height and high-piled storage

NFPA 13 and the model codes generally define high-piled storage as combustibles stored higher than 12 ft (3.7 m); at or below that it is low-piled. Group A plastics are treated as high-piled at lower heights (commonly cited around 5–6 ft) because of their severity. The area of high-piled storage, combined with the commodity class, determines whether sprinklers are required and how they must be designed. Under storage-building guidance, automatic suppression is typically mandated above roughly 7.5 m storage height, with heights beyond about 9–12 m triggering more stringent in-rack / high-bay requirements — but the exact triggers depend on commodity, configuration and the governing standard, and must be confirmed with Civil Defence.

Choosing the sprinkler family

NFPA 13 offers three storage sprinkler families plus in-rack protection:

  • CMDA (control-mode density/area) — designed off density-area curves; a traditional control approach.
  • CMSA (control-mode special application / large-drop) — selected via decision tables rather than density-area curves.
  • ESFR (early-suppression fast-response) — uses large, high-momentum droplets to suppress rather than merely control the fire, and can sometimes avoid in-rack piping. ESFR eligibility is limited by ceiling height and clearance to storage.
  • In-rack sprinklers — added inside the racking when ceiling sprinklers alone cannot protect the storage due to great height, obstructions or a high-hazard commodity.

As an illustration of how in-rack design is detailed, FM Global guidance permits quick-response 70 °C (160 °F) pendent in-rack sprinklers at K200 (K14.0) and larger at maximum 9.1 m (30 ft) vertical increments for Class 1–4 and plastic commodities, and K320 (K22.4) and larger at maximum 12.2 m (40 ft) vertical increments for cartoned unexpanded plastics in open-frame racks. These are FM Global figures under FM's specific listing conditions; NFPA 13 in-rack rules can differ — do not transpose them onto an NFPA 13 design without an engineer's confirmation.

Note too that warehouse and insurer designs sometimes use FM Global Data Sheets (e.g. 8-9, 8-34) or VdS CEA 4001 instead of NFPA 13, and these can give different densities and criteria. Confirm which standard the AHJ and the insurer require for your specific project.

Sprinkler design drivers at a glance

Design driverWhat it determinesNotes / where it is fixed
Commodity classification (Class I–IV, Group A/B/C plastics)Required water density, sprinkler type, and whether in-rack protection is neededNFPA 13 storage chapters; misclassification is a common, serious error — verify packaging & encapsulation
Storage height (top of storage)Whether suppression is mandatory and the design area/density; in-rack tier spacingSuppression commonly required above ~7.5 m high racking (confirm); high-piled generally >12 ft / 3.7 m
Ceiling/roof height & clearance to storageEligibility for ESFR vs control-mode; obstruction rulesNFPA 13 limits ESFR by ceiling height & clearance
Storage arrangement (rack / pile / shelf, aisle width, flue spaces)Chimney/flue effect, in-rack need, water penetrationOpen-frame racks vs solid shelving change protection
Encapsulation / plastic packaging & palletsIncreased water demand, reduced max stacking heightPlastic pallets and expanded plastics raise hazard sharply
Sprinkler family: CMDA / CMSA / ESFR / in-rackDensity-area design vs decision-table design vs suppression designSelected per NFPA 13 by class + height + configuration

Early detection for high-volume warehouses

In a high-ceiling warehouse — roughly 30 ft (~9 m) and above — ordinary spot smoke detectors become ineffective, because smoke cools and stratifies before it reaches them. The right technology depends on ceiling height, volume, airflow and how dirty the environment is. Aspirating smoke detection (ASD / VESDA) and projected beam detectors are the workhorses for very-early warning across large open volumes; spot, heat and flame detection each have their place in ancillary or specialist areas.

Detection technologyBest-suited warehouse applicationStrengthsLimitationsGoverning / product standard
Aspirating smoke detection (ASD / VESDA)Very high ceilings, large open volumes, high-value or high-airflow areas; cold/dirty environmentsVery-early (incipient) warning; adjustable sensitivity; sampling network reaches difficult zonesHigher cost; needs engineered pipe layout & commissioning; sensitivity tuning vs dust/dieselEN 54-20 (Class A/B/C); NFPA 72; BS 5839-1
Projected beam smoke detectorsLarge open high-bay spaces with clear line-of-sight across the volumeCovers long spans economically; suits high ceilings where spot detectors failNeeds clear unobstructed beam path; alignment/racking changes affect it; dust can cause faultsEN 54-12; NFPA 72
Spot smoke detectors (photoelectric)Lower-ceiling areas, offices, ancillary rooms; smouldering-fire detection in dense storageLow cost; standard for normal ceilings; photoelectric suits smouldering storage firesIneffective at great heights (stratification); not for very high open volumesEN 54-7; NFPA 72
Heat detection (line-type / spot)Dirty, dusty or fume-laden areas where smoke detection is impracticalRobust in harsh environments; line-type covers conveyors/racksSlower than smoke detection — responds to a developed fireEN 54-5 / EN 54-22; NFPA 72
Flame detectors (UV/IR)Flammable-liquid stores, fast-flaming high-energy fuelsFast response to flaming fires; line-of-sight to hazardDetects flame not smouldering; needs line of sight; false-alarm managementEN 54-10; NFPA 72

See our fire alarm & detection systems page for how these tie into the panel, sounders and monitoring.

Fire pumps and water supply

Sprinklers and hydrants are only as good as the water behind them. Where the town main cannot deliver the required flow and pressure — which is the case for most sprinklered or hydranted warehouses — a fire pump set is needed, governed by NFPA 20.

  • Pump set. NFPA 20 covers electric- and diesel-driven main pumps, plus a small jockey (pressure-maintenance) pump that holds system pressure so the main pumps are not started by minor leaks.
  • Diesel fuel. Where the engine's fuel-consumption rate is not known, NFPA 20 sizes diesel fuel tanks at a minimum of roughly 1 US gallon per rated horsepower, plus an allowance for expansion and sump (commonly 5% each) — recent editions also allow sizing directly from the engine's fuel-consumption rate, so confirm the governing edition.
  • Water storage. A dedicated fire-water storage tank — covered by NFPA 22 — is provided where a reliable pressurised supply of the required duration is not otherwise guaranteed.
  • Duration. The required water-supply duration for warehouse/storage suppression is set by the hazard and the governing code — it is not a single fixed figure — and must be confirmed with Civil Defence.

On the hydrant side, UAE Code summaries indicate a private fire-hydrant minimum pressure of 6.9 bar with the private fire-hydrant supply sized for 2 hours, and landing valves as 65 mm instantaneous outlets (near staircases) for trained/Civil Defence firefighters, with landing valves, piping, fittings, breeching inlet and connections designed to withstand 250 gpm at 6.9 bar. These figures are drawn from secondary summaries — verify them against the primary Code text and current edition before relying on them. Learn more on our fire pumps page.

Extinguishers, hose reels and hydrants

Portable extinguishers (NFPA 10 vs EN/ISO)

Every warehouse needs portable extinguishers, with the class, rating and travel distance matched to the hazard. The UAE widely uses the NFPA 10 system, but EN/ISO ratings also appear — and the two systems define Class C differently, which is a frequent and dangerous source of confusion. Always state which system a rating refers to.

Fuel / hazardNFPA 10 (US, used widely in UAE)EN 2 / ISO (European system)Typical warehouse use
Ordinary combustibles (wood, paper, cardboard, textiles, most plastics)Class A (numerical rating)Class AGeneral storage areas, packaging
Flammable & combustible liquidsClass B (numerical rating)Class BPaint, solvent, fuel stores
Flammable gasesCovered under Class BClass C (own class)LPG / gas-cylinder areas
Energized electrical equipmentClass C (no number; means non-conductive agent)No separate class — electricity is treated as an ignition source, so the burning material sets the class; de-energize first and use an agent suitable on live equipmentSwitchrooms, chargers, electronics
Combustible metals (Mg, Li, Ti, etc.)Class D (special agent)Class DMetal stock, lithium-battery storage (specialist agents)
Cooking oils & fatsClass KClass FOn-site canteen / kitchen only

Numerical A and B ratings indicate relative capacity; NFPA Class C carries no number — it only signifies a non-conductive agent. See our fire extinguishers and fire-fighting equipment pages.

Hose reels and hydrants

Fixed hose reels give staff a first-aid firefighting capability and are covered by EN 671 (Part 1 fixed hose reels with semi-rigid hose; Part 2 hose systems with lay-flat hose; Part 3 maintenance). Standpipe and landing-valve provisions for fire-brigade use follow NFPA 14, and the UAE Code specifies hose-reel coverage, landing valves, wet/dry risers and hydrants by building area and height. Browse our hose reels & cabinets range.

Clean-agent suppression for enclosed rooms

Enclosed high-value or electronic rooms inside the warehouse — server, control, battery and archive rooms — are protected with gaseous clean agents per NFPA 2001 / ISO 14520, because water is unsuitable there. FK-5-1-12 (formerly marketed as Novec 1230) is a low-GWP fluoroketone (GWP of about 1) increasingly favoured for new installs; HFC-227ea (FM-200) is being phased down (not banned) under the Kigali Amendment, so existing systems remain legal and serviceable while new designs trend toward low-GWP or inert-gas agents. GWP values quoted in the industry are approximate — confirm current values and UAE regulatory status before specifying. See FM-200 / clean-agent suppression.

Housekeeping and aisle-keeping

Even a perfectly engineered system fails if day-to-day housekeeping undermines it. Good practice protects the geometry the sprinkler and detection design assumes.

Do

  • Keep stored goods below the sprinkler deflectors with the clearance the design assumes — over-stacking blocks water distribution.
  • Maintain clear aisles and the rack flue spaces the design relies on for water penetration.
  • Keep exits, extinguishers, hose reels and hydrants unobstructed and clearly visible at all times.
  • Segregate and control flammable goods and ignition sources; keep battery-charging areas separated from general storage.
  • Treat lithium-battery and EV storage as a special, emerging hazard — classify it separately and confirm current UAE Code requirements.

Don't

  • Don't change the racking layout, storage height or commodity mix without revisiting the fire design — it may invalidate the sprinkler basis.
  • Don't block landing valves, fire-department connections or hydrants with stock or vehicles.
  • Don't store encapsulated or plastic loads beyond the heights the design allows.
  • Don't let dust, fumes or diesel exhaust accumulate where they can blind beam or aspirating detectors.

How a compliant warehouse project comes together

  1. Classify. Document the occupancy/storage class, the commodity classification and the storage height — this is the design basis for everything that follows.
  2. Engineer. A licensed fire engineer performs a commodity/storage analysis and selects the sprinkler family (CMDA/CMSA/ESFR/in-rack), detection technology, pump and water-supply scheme.
  3. Submit & approve. Drawings and calculations are submitted to the relevant emirate Civil Defence (DCD / ADCD / Sharjah CD, etc.) for approval and a No-Objection Certificate.
  4. Install & commission. Systems are installed and commissioned to the approved design — see fire system installation.
  5. Inspect & certify. Civil Defence inspects; a completion certificate / NOC is issued. See Civil Defense approvals.
  6. Maintain. Ongoing inspection, testing and maintenance under NFPA 25 keeps the system certified — covered by an AMC.

On maintenance: NFPA 25 governs the inspection, testing and maintenance of water-based systems, with intervals that vary by component and code edition — for example weekly control-valve/gauge checks, a monthly electric fire-pump no-flow (churn) test (≥10 minutes, since the 2014 edition; diesel pumps are typically tested weekly and run ≥30 minutes), quarterly waterflow-alarm and main-drain tests, annual full-system and fire-pump flow tests (churn / 100% / 150%), and a 5-year internal pipe/obstruction inspection. Exact intervals are edition-dependent and must follow the AHJ.

Warehouse fire-safety compliance checklist

Use this as a working checklist — but verify every final figure with Civil Defence.

AreaCheck item
ClassificationOccupancy/storage class, commodity classification and storage height documented and used as the design basis
ApprovalsDesign submitted to and approved by the relevant emirate Civil Defence (DCD/ADCD/Sharjah CD, etc.); valid NOC / completion certificate held
SprinklersCorrect sprinkler family (CMDA/CMSA/ESFR/in-rack) for commodity, height and arrangement; in-rack provided where required; spare sprinklers & wrench on site
Water supply & pumpsFire pump set (electric/diesel) + jockey pump; dedicated storage tank of required duration; pump room access, fuel and supervision per NFPA 20/22
Standpipes/hydrantsWet/dry risers, landing valves (65 mm) and private hydrants per area/height; FD connections accessible and signed
Hose reelsEN 671 hose reels sited for coverage, charged and unobstructed
ExtinguishersCorrect classes (A/B/C/D/K as applicable) by hazard; travel distances, mounting, signage and inspection tags current
Detection & alarmDetection technology suited to ceiling height (ASD/beam vs spot); panel, sounders, monitoring and interfaces tested
Clean agentEnclosed high-value rooms protected per NFPA 2001/ISO 14520; agent choice considers GWP/Kigali; room integrity (door-fan) test current
Compartmentation & egressFire-rated walls/doors, smoke venting, emergency lighting, exit signage and clear, adequate exits
Housekeeping & aisle keepingRequired clearances maintained (storage below sprinkler deflectors, clear aisles, no blocked exits/extinguishers/hydrants); ignition sources & flammable goods controlled; charging areas segregated
ITM / maintenanceNFPA 25 inspection/testing schedule followed (weekly/monthly/quarterly/annual/5-yr); records retained; AMC in place

Related: passive fire protection, fire doors, emergency & exit lighting, and foam systems for flammable-liquid stores.

This guide is general information for warehouses in the UAE and is not a substitute for project-specific fire engineering. Every numeric value here — area and height thresholds, the ~500 m² and ~3,600 m² figures, the ~7.5 m suppression trigger, sprinkler densities, water-supply duration, pump capacity, in-rack tier spacing, hydrant flow and duration, and NFPA 25 service intervals — is indicative only and edition- and emirate-dependent. The governing edition of the UAE Fire and Life Safety Code of Practice and your emirate's Civil Defence authority (DCD / ADCD / Sharjah CD, etc.) set the final requirements after a site assessment. Confirm exact figures, standards and intervals with our team and your Civil Defence authority before designing, installing or relying on any of the above.

Frequently asked questions

Do all warehouses in the UAE need sprinklers?

Not automatically — but most mid-size and larger warehouses do. The requirement depends on the floor area, the storage height and the goods stored. Sprinklers are commonly cited as required above roughly 500 m² and/or for high-piled storage, with stricter design once high racking passes about 7.5 m. The exact triggers depend on the UAE Code edition and your emirate, and the final requirement is set by Civil Defence after a site assessment.

What is the single most important factor in warehouse sprinkler design?

Two factors that work together: the commodity classification (how combustible the stored goods are, from Class I–IV to Group A/B/C plastics) and the storage height. Together they drive the sprinkler type, the water density and whether in-rack sprinklers are needed. Misclassifying the commodity — especially under-rating plastics, expanded plastics, encapsulated loads or lithium batteries — is one of the most common and serious errors and can invalidate the whole design.

Which fire detection suits a high-ceiling warehouse?

Above roughly 9 m (30 ft) ceilings, ordinary spot smoke detectors become unreliable because smoke cools and stratifies before reaching them. Aspirating smoke detection (ASD / VESDA) and projected beam detectors are the appropriate technologies for very-early warning across large open volumes. Heat and flame detection suit dirty environments and flammable-liquid stores respectively.

What is the difference between Class C extinguishers in NFPA and EN?

It is a critical divergence. Under NFPA 10 (the US system, widely used in the UAE) Class C means energized electrical equipment, and the rating carries no number — it only signifies a non-conductive agent. Under EN 2 / ISO (the European system) Class C means flammable gases; there is no separate electrical class because electricity is treated as an ignition source rather than a fuel, so an electrical fire is classed by what is burning, and cooking-oil fires are Class F (the NFPA equivalent is Class K). Always state which system a rating refers to.

How much fire-water storage and how big a pump does a warehouse need?

There is no single fixed figure. The required water-supply flow, pressure and duration are set by the hazard — the commodity and storage height — and by the governing code, then confirmed by Civil Defence. A fire pump (NFPA 20) plus jockey pump is needed wherever the town main cannot meet the required flow and pressure, and a dedicated storage tank (NFPA 22) is provided where a reliable supply of the required duration is not otherwise guaranteed. A licensed fire engineer sizes these from your project's data.

Sources & references

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