Columbus, Ohio, November 12, 2025- TotalEnergies has signed a 15-year power purchase agreement (PPA) with Google to supply renewable electricity for the tech giant’s expanding data centre operations across Ohio, marking a significant milestone in both companies’ push toward decarbonized digital infrastructure.
Under the agreement, TotalEnergies will deliver approximately 1.5 terawatt-hours (TWh) of certified renewable electricity to Google over the contract term. The clean energy will be sourced primarily from the company’s Montpelier solar project, a 49-megawatt (MW) facility located in Williams County, Ohio, which connects to the PJM Interconnection grid and is set to reach full operation by early 2026.
“This agreement illustrates TotalEnergies’s ability to meet the growing energy demands of major tech companies by leveraging its integrated portfolio of renewable and flexible assets,” said Stéphane Michel, President of Gas, Renewables & Power at TotalEnergies. “It also reflects our ambition to accelerate the deployment of clean energy across key industrial and digital sectors.”
The deal forms part of Google’s 24/7 carbon-free energy initiative, which aims to match every kilowatt-hour of electricity consumed in its data centres and offices with carbon-free sources by the end of the decade.
According to Matt Brittin, President of Google EMEA, partnerships like this “help bring new renewable projects online, strengthen local grids, and support sustainable growth for the digital economy.”
The Ohio agreement builds on an existing relationship between the two companies: TotalEnergies already supplies renewable energy to Google data centres in Europe and Asia, including facilities in Finland and Singapore. The latest PPA expands that collaboration into the United States, where hyperscale data centre demand and AI-driven workloads are intensifying energy requirements.
Industry observers note that the partnership underscores a broader trend among hyperscalers, securing long-term renewable supply contracts close to operational regions to reduce exposure to volatile power markets and grid constraints. The deal also advances TotalEnergies’ goal of achieving 100 TWh of renewable electricity output per year by 2030.