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TotalEnergies Secures 10-Year 800 GWh Clean Power Deal with SWM

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TotalEnergies Secures 10-Year 800 GWh Clean Power Deal with SWM

TotalEnergies Secures 10-Year 800 GWh Clean Power Deal with SWM

  • 10-year clean firm power contract totaling 800 GWh for three French paper plants
  • Secures 50 percent of SWM’s national electricity demand, supporting 2033 decarbonization goals
  • Demonstrates growing industrial demand for stable renewable procurement in energy-intensive sectors

TotalEnergies will supply 800 GWh of clean firm power to paper manufacturer SWM over ten years beginning in 2026, marking one of France’s stronger examples of heavy industry locking in stable renewable procurement to control costs and reduce emissions.

Contract Structure and Supply Profile

The agreement covers three SWM plants in France, located at Papeteries de Saint Girons, PDM Industries, and LTR Industries. TotalEnergies will deliver a constant renewable supply profile, drawing from roughly 50 MW of its operating renewable assets in the country.

Clean firm power remains a critical instrument for European industrial buyers that cannot compromise output due to intermittency. By blending renewables with flexible assets inside an integrated production portfolio, TotalEnergies aims to reduce balancing risk for customers as the continent tightens climate rules and electricity markets absorb higher volumes of variable generation.

We are delighted to support SWM in its decarbonization efforts and pursuit of competitiveness through our ‘clean firm power’ solutions. This contract illustrates TotalEnergies’ ability to offer tailor-made solutions adapted to the specific needs of our industrial customers in France. These solutions are based on our integrated production portfolio combining both renewable and flexible assets,” said Sophie Chevalier, Senior Vice President Flexible Power & Integration at TotalEnergies.

Cost Stability for an Energy-Intensive Sector

For SWM, the agreement secures half of its electricity consumption in France. The company framed the contract as both an emissions lever and a financial hedge, with energy costs weighing heavily on industrial competitiveness across Europe as carbon policies tighten and power markets remain volatile.

This agreement secures half of our French electricity needs from renewable sources for the next decade, a decisive step toward our commitment to significantly reduce Scope 1 and 2 emissions by 2033. For an energy-intensive industry like ours, this isn’t just an environmental milestone; it’s a strategic investment that gives us cost predictability and strengthens our ability to offer customers genuinely sustainable solutions,” stated Giuliano Scilio, Vice President & CIO at SWM.

RELATED ARTICLE: TotalEnergies to Lead France’s Largest Renewable Energy Project

Governance and Policy Context

France and the EU are intensifying efforts to decarbonize manufacturing supply chains under the Fit for 55 package, tightening state aid frameworks, and preparing for broader carbon border adjustment enforcement. Heavy industries are among the bloc’s priority targets for electrification and efficiency, raising demand for corporate power purchase agreements and long-duration renewable contracts.

Industrial PPAs are increasingly viewed as a core instrument for compliance with climate reporting obligations, both under EU sustainability disclosure requirements and emerging Scope 3 transparency expectations from multinational buyers.

Investor and C-Suite Takeaways

For investors, the contract reinforces an important structural trend: renewable procurement is shifting from discretionary sustainability branding toward balance sheet and risk management strategy. Energy-intensive manufacturers are among the fastest-growing buyers of firmed clean power in Europe as electrification deepens and carbon pricing erodes the viability of fossil-based power.

For corporates, firm renewable arrangements can support predictable input costs, hedge compliance exposure, and strengthen low-carbon product claims within downstream markets that are beginning to price emissions into procurement decisions.

Regional and Global Significance

Although national in scope, the SWM arrangement reflects broader industrial clean power demand across Europe, North America, and parts of Asia, where long-term procurement is becoming foundational to competitiveness. As electrification accelerates under climate frameworks, firm renewable power contracts are likely to expand in both scale and sophistication, influencing capital allocation, industrial strategy, and emissions disclosure standards globally.

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