Frankly, you've got yourself a problem not easily "analyzed" by engineering, because I see carelessness (in stacking the cartons on the pallets, and (possibly) stacking loaded and unloaded pallets on top of each other) being the MUCH more severe problem causing likely collapse than a slightly uneven concrete surface.
I'd leave the slight slope "as-is" and require separators between pallet loading zones (make a series of slots for the loaded pallets to go into) so one collapsing pallet load by illegals or untrained or incompetent/overzealous workers (both potentially dangerous!) won't cause the whole row to fall over when the load on the pallet in the middle slides sideways..
3 meters is 10 feet - certainly high enough to be dangerous if the pile collapses. Another safer "fall direction" is to make each slot sloped away from the open front. Then, when the pile falls, it falls away from the loading zone (the open front) and the collapsing load is trapped by the rear wall and both side walls. More expensive though. CME walls?