A Petroleum Depot License is one of the most strictly regulated authorisations in Nigeria’s downstream and midstream petroleum sector. Any company intending to operate a petroleum storage depot, whether for bulk storage, wholesale trading, throughputs, import discharge, or third-party storage, must obtain the relevant license or permit from the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA).
Table of Contents
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Introduction
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What Is a Petroleum Depot License?
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Who Needs This License?
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Regulatory Framework
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Overview of the Official Licensing Portals
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Step-by-Step Application Process
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Documentation Requirements
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Cost & Fees (Official Examples)
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Inspections & Technical Assessments
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Renewal, Modification & Compliance
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Complete Applicant Checklist
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Frequently Asked Questions
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Common Misconceptions
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Sample Timeline
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Conclusion & Next Steps
1. Introduction
Nigeria’s petroleum sector remains one of the largest and most regulated in Africa. Companies wishing to operate in the storage and bulk handling of petroleum products must obtain a Petroleum Depot License, which ensures compliance with safety, technical, environmental and operational standards.
2. What Is a Petroleum Depot License?
A Petroleum Depot License authorises a company to operate petroleum storage facilities, including:
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Tank farms
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Bulk storage depots
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Jetty-linked storage terminals
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Third-party storage facilities
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Facilities receiving imported products
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Facilities supplying wholesalers and marketers
The license validates that a depot complies with safety, engineering, environmental and quality standards established by NMDPRA.
3. Who Needs This License?
You must apply for a Petroleum Depot License if your business activities involve:
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Operating petroleum storage depots
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Storing products for yourself or third parties
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Receiving imported petroleum products
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Discharging products from vessels at a jetty into storage
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Handling wholesale distribution to marketers
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Participating in bulk trading, coastal movements or trans-loading
If a company operates tanks, loading gantries or storage systems above regulatory thresholds, licensing is mandatory.
4. Regulatory Framework
The Petroleum Depot License is governed by the following regulatory instruments:
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Petroleum Industry Act (PIA)
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Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Operations Regulations
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NMDPRA safety, environmental and technical guidelines
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Portal-based licensing standards
Licenses generally have specific validity periods and often expire on December 31st of the issuance year unless stated otherwise.
5. Overview of the Official Licensing Portals
NMDPRA licensing is now handled 100% electronically through designated portals:
a. CELPS (Central Electronic Licensing & Permit System)
Used for most midstream and downstream licensing activities.
This is often the first account to create.
b. DEPOT Licensing Portal
Dedicated to depot license applications, renewals and fee schedules.
c. IMPEX Portal
Used if the depot handles imported petroleum products, includes import permits, vessel notifications and product receipt processes.
d. AGS Portal
Used for gas-related depots (LPG, CNG, LNG).
6. Step-by-Step Application Process
Below is the standardised step-by-step process for obtaining a Petroleum Depot License exactly as implemented by NMDPRA across its licensing portals.
Step 1: Conduct Pre-Application Compliance Checks
Before initiating the online process:
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Verify CAC registration and up-to-date tax compliance.
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Secure site documentation (title, lease, or management agreement).
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Gather all engineering drawings and tank lists.
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Prepare HSE documentation (safety case, EIA, ERP).
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Ensure firefighting and spill-control systems meet standards.
Step 2: Register Your Company on the Appropriate Portals
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Create a CELPS account.
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Create a DEPOT portal account for depot-specific licensing.
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Create an IMPEX account if your depot will receive imported products.
Portal account creation is mandatory before any licensing activity.
Step 3: Prepare All Required Documentation
Documents must be scanned clearly and labelled in PDF format. These include:
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CAC incorporation documents
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Tax Identification Number (TIN)
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Storage or lease agreements
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Tank inventory and engineering drawings
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HSE manuals and environmental approvals
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Bank reference (for import-related operations)
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Fire safety and technical certifications
Step 4: Log Into the Portal and Begin Application
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Select New Depot License or New Permit Application.
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Fill required fields (company, facility, technical details).
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Upload required documents in portal-specified order.
Incomplete applications are automatically rejected.
Step 5: Pay All Applicable Fees
Typical fees include:
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Application fee
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Processing fee
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Import/performance fees (volume-based) where applicable
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Vessel notification fees (if import-bound)
Payment is usually via Remita or card-based electronic payment.
Step 6: Technical Review & Site Inspection
NMDPRA conducts on-site verification, inspecting:
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Tank integrity and calibration
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Firefighting and safety systems
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Spill containment and environmental systems
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Piping, manifolds and meter accuracy
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Laboratory and quality control processes
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HSE implementation and emergency response
Deficiencies must be corrected before a license can be granted.
Step 7: License Issuance
After meeting all requirements, NMDPRA issues the Petroleum Depot License digitally on the portal.
A printed copy may be collected if required.
Step 8: Post-Licensing Obligations
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Submit periodic depot activity returns
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Renew the license before expiry
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Notify the Authority of any modifications
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Maintain compliance with safety and environmental rules
7. Documentation Requirements (Full Checklist)
| Category | Required Document |
|---|---|
| Corporate | CAC Certificate, MEMART |
| Tax | TIN, tax clearance |
| Financial | Bank reference (for import operations) |
| Legal | Site title, lease, management or storage agreement |
| Technical | Tank schedule, engineering drawings, piping diagrams |
| HSE | ERP, safety case, EIA/PCS (where applicable) |
| Environment | Spill plan, waste management plan |
| Operations | Depot operating procedures, QC protocols |
| Payment | Remita receipt / RRR evidence |
This is the typical minimum; the portal may request additional supporting documents.
8. Costs & Fee Structure (Official Examples)
Below is a representative fee guide based on typical portal fee ranges.
Note: Actual fees must always be verified on the DEPOT or IMPEX portal.
| Fee Type | Typical Example |
|---|---|
| Depot License Application | Portal-specific (varies by year/product class) |
| Import Permit Application | ₦75,000 per 30 MT (example) |
| Import Permit Processing | ~₦210,000 |
| Vessel Notification | ~₦220,000 |
| Modification Fees | Portal-specific |
| Miscellaneous (date changes, reprocessing) | ₦165,000 and above |
Fees may differ depending on capacity, product type and regulatory updates.
9. Inspections & Technical Assessments
NMDPRA inspectors evaluate:
a. Engineering & Structural Safety
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Tank shell thickness
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Bund walls and secondary containment
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Fire hydrants, hoses, foams, extinguishers
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Pumps, manifolds, and transfer systems
b. HSE Compliance
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Emergency Response Plan
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Staff PPE
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Fire drills and training records
c. Environmental Compliance
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Spill kits
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Sludge management
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Drainage and effluent controls
d. Quality Control
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Accredited laboratory
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Product purity tests
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Metering accuracy
Non-compliance may result in delays, conditional licensing or rejection.
10. Renewal, Modification & Compliance
Renewal
Licenses are usually renewed annually and should be applied for at least 30 days before expiry.
Modification
Any of the following requires modification approval:
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Tank capacity changes
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Structural alterations
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New product types
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Jetty/throughput link addition
Compliance Enforcement
Violations may lead to:
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Suspension
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Penalties
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Revocation
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Sealing of facility
11. Complete Applicant Checklist (Download-Ready)
Before Applying:
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CAC documents ready
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TIN & tax clearance
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Site/lease/title agreement
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Full engineering drawings
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Tank schedule
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EIA or environmental documents
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HSE manual & ERP
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Fire safety certificates
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Laboratory accreditation
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Bank reference (import)
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Payment receipts
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Portal registration on CELPS, DEPOT & IMPEX
12. Frequently Asked Questions.
1. What is the difference between a depot license and an import permit?
A depot license allows operation of a storage facility, while an import permit allows importation and discharge of petroleum products into a depot.
2. How long does the licensing process take?
Typically 3–8 weeks, depending on:
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Document completeness
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Inspection scheduling
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Technical compliance
3. Can a company operate tanks without a depot license?
No. Operating without a license is a regulatory offense punishable by sanctions.
4. Does every depot need an IMPEX permit?
Only if it receives imported petroleum products.
5. Do upgrades or capacity expansions need approval?
Yes. Any modification must be approved before implementation.
13. Common Misconceptions Corrected
Misconception 1: “Portal registration is optional.”
Incorrect. All depot licensing is processed 100% online.
Misconception 2: “One license covers any future expansion.”
Incorrect. Any change in capacity or structure requires modification approval.
Misconception 3: “A depot can import without IMPEX registration.”
Incorrect. IMPEX is mandatory for all import-related activities.
Misconception 4: “Fire service approval is not needed.”
Incorrect. Fire safety systems are a core licensing requirement.
14. Sample Licensing Timeline (Typical)
| Stage | Timeframe |
|---|---|
| Document preparation | 1–7 days |
| Portal registration | 1 day |
| Application submission | Same day |
| Document review | 1–3 weeks |
| Technical inspection | 1–4 weeks |
| Final approval | Within 1–2 weeks |
Times may vary based on depot readiness.
15. Conclusion & Next Steps
Obtaining a Petroleum Depot License in Nigeria requires careful preparation, regulatory alignment, and strict adherence to technical and environmental standards. By following the steps outlined in this guide, preparation, portal registration, document compilation, inspection readiness and renewal planning, your company can achieve full compliance and operate confidently within the regulated petroleum value chain.