
Overview
Foam concentrate is proportioned into water to form a blanket that smothers and seals a flammable-liquid surface, suppressing vapours and cooling. Governed by NFPA 11.
Types
- Low-expansion (incl. AFFF) — for hydrocarbon fuels (petrol, diesel, jet fuel)
- AR-AFFF (alcohol-resistant) — for polar/water-miscible solvents (alcohols, ketones)
- Medium/high-expansion — to volume-fill enclosed spaces such as hangars
Where it’s used
Fuel storage tank farms, aircraft hangars, loading racks, refineries and petrochemical plants, flammable-liquid warehouses and helidecks.
Standards & environmental note
Designed to NFPA 11. Note that traditional AFFF contains PFAS and is being phased out for fluorine-free foam (F3) in many jurisdictions; F3 is not always a drop-in replacement and equipment must be listed for the specific foam. We confirm the current Civil Defence-approved foam for your project.
What we provide — turnkey
- Supply of genuine, certified products
- Design & advice on the right specification for your building and its risks
- Installation & commissioning to code, inspection-ready
- Maintenance (AMC) — scheduled inspection, testing, refills and servicing
- Civil Defense approvals — drawings, NOCs and inspection coordination
Specifications
Exact specifications — capacity / rating, model, dimensions, certification and listing — depend on the product and your project. We confirm the precise specification and provide manufacturer datasheets on quotation. Request a datasheet or quote →
Warranty & terms
We supply genuine products covered by the manufacturer’s warranty; the exact warranty period and commercial terms are confirmed on your quotation. Installation workmanship is warranted, and an Annual Maintenance Contract (AMC) keeps the system serviced, certified and compliant year-round.
General guidance to help you choose. Final selection, sizing and approval follow the UAE Fire and Life Safety Code of Practice and your Civil Defence authority — our team confirms the right solution for your site.
Frequently asked questions
Is foam safe on cooking-oil or electrical fires?
No — foam is for Class A and flammable-liquid (Class B) hazards; use wet chemical for kitchens and a non-conductive agent for live electrical.
What about the move to fluorine-free foam?
PFAS-containing AFFF is being phased out in many regions; we advise on currently-approved fluorine-free options and the equipment they require.