UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

 

 

FORM 6-K

 

 

 

REPORT OF FOREIGN PRIVATE ISSUER

PURSUANT TO RULE 13a-16 OR 15d-16 OF

THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

 

April 30, 2025

Commission File Number 001-10888

 

 

 

TotalEnergies SE

(Translation of registrants name into English)

 

 

 

2, place Jean Millier

La Défense 6

92400 Courbevoie

France

(Address of principal executive offices)

 

 

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover of Form 20-F or Form 40-F.

 

Form 20-F   x        Form 40-F   ¨

 

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(1):  ¨

 

Note: Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(1) only permits the submission in paper of a Form 6-K if submitted solely to provide an attached annual report to security holders.

 

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(7):  ¨

 

Note: Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(7) only permits the submission in paper of a Form 6-K if submitted to furnish a report or other document that the registrant foreign private issuer must furnish and make public under the laws of the jurisdiction in which the registrant is incorporated, domiciled or legally organized (the registrants home country), or under the rules of the home country exchange on which the registrants securities are traded, as long as the report or other document is not a press release, is not required to be and has not been distributed to the registrants security holders, and, if discussing a material event, has already been the subject of a Form 6-K submission or other Commission filing on EDGAR.

 

 

THIS REPORT ON FORM 6-K SHALL BE DEEMED TO BE INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE IN THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT ON FORM F-3 (NOS. 333-278983, 333-278983-01, 333-278983-02 AND 333-278983-03) OF TOTALENERGIES SE, TOTALENERGIES CAPITAL INTERNATIONAL, TOTALENERGIES CAPITAL CANADA LTD. AND TOTALENERGIES CAPITAL AND THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT ON FORM S-8 (NOS. 333-278948 AND 333-280516) OF TOTALENERGIES SE, AND TO BE PART THEREOF FROM THE DATE ON WHICH THIS REPORT IS FURNISHED, TO THE EXTENT NOT SUPERSEDED BY DOCUMENTS OR REPORTS SUBSEQUENTLY FILED OR FURNISHED.

 

 

 

 

 

 

TotalEnergies SE is providing on this Form 6-K its results for the first quarter of 2025 and the three months ended March 31, 2025, a description of certain recent developments relating to its business, as well as a capitalization table as of March 31, 2025.

 

 

 

 

EXHIBIT INDEX

 

Exhibit No. Description
   
Exhibit 99.1 Results for the First Quarter of 2025 and Three Months Ended March 31, 2025
   
Exhibit 99.2 Recent Developments
   
Exhibit 99.3 Capitalization and Indebtedness

 

 

 

 

SIGNATURES

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

 

  TotalEnergies SE
     
     
Date: April 30th, 2025 By: /s/ DENIS TOULOUSE
    Name: Denis Toulouse
    Title: Company Treasurer

 

 

 

 

EXHIBIT 99.1

 

OPERATING AND FINANCIAL REVIEW AND PROSPECTS

 

The terms "TotalEnergies", "TotalEnergies company" and "Company" in this exhibit are used to designate TotalEnergies SE and the consolidated entities directly or indirectly controlled by TotalEnergies SE.

 

The financial and extra-financial information on pages 1-24 of this exhibit relating to TotalEnergies with respect to the first quarter of 2025 has been derived from TotalEnergies’ unaudited consolidated balance sheets as of March 31, 2025, unaudited statements of income, comprehensive income, cash flow and business segment information for the first quarter of 2025 and unaudited consolidated statements of changes in shareholders’ equity for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 on pages 26 et seq. of this exhibit.

 

The following discussion should be read in conjunction with the aforementioned financial statements and with the information, including TotalEnergies’ audited consolidated financial statements and related notes, provided in TotalEnergies’ Annual Report on Form 20-F for the year ended December 31, 2024, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) on March 31, 2025.

 

A. KEY FIGURES

 

In millions of dollars, except earnings per share and number of shares 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Sales 52,254 52,508 - 56,278 -7%
Net income (TotalEnergies share) 3,851 3,956 -3% 5,721 -33%
Adjusted EBITDA (1) 10,504 10,529 - 11,493 -9%
Adjusted net operating income (2) from business segments 4,792 4,992 -4% 5,600 -14%
Exploration & Production 2,451 2,305 +6% 2,550 -4%
Integrated LNG 1,294 1,432 -10% 1,222 +6%
Integrated Power 506 575 -12% 611 -17%
Refining & Chemicals 301 318 -5% 962 -69%
Marketing & Services 240 362 -34% 255 -6%
Adjusted net income (1) (TotalEnergies share) 4,192 4,406 -5% 5,112 -18%
Fully-diluted earnings per shares ($) 1.68 1.70 - 2.40 -
Fully-diluted weighted-average shares (millions) 2,246 2,282 -2% 2,352 -5%
Cash flow used in investing activities 4,805 3,745 +28% 3,467 +39%
Organic investments (1) 4,501 3,839 +17% 4,072 +11%
Acquisitions net of assets sales(1) 420 24 x17,4 (500) ns
Net investments (1) 4,921 3,863 +27% 3,572 +38%
Cash flow from operating activities 2,563 12,507 -80% 2,169 +18%
Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) (1) 6,992 7,151 -2% 8,168 -14%
Debt Adjusted Cash Flow (DACF) (1) 7,276 7,398 -2% 8,311 -12%
Gearing (1) of 14.3% at March 31, 2025 vs. 8.3% at December 31, 2024 and 10.5% at March 31, 2024.

(1)Adjusted EBITDA, adjusted net income, organic investments, acquisitions net of assets sales, net investments, cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO), debt adjusted cash flow (DACF) and gearing are non-GAAP financial measures. Refer to the Glossary on page 25 for the definitions and further information on non-GAAP measures (alternative performance measures) and to pages 16 and following for reconciliation tables.
(2)Detail of adjustment items shown in the business segment information starting on page 31.

 

 

 

 

Key figures of environment, greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) and production

 

Environment – liquids and gas price realizations, refining margins

 

  1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Brent ($/b) 75.7 74.7 +1% 83.2 -9%
Henry Hub ($/Mbtu) 3.9 3.0 +29% 2.1 +84%
TTF ($/Mbtu)(1) 14.4 13.6 +6% 8.8 +65%
JKM ($/Mbtu)(2) 14.1 14.0 +1% 9.3 +52%

Average price of liquids (3), (4) ($/b)

 

Consolidated subsidiaries

72.2 71.8 +1% 78.9 -8%

Average price of gas (3), (5) ($/Mbtu)

 

Consolidated subsidiaries

6.60 6.26 +5% 5.11 +29%

Average price of LNG (3), (6) ($/Mbtu)

 

Consolidated subsidiaries and equity affiliates

10.00 10.37 -4% 9.58 +4%
European Refining Margin (ERM) (3), (7) ($/t) 29.4 25.9 +14% 71.7 -59%
(1)TTF (Title Transfer Facility) is a virtual trading point in the Netherlands for transferring rights in respect of physical gas. It is the most liquid and widely used price benchmark for the natural gas markets in Europe. TTF is operated by Gasunie Transport Services (GTS), the owner and operator of the national transmission network in the Netherlands. It is traded in €/MWh.
(2)JKM (Japan-Korea Marker) measures the prices of spot liquid natural gas (LNG) trades in Asia. It is based on prices reported in spot market trades and/or bids and offers collected after the close of the Asian trading day at 16:30 Singapore time.
(3)Does not include oil, gas and LNG trading activities, respectively.
(4)Sales in $ / Sales in volume for consolidated affiliates.
(5)Sales in $ / Sales in volume for consolidated affiliates.
(6)Sales in $ / Sales in volume for consolidated and equity affiliates.
(7)This market indicator for European refining, calculated based on public market prices ($/t), uses a basket of crudes, petroleum product yields and variable costs representative of the European refining system of TotalEnergies.

 

Greenhouse gas emissions (GHG)(1)

 

Scope 1+2 emissions (2) (MtCO2e) 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Scope 1+2 from operated facilities (3) 8.4 9.6 -13% 8.2 +2%
of which Oil & Gas 7.2 7.9 -9% 7.1 +1%
of which CCGT 1.2 1.7 -29% 1.1 +9%
Scope 1+2 – ESRS share (3) 11.1 12.4 -10% 10.9 +2%

Estimated quarterly emissions.

 

(1)The six greenhouse gases in the Kyoto protocol, namely CO2, CH4, N2O, HFCs, PFCs and SF6, with their respective 100-year time horizon GWP (Global Warming Potential) as described in the 2021 IPCC report. HFCs, PFCs and SF6 are virtually absent from the Company’s emissions or are considered as non-material and are therefore no longer counted with effect from 2018. In CO2 equivalent terms, nitrous oxide (N2O) represents less than 1% of the Company's Scope 1+2 emissions.
(2)Scope 1+2 GHG emissions are defined as the sum of direct emissions of GHG from sites or activities that are included in the scope of reporting and indirect emissions attributable to brought-in energy (electricity, heat, steam), net from potential energy sales, excluding purchased industrial gases (H2). Unless stated otherwise, TotalEnergies reports Scope 2 GHG emissions using the market-based method defined by the GHG Protocol.
(3)Refer to the Glossary on page 25 for the definitions and further information on non-GAAP measures (alternative performance measures) and to pages 16 and following for reconciliation tables.

 

Methane emissions (ktCH4) 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Methane emissions from operated facilities (1) 6 7 -14% 8 -25%

Estimated quarterly emissions.

 

(1)Refer to the Glossary on page 25 for the definitions and further information on non-GAAP measures (alternative performance measures) and to pages 16 and following for reconciliation tables.

 

Scope 1+2 emissions from operated installations were down 13% quarter-to-quarter given continuous decline in flaring emissions on Exploration & Production facilities, carbon footprint reduction initiatives in Refining & Chemicals and the perimeter effect related to the partial sale of West Burton gas-fired capacity during the fourth quarter of 2024.

 

First quarter 2025 Scope 3(1) Category 11 emissions are estimated to be 84 Mt CO2e.

 

 

 

 

 

 

1If not stated otherwise, TotalEnergies reports Scope 3 GHG emissions, category 11, which correspond to indirect GHG emissions related to the direct use phase emissions of sold products over their expected lifetime (i.e., the scope 1 and scope 2 emissions of end users that occur from the combustion of fuels) in accordance with the definition of the GHG Protocol Corporate Value Chain (Scope 3) Accounting and Reporting Standard Supplement. The Company follows the oil & gas industry reporting guidelines published by IPIECA, which comply with the GHG Protocol methodologies. In order to avoid double counting, this methodology accounts for the largest volume in the oil and gas value chains, i.e. the higher of the two production volumes or sales for end use. For TotalEnergies, in 2024, the calculation of Scope 3 GHG emissions for the oil value chain considers products sales (higher than production) and for the gas value chain, the marketable gas and condensates production (higher than gas sales, either as LNG or as direct sales to B2B/B2C customers). A stoichiometric emission factor (oxidation of molecules to carbon dioxide) is applied to these sales or production to obtain an emission volume. In accordance with the Technical Guidance for Calculating Scope 3 Emissions Supplement to the Corporate Value Chain (Scope 3) Accounting and Reporting Standard which defines end users as both consumers and business customers that use final products, and with IPIECA’s Estimating petroleum industry value chain (Scope 3) greenhouse gas emissions guidelines, under which reporting of emissions from fuel purchased for resale to non-end users (e.g. traded) is optional, TotalEnergies does not report emissions associated with trading activities.

 

 

 

 

Production*

 

Hydrocarbon production 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Hydrocarbon production (kboe/d) 2,558 2,427 +5% 2,461 +4%
Oil (including bitumen) (kb/d) 1,355 1,292 +5% 1,322 +2%
Gas (including condensates and associated NGL) (kboe/d) 1,203 1,135 +6% 1,139 +6%
Hydrocarbon production (kboe/d) 2,558 2,427 +5% 2,461 +4%
Liquids (kb/d) 1,516 1,445 +5% 1,482 +2%
Gas (Mcf/d) 5,655 5,323 +6% 5,249 +8%

*      Company production = Exploration & Production production + Integrated LNG production.

 

Hydrocarbon production was 2,558 thousand barrels of oil equivalent per day in the first quarter of 2025, up 4% year-on-year, and was comprised of:

 

·+4% due to start-ups and ramp-ups, including Mero-2 and Mero-3 in Brazil, Fenix in Argentina, Tyra in Denmark, Anchor in the United States and Akpo West in Nigeria,
·-1% due to lower availability of production facilities, mainly due to planned maintenance,
·+3% portfolio effect related to the acquisitions of SapuraOMV in Malaysia and interests in the Eagle Ford shale gas plays in Texas,
·-2% due to the natural field decline.

 

 

 

 

B. ANALYSIS OF BUSINESS SEGMENT RESULTS

 

Financial information by business segment is reported in accordance with the internal reporting system and shows internal segment information that is used to manage and measure the performance of TotalEnergies and which is reviewed by the main operational decision-making body of TotalEnergies, namely the Executive Committee.

 

Management presents adjusted financial indicators to assist investors in better understanding, in conjunction with the Company’s financial results

 

presented in accordance with IFRS, the economic performance of the Company. Adjustment items are of three types: inventory valuation effect, effect of changes in fair value, and special items.

 

The inventory valuation effect: in accordance with IAS 2, TotalEnergies values inventories of petroleum products in its financial statements according to the First-In, First-Out (FIFO) method and other inventories using the weighted-average cost method. Under the FIFO method, the cost of inventory is based on the historic cost of acquisition or manufacture rather than the current replacement cost. In volatile energy markets, this can have a significant distorting effect on the reported income. Accordingly, the adjusted results of the Refining & Chemicals and Marketing & Services segments are presented according to the replacement cost method. This method is used to assess the segments’ performance and facilitate the comparability of the segments’ performance with those of its main competitors. In the replacement cost method, which approximates the Last-In, First-Out (LIFO) method, the variation of inventory values in the statement of income is, depending on the nature of the inventory, determined using either the month-end prices differential between one period and another or the average prices of the period rather than the historical value. The inventory valuation effect is the difference between the results under the FIFO and the replacement cost methods.

 

Effect of changes in fair value: the effect of changes in fair value presented as an adjustment item reflects, for trading inventories and storage contracts, differences between internal measures of performance used by TotalEnergies’ Executive Committee and the accounting for these transactions under IFRS. IFRS requires that trading inventories be recorded at their fair value using period-end spot prices. In order to best reflect the management of economic exposure through derivative transactions, internal indicators used to measure performance include valuations of trading inventories based on forward prices. TotalEnergies, in its trading activities, enters into storage contracts, whose future effects are recorded at fair value in TotalEnergies’ internal economic performance. IFRS precludes recognition of this fair value effect. Furthermore, TotalEnergies enters into derivative instruments to risk manage certain operational contracts or assets. Under IFRS, these derivatives are recorded at fair value while the underlying operational transactions are recorded as they occur. Internal indicators defer the fair value on derivatives to match with the transaction occurrence.

 

Special items: due to their unusual nature or particular significance, certain transactions qualifying as "special items" are excluded from the business segment figures. In general, special items relate to transactions that are significant, infrequent or unusual. However, in certain instances, transactions such as restructuring costs or assets disposals, which are not considered to be representative of the normal course of business, may qualify as special items although they may have occurred in prior years or are likely to occur in following years.

 

TotalEnergies measures performance at the segment level on the basis of Adjusted net operating income. Adjusted net operating income comprises operating income of the relevant segment after deducting the amortization and the depreciation of intangible assets other than mineral interest, translation adjustments and gains or losses on the sale of assets, as well as all other income and expenses related to capital employed (dividends from nonconsolidated companies, income from equity affiliates and capitalized interest expenses) and after income taxes applicable to the above, excluding the effect of the adjustments describe below.

 

The income and expenses not included in net operating income adjusted that are included in net income (TotalEnergies share) are interest expenses related to net financial debt, after applicable income taxes (net cost of net debt), non-controlling interests, and the adjusted items.

 

The operational profit and assets are broken down by business segment prior to the consolidation and inter-segment adjustments.

 

Sales prices between business segments approximate market prices.

 

The reporting structure for the business segments’ financial information is based on the following five business segments:

 

-An Exploration & Production segment that encompasses the activities of exploration and production of oil and natural gas, conducted in about 50 countries;

 

-An Integrated LNG segment covering the integrated gas chain (including upstream and midstream LNG activities) as well as biogas, hydrogen and gas trading activities;

 

-An Integrated Power segment covering generation, storage, electricity trading and B2B-B2C distribution of gas and electricity;

 

-A Refining & Chemicals segment constituting a major industrial hub comprising the activities of refining, petrochemicals and specialty chemicals. This segment also includes the activities of oil Supply, Trading and marine Shipping;

 

-A Marketing & Services segment including the global activities of supply and marketing in the field of petroleum products.

 

In addition, the Corporate segment includes holdings operating and financial activities.

 

 

 

 

B.1 Exploration & Production

 

1. Production

 

Hydrocarbon production 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

EP (kboe/d) 1,976 1,933 +2% 1,969 -
Liquids (kb/d) 1,442 1,385 +4% 1,419 +2%
Gas (Mcf/d) 2,848 2,924 -3% 2,937 -3%

 

2. Results

 

In millions of dollars, except effective tax rate 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Adjusted net operating income (1) 2,451 2,305 +6% 2,550 -4%
including adjusted income from equity affiliates 150 207 -28% 145 +3%
Effective tax rate (2) 49.4% 50.5% - 48.5% -
Cash flow used in investing activities 2,689 1,688 +59% 1,988 +35%
Organic investments 2,684 2,104 +28% 2,041 +32%
Acquisitions net of assets sales 116 (258) ns 36 x3.2
Net investments 2,800 1,846 +52% 2,077 +35%
Cash flow from operating activities 3,266 4,500 -27% 3,590 -9%
Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) 4,291 3,945 +9% 4,478 -4%
(1)Detail of adjustment items shown in the business segment information starting on page 31.
(2)Effective tax rate = (tax on adjusted net operating income) / (adjusted net operating income – income from equity affiliates – dividends received from investments – impairment of goodwill + tax on adjusted net operating income).

 

In the first quarter of 2025, Exploration & Production:

 

·adjusted net operating income was $2,451 million, up 6% quarter-to-quarter, driven by higher production in a slightly more favorable price environment,
·cash flow from operating activities was $3,266 million, down 27% quarter-to-quarter, and
·cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) was $4,291 million, up 9% quarter-to-quarter, for the same reasons stated above.

 

 

 

 

 

B.2 Integrated LNG

 

1. Production

Hydrocarbon production for LNG 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Integrated LNG (kboe/d) 582 494 +18% 492 +18%
Liquids (kb/d) 74 60 +24% 63 +18%
Gas (Mcf/d) 2,807 2,399 +17% 2,312 +21%

 

Liquefied Natural Gas in Mt 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Overall LNG sales 10.6 10.8 -2% 10.7 -1%
Incl. Sales from equity production* 4.0 3.8 +4% 4.2 -4%
Incl. Sales by TotalEnergies from equity production and third party purchases 9.4 9.4 - 9.3 +1%

*     The Company’s equity production may be sold by TotalEnergies or by the joint ventures.

 

LNG sales were globally stable quarter-to-quarter, with increased sales from equity production offset notably by lower spot activity.

 

2. Results

 

In millions of dollars, except average price of LNG 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Average price of LNG ($/Mbtu)(1)

 

Consolidated subsidiaries and equity affiliates

10.00 10.37 -4% 9.58 +4%
Adjusted net operating income(2) 1,294 1,432 -10% 1,222 +6%
including adjusted income from equity affiliates 535 525 +2% 494 +8%
Cash flow used in investing activities 892 1,657 -46% 515 +73%
Organic investments 752 554 +36% 540 +39%
Acquisitions net of assets sales 140 1,116 -87% (12) ns
Net investments 892 1,670 -47% 528 +69%
Cash flow from operating activities 1,743 2,214 -21% 1,710 +2%
Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) 1,249 1,447 -14% 1,348 -7%
(1)Sales in $ / Sales in volume for consolidated and equity affiliates. Does not include LNG trading activities.
(2)Detail of adjustment items shown in the business segment information starting on page 31.

 

In the first quarter of 2025, Integrated LNG:

 

adjusted net operating income was $1,294 million, up 6% year-on-year and down 10% quarter-to-quarter, in line with the evolution of the average LNG price,
cash flow from operating activities was $1,743 million, up 2% year-on-year and down 21% quarter-to-quarter, and
cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) was $1,249 million, down 7% year-on-year and down 14% quarter-to-quarter, for the same reasons stated above and due to a timing effect in dividend payments from some equity affiliates.

 

 

B.3 Integrated Power

 

1. Productions, capacities, clients and sales

 

Integrated Power 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Net power production (TWh) (1) 11.3 11.4 -1% 9.6 +18%
o/w power production from renewables 6.8 6.5 +5% 6.0 +13%
o/w power production from gas flexible capacities 4.5 4.9 -8% 3.6 +27%
Portfolio of power generation net installed capacity (GW) (2) 22.7 21.5 +6% 19.5 +17%
o/w renewables 16.2 15.1 +8% 13.7 +18%
o/w power production from gas flexible capacities 6.5 6.5 +1% 5.8 +13%
Portfolio of renewable power generation gross capacity (GW) (2), (3) 97.5 97.2 - 84.1 +16%
o/w installed capacity 27.8 26.0 +7% 23.5 +18%
Clients power – BtB and BtC (Million) (2) 6.0 6.1 - 6.0 +1%
Clients gas – BtB and BtC (Million) (2) 2.8 2.8 - 2.8 -
Sales power – BtB and BtC (TWh) 14.5 13.8 +5% 14.9 -3%
Sales gas – BtB and BtC (TWh) 35.7 30.1 +19% 35.7 -
(1)Solar, wind, hydroelectric and gas flexible capacities.
(2)End of period data.
(3)Includes 20% of Adani Green Energy Ltd’s gross capacity, 50% of Clearway Energy Group’s gross capacity and 49% of Casa dos Ventos’ gross capacity.

 

Net power production increased 18% year-on-year, reaching 11.3 TWh, linked to the renewables production growth and the acquisition of flexible gas capacity in the United Kingdom and the United States in 2024.

 

Gross installed renewable power generation capacity reached 27.8 GW at the end of the first quarter of 2025, up 18% year-on-year, i.e. a 4.3 GW increase.

 

Results

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Adjusted net operating income(1) 506 575 -12% 611 -17%
including adjusted income from equity affiliates 44 (25) ns (39) ns
Cash flow used in investing activities 878 (509) ns 1,677 -48%
Organic investments 645 109 x5.9 943 -32%
Acquisitions net of assets sales 238 (662) ns 735 -68%
Net investments 883 (553) ns 1,678 -47%
Cash flow from operating activities (399) 1,201 ns (249) ns
Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) 597 604 -1% 692 -14%

(1)    Detail of adjustment items shown in the business segment information starting on page 31.

 

In the first quarter of 2025, Integrated Power:

 

adjusted net operating income was $506 million, down 12% quarter-on-quarter, in the absence of farm-downs during the quarter,
cash flow from operating activities was $(399) million; and
cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) was $597 million, stable quarter-to-quarter and in line with the annual guidance.

 

 

B.4 Downstream (Refining & Chemicals and Marketing & Services)

 

1. Results

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Adjusted net operating income(1) 541 680 -20% 1,217 -56%
Cash flow used in investing activities 311 850 -63% (740) ns
Organic investments 386 1,013 -62% 520 -26%
Acquisitions net of assets sales (75) (172) ns (1,258) ns
Net investments 311 841 -63% (738) ns
Cash flow from operating activities (1,415) 4,610 ns (2,237) ns
Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) 1,117 1,356 -18% 1,770 -37%
(1)Detail of adjustment items shown in the business segment information starting on page 31.

 

B.5 Refining & Chemicals

 

1. Refinery and petrochemicals throughput and utilization rates

 

Refinery throughput and utilization rate 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Total refinery throughput (kb/d) 1,549 1,432 +8% 1,424 +9%
France 435 424 +3% 382 +14%
Rest of Europe 627 541 +16% 618 +1%
Rest of world 487 467 +4% 424 +15%
Utilization rate based on crude only* 87% 82%   79%  

*      Based on distillation capacity at the beginning of the year, excluding the African refinery SIR (divested) from the third quarter of 2024 and the African refinery Natref (divested) during the fourth quarter of 2024.

 

Petrochemicals production and utilization rate 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Monomers* (kt) 1,250 1,233 +1% 1,287 -3%
Polymers (kt) 1,173 1,080 +9% 1,076 +9%
Steam cracker utilization rate** 78% 79%   73%  

*      Olefins. 

**     Based on olefins production from steam crackers and their treatment capacity at the start of the year, excluding Lavera (divested) from the second quarter of 2024.

 

Refinery throughput was up by 8% quarter-on-quarter, mainly due to the restart of the Leuna refinery following a planned turnaround, setting the utilization rate at 87% during the first quarter of 2025.

 

 

2. Results

 

In millions of dollars, except ERM 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

European Refining Margin Marker (ERM) ($/t)(1) 29.4 25.9 +14% 71.7 -59%
Adjusted net operating income(2) 301 318 -5% 962 -69%
Cash flow used in investing activities 236 498 -53% 397 -41%
Organic investments 236 581 -59% 419 -44%
Acquisitions net of assets sales - (92) -100% (20) -100%
Net investments 236 489 -52% 399 -41%
Cash flow from operating activities (1,983) 3,832 ns (2,129) ns
Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) 633 822 -23% 1,291 -51%
(1)This market indicator for European refining, calculated based on public market prices ($/t), uses a basket of crudes, petroleum product yields and variable costs representative of the European refining system of TotalEnergies. Does not include oil trading activities.
(2)Detail of adjustment items shown in the business segment information starting on page 31.

 

In the first quarter of 2025, Refining & Chemicals:

 

adjusted net operating income was $301 million, down 5% quarter-to-quarter, reflecting low refining margins and declining petrochemical and biofuel margins in Europe, together with operational difficulties at Donges and Port-Arthur refineries,
cash flow from operating activities was $(1,983) million, and
cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) was $633 million, down 23% compared to the previous quarter which benefited from dividends received from equity affiliates.

 

 

B.6 Marketing & Services

 

1. Petroleum product sales

 

Sales in kb/d* 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Total Marketing & Services sales 1,266 1,312 -4% 1,312 -4%
Europe 714 724 -1% 715 -
Rest of world 551 587 -6% 597 -8%

*     Excludes trading and bulk refining sales.

 

Sales of petroleum products were down 4% quarter-to-quarter due to the seasonality of transport markets.

 

 

2. Results

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Adjusted net operating income (1) 240 362 -34% 255 -6%
Cash flow used in investing activities 75 352 -79% (1,137) ns
Organic investments 150 432 -65% 101 +49%
Acquisitions net of assets sales (75) (80) ns (1,238) ns
Net investments 75 352 -79% (1,137) ns
Cash flow from operating activities 568 778 -27% (108) ns
Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) 484 534 -9% 479 +1%

(1)    Detail of adjustment items shown in the business segment information starting on page 31.

 

In the first quarter of 2025, Marketing & Services:

 

adjusted net operating income was $240 million, down 6% year-on-year, in line with the volume decrease,
cash flow from operating activities was $568 million, down 27% quarter-to-quarter, and
cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) was $484 million, slightly up year-on-year with the strong performance of lubricants offsetting the decrease in volumes sold.

 

 

 

C. TOTALENERGIES RESULTS

 

1.Net income (TotalEnergies share)

 

Net income (TotalEnergies share) was $3,851 million in the first quarter of 2025 compared to $3,956 million in the fourth quarter of 2024 and $5,721 in the first quarter of 2024.

 

Adjusted net income (TotalEnergies share) was $4,192 million in the first quarter of 2025 compared to $5,112 million in the first quarter of 2024, mainly due to softening oil prices and refining margins, partially compensated by higher hydrocarbon production and higher gas prices.

 

Adjusted net income excludes the after-tax inventory effect, special items and the impact of changes in fair value.

 

Adjustments to net income were ($0.3) billion in the first quarter of 2025, consisting mainly of:

 

($0.2) billion of changes in fair value and stock variation,

($0.1) billion of non-recurring items, mainly related to the impact of the Energy Profit Levy in the United Kingdom.

 

2.Fully-diluted shares and share buybacks

 

As of March 31, 2025, the number of diluted shares was 2,242 million.

 

TotalEnergies repurchased 33.3 million shares1 in the first quarter of 2025 for $2 billion.

 

3.Acquisitions - asset sales

 

Acquisitions were $836 million in the first quarter of 2025, primarily related to:

 

the acquisition of an additional 10% interest in the Moho field in Congo,

the acquisition of SN Power, a developer of hydro-electricity projects in Africa, and

the acquisition of the Big Sky Solar project in Canada.

 

Divestments were $416 million in the first quarter of 2025, primarily related to:

 

the sale of interests in Nkossa and Nsoko II permits in Congo, and

the finalization of the divestment of fuel distribution activities in Brazil.

 

4.Cash flow

 

TotalEnergies’ cash flow from operating activities was $2,563 million in the first quarter of 2025, compared to a cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO)2 of $6,992 million in the first quarter of 2025, and was impacted by increased working capital of $4.4 billion, mainly due to:

 

$1 billion reversal of exceptional working capital items which reduced working capital in the fourth quarter of 2024,

$2 billion seasonal effect from gas and power distribution activities in Europe and related to advanced payments happening in the first quarter of the year, and

$1 billion effect of the evolution of the business (stocks and sales increase at the end of the quarter).

 

The change in working capital was an increase of $4,232 million in the first quarter of 2025 in accordance with IFRS. The difference of $197 million between IFRS and replacement cost method corresponds to the following adjustments: (i) the pre-tax inventory valuation effect of $107 million, (ii) plus the mark-to-market effect of Integrated LNG’s and Integrated Power’s contracts of $84 million, (iii) plus the capital gains from the renewables project sale of $0 million and (iv) plus the organic loan repayments from equity affiliates of $6 million.

 

The change in working capital, as determined using the replacement cost method excluding the mark-to-market effect of Integrated LNG and Integrated Power’s contracts, including capital gain from renewable project sales and including organic loan repayment from equity affiliates, was an increase of $4,429 million in the first quarter of 2025, compared to a decrease of $5,356 million in the fourth quarter of 2024.

 

TotalEnergies’ net cash flow was $2,071 million in the first quarter of 2025 compared to $3,288 million in the fourth quarter of 2024, reflecting the $159 million decrease in CFFO and the $1,058 million increase in net investments to $4,921 million.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Including coverage of employees share grant plans.

2 Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) is a non-GAAP financial measure. Refer to the Glossary on page 25 for the definitions and further information on non-GAAP measures (alternative performance measures) and to pages 16 and following for reconciliation tables.

 

 

 

 

D. PROFITABILITY

 

Return on equity was 15.1% for the twelve months ended March 31, 2025.

 

In millions of dollars

April 1, 2024
March 31, 2025

January 1, 2024
December 31, 2024

April 1, 2023
March 31, 2024

Adjusted net income (TotalEnergies share) 17,636 18,586 22,047
Average adjusted shareholders’ equity 116,758 117,835 115,835
Return on equity (ROE) 15.1% 15.8% 19.0%

 

Return on average capital employed (ROACE)3 was 13.2% for the twelve months ended March 31, 2025.

 

In millions of dollars

April 1, 2024
March 31, 2025

January 1, 2024
December 31, 2024

April 1, 2023
March 31, 2024

Adjusted net operating income 19,125 19,974 23,278
Average capital employed 144,629 135,174 140,662
ROACE 13.2% 14.8% 16.5%

 

 

E. Annual 2025 Sensitivities*

  Change

Estimated impact
on adjusted net
operating income

Estimated impact
on cash flow
from operations

Dollar +/- 0.1 $ per € -/+ 0.1 B$ ~0 B$
Average liquids price** +/- 10$/b +/- 2.3 B$ +/- 2.8 B$
European gas price – TTF +/- 2 $/Mbtu +/- 0.4 B$ +/- 0.4 B$
European Refining Margin Marker (ERM) +/- 10 $/t +/- 0.4 B$ +/- 0.5 B$

* Sensitivities are revised once per year upon publication of the previous year’s fourth quarter results. Sensitivities are estimates based on assumptions about TotalEnergies’ portfolio in 2025. Actual results could vary significantly from estimates based on the application of these sensitivities. The impact of the $-€ sensitivity on adjusted net operating income is essentially attributable to Refining & Chemicals. 

** In an 70-80 $/b Brent environment.

 

F. SUMMARY AND OUTLOOK

 

In the context of geopolitical and macroeconomic uncertainties following the introduction of trade tariffs by the United States, the oil demand outlook has softened and meanwhile OPEC+ countries have announced the unwinding of some of the voluntary production cuts beginning in the second quarter of 2025. Consequently, oil prices remain volatile between $60 and $70/b and refining and petrochemical margins are expected to remain weak.

 

Forward European markets expect gas prices to remain elevated in the second quarter of 2025, in a context of inventory replenishment in Europe. Given the evolution of oil and gas prices in recent months and the lag effect on price formulas, TotalEnergies anticipates its average LNG selling price will be between $9 and $9.5/Mbtu in the second quarter of 2025.

 

Hydrocarbon production in the second quarter of 2025 is expected to be impacted by more planned maintenance than during the first quarter of 2025 (50 kboe/d) and second quarter of 2024. As a result, hydrocarbon production during the second quarter of 2025 is expected to grow 2 to 3% year-on-year. Given the growth of nearly 4% in the first quarter, the Company also confirms its target to grow hydrocarbon production by more than 3% in fiscal year 2025 versus fiscal year 2024.

 

For 2025, TotalEnergies reiterates net investments guidance of $17 to $17.5 billion, of which $4.5 billion is dedicated to low carbon energies, mostly Integrated Power.

 

 

 

 

3 ROACE is a non-GAAP financial measure. Refer to the Glossary on page 25 for the definitions and further information on Non-GAAP measures (alternative performance measures).

 

 

 

 

FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

 

This document may contain forward-looking statements (including within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995), notably with respect to the financial condition, results of operations, business activities and strategy of TotalEnergies. This document may also contain statements regarding the perspectives, objectives, areas of improvement and goals of TotalEnergies, including with respect to climate change and carbon neutrality (net zero emissions). An ambition expresses an outcome desired by TotalEnergies, it being specified that the means to be deployed do not depend solely on TotalEnergies. These forward-looking statements may generally be identified by the use of the future or conditional tense or forward-looking words such as “will”, “should”, “could”, “would”, “may”, “likely”, “might”, “envisions”, “intends”, “anticipates”, “believes”, “considers”, “plans”, “expects”, “thinks”, “targets”, “aims” or similar terminology. Such forward-looking statements included in this document are based on economic data, estimates and assumptions prepared in a given economic, competitive and regulatory environment and considered to be reasonable by TotalEnergies as of the date of this document.

 

These forward-looking statements are not historical data and should not be interpreted as assurances that the perspectives, objectives or goals announced will be achieved. They may prove to be inaccurate in the future, and may evolve or be modified with a significant difference between the actual results and those initially estimated, due to the uncertainties notably related to the economic, financial, competitive and regulatory environment, or due to the occurrence of risk factors, such as, notably, the price fluctuations in crude oil and natural gas, the evolution of the demand and price of petroleum products, the changes in production results and reserves estimates, the ability to achieve cost reductions and operating efficiencies without unduly disrupting business operations, changes in laws and regulations including those related to the environment and climate, changes in the geopolitical environment, including the impact of tariffs and trade disputes, currency fluctuations, technological innovations, meteorological conditions and events, as well as socio-demographic, economic and political developments, changes in market conditions, loss of market share and changes in consumer preferences, or pandemics such as COVID-19. Additionally, certain financial information is based on estimates particularly in the assessment of the recoverable value of assets and potential impairments of assets relating thereto.

 

Readers are cautioned not to consider forward-looking statements as accurate, but as an expression of the Company’s views only as of the date this document is published. TotalEnergies SE and its subsidiaries have no obligation, make no commitment and expressly disclaim any responsibility to investors or any stakeholder to update or revise, particularly as a result of new information or future events, any forward-looking information or statement, objectives or trends contained in this document. In addition, the Company has not verified, and is under no obligation to verify any third-party data contained in this document or used in the estimates and assumptions or, more generally, forward-looking statements published in this document.

 

For additional factors, you should read the information set forth under “Item 3. -3.1 Risk Factors”, “Item 4. Information on the Company”, “Item 5. Operating and Financial Review and Prospects” and “Item 11. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk” in TotalEnergies’ Form 20-F for the year ended December 31, 2024.

 

Additionally, developments related to environmental and climate change-related issues in this document are based on various frameworks and the interests of various stakeholders which are subject to change and evolve independently of the Company. Moreover, the Company’s disclosures on such issues, including climate-related disclosures, may include information that is not necessarily "material" under US securities laws for SEC reporting purposes or under applicable securities law.

 

 

 

 

OPERATING INFORMATION BY SEGMENT

 

Company’s production (Exploration & Production + Integrated LNG)

 

Combined liquids and gas
production by region (kboe/d)
1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Europe 571 589 -3% 570 -
Africa 424 437 -3% 463 -8%
Middle East and North Africa 849 790 +7% 815 +4%
Americas 424 401 +6% 352 +21%
Asia-Pacific 290 210 +38% 261 +11%
Total production 2,558 2,427 +5% 2,461 +4%
includes equity affiliates 390 369 +6% 346 +13%
           
Liquids production by region (kb/d) 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Europe 216 228 -6% 224 -4%
Africa 312 318 -2% 331 -6%
Middle East and North Africa 680 627 +8% 652 +4%
Americas 202 193 +5% 171 +18%
Asia-Pacific 106 79 +35% 104 +1%
Total production 1,516 1,445 +5% 1,482 +2%
includes equity affiliates 163 151 +8% 154 +6%
           
Gas production by region (Mcf/d) 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Europe 1,920 1,951 -2% 1,869 +3%
Africa 567 620 -9% 648 -13%
Middle East and North Africa 920 889 +3% 896 +3%
Americas 1,237 1,154 +7% 1,003 +23%
Asia-Pacific 1,011 709 +43% 833 +21%
Total production 5,655 5,323 +6% 5,249 +8%
includes equity affiliates 1,237 1,181 +5% 1,043 +19%

 

Downstream (Refining & Chemicals and Marketing & Services)

 

Petroleum product sales by region (kb/d) 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Europe 1,677 1,820 -8% 1,774 -5%
Africa 618 614 +1% 591 +4%
Americas 1,073 970 +11% 1,033 +4%
Rest of world 945 975 -3% 711 +33%
Total consolidated sales 4,313 4,380 -2% 4,109 +5%
Includes bulk sales 344 343 - 401 -14%
Includes trading 2,703 2,725 -1% 2,397 +13%

 

Petrochemicals production* (kt) 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Europe 984 875 +12% 990 -1%
Americas 694 701 -1% 645 +8%
Middle East and Asia 745 737 +1% 727 +2%
*Olefins, polymers.

 

 

 

 

INTEGRATED POWER

 

Net power production

 

    1Q25   4Q24
Net power production (TWh)   Solar Onshore
Wind
Offshore
Wind
Gas Others Total   Solar Onshore
Wind
Offshore
Wind
Gas Others Total
France   0.1 0.2 - 1.9 0.0 2.2   0.2 0.3 - 1.4 0.0 1.9
Rest of Europe   0.1 0.6 0.3 1.6 0.1 2.6   0.1 0.6 0.4 2.1 0.0 3.2
Africa   0.0 - - - 0.0 0.1   0.0 0.0 - - - 0.0
Middle East   0.2 - - 0.2 - 0.4   0.2 - - 0.2 - 0.4
North America   0.7 0.5 - 0.9 - 2.1   0.9 0.5 - 1.1 - 2.5
South America   0.2 0.8 - - - 0.9   0.1 0.9 - - - 1.1
India   2.2 0.3 - - - 2.5   1.6 0.2 - - - 1.9
Asia-Pacific   0.3 0.0 0.2 - - 0.5   0.3 0.0 0.2 - - 0.4
Total   3.8 2.4 0.5 4.5 0.1 11.3   3.4 2.5 0.6 4.9 0.1 11.4

 

 

Installed power generation net capacity

 

    1Q25 4Q24
Installed power generation net capacity (GW)
(1)
  Solar Onshore
Wind
Offshore
Wind
Gas Others Total   Solar Onshore
Wind
Offshore
Wind
Gas Others Total
France   0.8 0.4 - 2.7 0.2 4.0   0.7 0.4 - 2.6 0.2 4.0
Rest of Europe   0.6 1.0 0.3 2.1 0.2 4.1   0.6 0.9 0.3 2.1 0.2 4.0
Africa   0.0 - - - 0.1 0.1   0.0 - - - - 0.0
Middle East   0.4 - - 0.3 - 0.8   0.4 - - 0.3 - 0.8
North America   2.5 0.8 - 1.5 0.3 5.1   2.3 0.8 - 1.5 0.3 4.9
South America   0.4 0.9 - - - 1.3   0.4 0.9 - - - 1.3
India   5.5 0.6 - - - 6.1   4.8 0.6 - - - 5.3
Asia-Pacific   1.1 0.0 0.2 - - 1.3   1.1 0.0 0.2 - - 1.3
Total   11.2 3.8 0.5 6.5 0.7 22.7   10.3 3.6 0.5 6.5 0.6 21.5
                                   

 

Power generation gross capacity from renewables

 

    1Q25   4Q24
Installed power generation gross capacity
from renewables (GW) (1), (2)
  Solar Onshore
Wind
Offshore
Wind
Other Total   Solar Onshore
Wind
Offshore
Wind
Other Total
France   1.2 0.7 - 0.2 2.1   1.2 0.7 - 0.2 2.1
Rest of Europe   0.6 1.3 1.1 0.3 3.2   0.6 1.1 1.1 0.3 3.1
Africa   0.1 - - 0.3 0.4   0.1 - - 0.0 0.1
Middle East   1.2 - - - 1.2   1.2 - - - 1.2
North America   5.6 2.2 - 0.7 8.4   5.4 2.2 - 0.7 8.2
South America   0.4 1.4 - - 1.8   0.4 1.3 - - 1.7
India   7.7 0.6 - - 8.4   6.7 0.6 - - 7.3
Asia-Pacific   1.7 0.0 0.6 0.0 2.3   1.6 0.0 0.6 0.0 2.2
Total   18.4 6.2 1.8 1.4 27.8   17.2 6.0 1.7 1.1 26.0
                         
    1Q25   4Q24
Power generation gross capacity from
renewables in construction (GW) (1), (2)
  Solar Onshore
Wind
Offshore
Wind
Other Total   Solar Onshore
Wind
Offshore
Wind
Other Total
France   0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.3   0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.3
Rest of Europe   0.5 0.1 0.8 0.3 1.8   0.5 0.2 0.8 0.0 1.4
Africa   0.4 0.1 - 0.1 0.7   0.4 0.1 - 0.1 0.6
Middle East   1.5 0.2 - - 1.7   0.1 - - - 0.1
North America   1.3 0.0 - 0.5 1.9   1.2 0.0 - 0.5 1.8
South America   0.4 0.5 - 0.2 1.1   0.4 0.6 - 0.2 1.2
India   2.2 0.0 - - 2.2   3.2 - - - 3.2
Asia-Pacific   0.1 - - - 0.1   0.1 - 0.1 - 0.1
Total   6.7 1.1 0.8 1.2 9.9   6.2 1.0 0.8 0.9 8.9
                         
    1Q25   4Q24
Power generation gross capacity from
renewables in development (GW) (1), (2)
  Solar Onshore
Wind
Offshore
Wind
Other Total   Solar Onshore
Wind
Offshore
Wind
Other Total
France   0.9 0.3 - 0.1 1.3   0.9 0.5 - 0.1 1.5
Rest of Europe   4.6 0.6 13.3 2.5 20.9   4.9 0.7 13.3 2.7 21.6
Africa   0.5 0.2 - - 0.7   0.6 0.2 - - 0.8
Middle East   0.8 - - - 0.8   2.3 0.2 - - 2.6
North America   10.6 3.0 4.1 4.4 22.1   10.3 3.1 4.1 4.4 21.9
South America   1.7 1.4 - 0.0 3.1   1.6 1.1 - 0.0 2.8
India   2.3 0.1 - - 2.4   2.3 0.1 - - 2.5
Asia-Pacific   3.4 1.1 3.0 1.1 8.5   3.4 1.1 3.0 1.2 8.6
Total   24.8 6.6 20.4 8.1 59.8   26.5 7.1 20.4 8.3 62.3

(1)          End-of-period data. 

(2)          Includes 20% of the gross capacities of Adani Green Energy Limited, 50% of Clearway Energy Group and 49% of Casa dos Ventos.

 

 

 

 

 

ADJUSTMENT ITEMS TO NET INCOME (TOTALENERGIES SHARE)

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24 1Q24
Net income (TotalEnergies share) 3,851 3,956 5,721
Special items affecting net income (TotalEnergies share) (108) (413) 805
Gain (loss) on asset sales - (25) 1,507
Restructuring charges - (6) -
Impairments - (232) (644)
Other (108) (150) (58)
After-tax inventory effect : FIFO vs. replacement cost (78) 216 124
Effect of changes in fair value (155) (253) (320)
Total adjustments affecting net income (341) (450) 609
Adjusted net income (TotalEnergies share) 4,192 4,406 5,112

 

 

RECONCILIATION OF NET INCOME (TOTALENERGIES SHARE) TO ADJUSTED EBITDA

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Net income (TotalEnergies share) 3,851 3,956 -3% 5,721 -33%
Less: adjustment items to net income (TotalEnergies share) 341 450 -24% (609) ns
Adjusted net income (TotalEnergies share) 4,192 4,406 -5% 5,112 -18%
Adjusted items          
Add: non-controlling interests 70 65 +8% 100 -30%
Add: income taxes 2,705 2,872 -6% 2,991 -10%
Add: depreciation, depletion and impairment of tangible assets and mineral interests 2,998 2,715 +10% 2,942 +2%
Add: amortization and impairment of intangible assets 83 107 -22% 92 -10%
Add: financial interest on debt 725 786 -8% 708 +2%
Less: financial income and expense from cash & cash equivalents (269) (422) ns (452) ns
Adjusted EBITDA 10,504 10,529 - 11,493 -9%

 

 

 

 

RECONCILIATION OF REVENUES FROM SALES TO ADJUSTED EBITDA AND NET INCOME (TOTALENERGIES SHARE)

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Adjusted items          
Revenues from sales 47,899 47,115 +2% 51,883 -8%
Purchases, net of inventory variation (30,563) (30,305) ns (33,525) ns
Other operating expenses (7,542) (7,094) ns (7,580) ns
Exploration costs (81) (242) ns (88) ns
Other income 247 280 -12% 240 +3%
Other expense, excluding amortization and impairment of intangible assets (216) (34) ns (125) ns
Other financial income 294 296 -1% 282 +4%
Other financial expense (249) (193) ns (215) ns
Net income (loss) from equity affiliates 715 706 +1% 621 +15%
Adjusted EBITDA 10,504 10,529 - 11,493 -9%
Adjusted items          
Less: depreciation, depletion and impairment of tangible assets and mineral interests (2,998) (2,715) ns (2,942) ns
Less: amortization of intangible assets (83) (107) ns (92) ns
Less: financial interest on debt (725) (786) ns (708) ns
Add: financial income and expense from cash & cash equivalents 269 422 -36% 452 -40%
Less: income taxes (2,705) (2,872) ns (2,991) ns
Less: non-controlling interests (70) (65) ns (100) ns
Add: adjustment - TotalEnergies share (341) (450) ns 609 ns
Net income - TotalEnergies share 3,851 3,956 -3% 5,721 -33%

 

 

 

 

INVESTMENTS – DIVESTMENTS AND RECONCILIATION OF CASH FLOW USED IN INVESTING ACTIVITIES TO NET INVESTMENTS, TO ACQUISITIONS NET OF ASSETS SALES AND TO ORGANIC INVESTMENTS: (TOTALENERGIES SHARE)

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Cash flow used in investing activities (a) 4,805 3,745 28% 3,467 +39%
Other transactions with non-controlling interests (b) - - ns - ns
Organic loan repayment from equity affiliates (c) 6 (2) ns 3 +100%
Change in debt from renewable projects financing (d) * - (52) -100% - ns
Capex linked to capitalized leasing contracts (e) 108 152 -29% 103 +5%
Expenditures related to carbon credits (f) 2 20 -90% (1) ns
Net investments (a + b + c + d + e + f = g - i + h) 4,921 3,863 27% 3,572 +38%
of which acquisitions net of assets sales (g-i) 420 24 x17.4 (500) ns
Acquisitions (g) 836 1,233 -32% 1,074 -22%
Asset sales (i) 416 1,209 -66% 1,574 -74%
Change in debt from renewable projects (partner share)   - 26 -100% - ns
of which organic investments (h) 4,501 3,839 17% 4,072 +11%
Capitalized exploration 111 122 -9% 145 -24%
Increase in non-current loans 568 625 -9% 538 +6%
Repayment of non-current loans, excluding organic loan repayment from equity affiliates (103) (619) ns (146) ns
Change in debt from renewable projects (TotalEnergies share) - (26) -100% - ns

* Change in debt from renewable projects (TotalEnergies share and partner share).

 

 

INVESTMENTS & DIVESTMENTS  AND RECONCILIATION OF CASH FLOW USED IN INVESTING ACTIVITIES TO NET INVESTMENTS, TO ACQUISITIONS NET OF ASSETS SALES AND TO ORGANIC INVESTMENTS: EXPLORATION & PRODUCTION

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24 1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Cash flow used in investing activities (a) 2,689 1,688 1,988 +35%
Other transactions with non-controlling interests (b) - - - ns
Organic loan repayment from equity affiliates (c) - - - ns
Change in debt from renewable projects financing (d) * - - - ns
Capex linked to capitalized leasing contracts (e) 109 138 90 +21%
Expenditures related to carbon credits (f) 2 20 (1) ns
Net investments (a + b + c + d + e + f = g - i + h) 2,800 1,846 2,077 +35%
of which acquisitions net of assets sales (g-i) 116 (258) 36 x3.2
Acquisitions (g) 445 11 327 +36%
Asset sales (i) 329 269 291 +13%
Change in debt from renewable projects (partner share)   - - - ns
of which organic investments (h) 2,684 2,104 2,041 +32%
Capitalized exploration 109 119 136 -20%
Increase in non-current loans 82 41 42 +95%
Repayment of non-current loans, excluding organic loan repayment from equity affiliates (29) (26) (15) ns
Change in debt from renewable projects (TotalEnergies share) - - - ns

* Change in debt from renewable projects (TotalEnergies share and partner share).

 

 

 

 

INVESTMENTS & DIVESTMENTS  AND RECONCILIATION OF CASH FLOW USED IN INVESTING ACTIVITIES TO NET INVESTMENTS, TO ACQUISITIONS NET OF ASSETS SALES AND TO ORGANIC INVESTMENTS: INTEGRATED LNG

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24 1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Cash flow used in investing activities (a) 892 1,657 515 +73%
Other transactions with non-controlling interests (b) - - - ns
Organic loan repayment from equity affiliates (c) 1 - 1 ns
Change in debt from renewable projects financing (d) * - - - ns
Capex linked to capitalized leasing contracts (e) (1) 13 12 ns
Expenditures related to carbon credits (f) - - - ns
Net investments (a + b + c + d + e + f = g - i + h) 892 1,670 528 +69%
of which acquisitions net of assets sales (g-i) 140 1,116 (12) ns
Acquisitions (g) 144 1,149 - ns
Asset sales (i) 4 33 12 -67%
Change in debt from renewable projects (partner share)   - - - ns
of which organic investments (h) 752 554 540 +39%
Capitalized exploration 2 3 9 -78%
Increase in non-current loans 182 269 173 +5%
Repayment of non-current loans, excluding organic loan repayment from equity affiliates (5) (214) (37) ns
Change in debt from renewable projects (TotalEnergies share) - - - ns

* Change in debt from renewable projects (TotalEnergies share and partner share).

 

 

INVESTMENTS & DIVESTMENTS AND RECONCILIATION OF CASH FLOW USED IN INVESTING ACTIVITIES TO NET INVESTMENTS, TO ACQUISITIONS NET OF ASSETS SALES AND TO ORGANIC INVESTMENTS: INTEGRATED POWER

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24 1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Cash flow used in investing activities (a) 878 (509) 1,677 -48%
Other transactions with non-controlling interests (b) - - - ns
Organic loan repayment from equity affiliates (c) 5 7 - ns
Change in debt from renewable projects financing (d) * - (52) - ns
Capex linked to capitalized leasing contracts (e) - 1 1 -100%
Expenditures related to carbon credits (f) - - - ns
Net investments (a + b + c + d + e + f = g - i + h) 883 (553) 1,678 -47%
of which acquisitions net of assets sales (g-i) 238 (662) 735 -68%
Acquisitions (g) 245 72 736 -67%
Asset sales (i) 7 734 1 x7
Change in debt from renewable projects (partner share)   - 26 - ns
of which organic investments (h) 645 109 943 -32%
Capitalized exploration - - - ns
Increase in non-current loans 268 300 305 -12%
Repayment of non-current loans, excluding organic loan repayment from equity affiliates (46) (323) (61) ns
Change in debt from renewable projects (TotalEnergies share) - (26) - ns

* Change in debt from renewable projects (TotalEnergies share and partner share).

 

 

 

 

INVESTMENTS & DIVESTMENTS AND RECONCILIATION OF CASH FLOW USED IN INVESTING ACTIVITIES TO NET INVESTMENTS, TO ACQUISITIONS NET OF ASSETS SALES AND TO ORGANIC INVESTMENTS: REFINING & CHEMICALS

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24 1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Cash flow used in investing activities (a) 236 498 397 -41%
Other transactions with non-controlling interests (b) - - - ns
Organic loan repayment from equity affiliates (c) - (9) 2 -100%
Change in debt from renewable projects financing (d) * - - - ns
Capex linked to capitalized leasing contracts (e) - - - ns
Expenditures related to carbon credits (f) - - - ns
Net investments (a + b + c + d + e + f = g - i + h) 236 489 399 -41%
of which acquisitions net of assets sales (g-i) - (92) (20) -100%
Acquisitions (g) - - 9 -100%
Asset sales (i) - 92 29 -100%
Change in debt from renewable projects (partner share)   - - - ns
of which organic investments (h) 236 581 419 -44%
Capitalized exploration - - - ns
Increase in non-current loans 10 1 7 +43%
Repayment of non-current loans, excluding organic loan repayment from equity affiliates (6) (16) (7) ns
Change in debt from renewable projects (TotalEnergies share) - - - ns

* Change in debt from renewable projects (TotalEnergies share and partner share).

 

 

INVESTMENTS & DIVESTMENTS  AND RECONCILIATION OF CASH FLOW USED IN INVESTING ACTIVITIES TO NET INVESTMENTS, TO ACQUISITIONS NET OF ASSETS SALES AND TO ORGANIC INVESTMENTS: MARKETING & SERVICES

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24 1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Cash flow used in investing activities (a) 75 352 (1,137) ns
Other transactions with non-controlling interests (b) - - - ns
Organic loan repayment from equity affiliates (c) - - - ns
Change in debt from renewable projects financing (d) * - - - ns
Capex linked to capitalized leasing contracts (e) - - - ns
Expenditures related to carbon credits (f) - - - ns
Net investments (a + b + c + d + e + f = g - i + h) 75 352 (1,137) ns
of which acquisitions net of assets sales (g-i) (75) (80) (1,238) ns
Acquisitions (g) 2 1 2 ns
Asset sales (i) 77 81 1,240 -94%
Change in debt from renewable projects (partner share)   - - - ns
of which organic investments (h) 150 432 101 +49%
Capitalized exploration - - - ns
Increase in non-current loans 18 19 11 +64%
Repayment of non-current loans, excluding organic loan repayment from equity affiliates (17) (20) (26) ns
Change in debt from renewable projects (TotalEnergies share) - - - ns

* Change in debt from renewable projects (TotalEnergies share and partner share).

 

 

 

 

 

CASH FLOW (TOTALENERGIES SHARE)

 

Reconciliation of Cash flow from operating activities to Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO), to DACF and to Net cash flow

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24

1Q25
vs

4Q24

1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Cash flow from operating activities (a) 2,563 12,507 -80% 2,169 +18%
(Increase) decrease in working capital (b) * (4,316) 5,072 ns (6,121) ns
Inventory effect (c) (107) 282 ns 125 ns
Capital gain from renewable project sales (d) - - ns - ns
Organic loan repayments from equity affiliates (e) 6 (2) ns 3 +100%
Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) (f = a - b - c + d + e) 6,992 7,151 -2% 8,168 -14%
Financial charges (284) (247) ns (143) ns
Debt Adjusted Cash Flow (DACF) 7,276 7,398 -2% 8,311 -12%
           
Organic investments (g) 4,501 3,839 +17% 4,072 +11%
Free cash flow after organic investments (f - g) 2,491 3,312 -25% 4,096 -39%
           
Net investments (h) 4,921 3,863 +27% 3,572 +38%
Net cash flow (f - h) 2,071 3,288 -37% 4,596 -55%

 

*Changes in working capital are presented excluding the mark-to-market effect of Integrated LNG and Integrated Power segments’ contracts.

 

CASH FLOW BY SEGMENT

 

Reconciliation of Cash flow from operating activities to Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO): Exploration & Production

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24 1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Cash flow from operating activities (a) 3,266 4,500 3,590 -9%
(Increase) decrease in working capital (b) (1,025) 555 (888) ns
Inventory effect (c) - - - ns
Capital gain from renewable project sales (d) - - - ns
Organic loan repayments from equity affiliates (e) - - - ns
Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) (f = a - b - c + d + e) 4,291 3,945 4,478 -4%

 

Reconciliation of Cash flow from operating activities to Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO): Integrated LNG

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24 1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Cash flow from operating activities (a) 1,743 2,214 1,710 +2%
(Increase) decrease in working capital (b) * 495 767 363 +36%
Inventory effect (c) - - - ns
Capital gain from renewable project sales (d) - - - ns
Organic loan repayments from equity affiliates (e) 1 - 1 ns
Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) (f = a - b - c + d + e) 1,249 1,447 1,348 -7%

 

*Changes in working capital are presented excluding the mark-to-market effect of Integrated LNG sectors’ contracts.

 

 

 

 

Reconciliation of Cash flow from operating activities to Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO): Integrated Power

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24 1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Cash flow from operating activities (a) (399) 1,201 (249) ns
(Increase) decrease in working capital (b) * (991) 604 (941) ns
Inventory effect (c) - - - ns
Capital gain from renewable project sales (d) - - - ns
Organic loan repayments from equity affiliates (e) 5 7 - ns
Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) (f = a - b - c + d + e) 597 604 692 -14%

 

*Changes in working capital are presented excluding the mark-to-market effect of Integrated Power sectors’ contracts.

 

Reconciliation of Cash flow from operating activities to Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO): Refining & Chemicals

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24 1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Cash flow from operating activities (a) (1,983) 3,832 (2,129) ns
(Increase) decrease in working capital (b) (2,543) 2,758 (3,526) ns
Inventory effect (c) (73) 243 108 ns
Capital gain from renewable project sales (d) - - - ns
Organic loan repayments from equity affiliates (e) - (9) 2 -100%
Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) (f = a - b - c + d + e) 633 822 1,291 -51%

 

Reconciliation of Cash flow from operating activities to Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO): Marketing & Services

 

In millions of dollars 1Q25 4Q24 1Q24

1Q25
vs

1Q24

Cash flow from operating activities (a) 568 778 (108) ns
(Increase) decrease in working capital (b) 118 205 (604) ns
Inventory effect (c) (34) 39 17 ns
Capital gain from renewable project sales (d) - - - ns
Organic loan repayments from equity affiliates (e) - - - ns
Cash flow from operations excluding working capital (CFFO) (f = a - b - c + d + e) 484 534 479 +1%

 

 

 

 

GEARING RATIO

 

In millions of dollars 3/31/2025 12/31/2024 3/31/2024
Current borrowings * 10,983 7,929 16,068
Other current financial liabilities 897 664 481
Current financial assets *, ** (5,892) (6,536) (5,969)
Net financial assets classified as held for sale * 41 33 (11)
Non-current financial debt * 37,862 35,711 30,452
Non-current financial assets * (953) (1,027) (1,165)
Cash and cash equivalents (22,837) (25,844) (25,640)
Net debt (a) 20,101 10,930 14,216
       
Shareholders’ equity - TotalEnergies share 117,956 117,858 118,409
Non-controlling interests 2,465 2,397 2,734
Shareholders' equity (b) 120,421 120,255 121,143
       
Gearing = a / (a+b) 14.3% 8.3% 10.5%
       
Leases (c) 8,533 8,272 8,013
Gearing including leases (a+c) / (a+b+c) 19.2% 13.8% 15.5%

 

*Excludes leases receivables and leases debts.

 

**Including initial margins held as part of the Company's activities on organized markets.

 

 

Gearing was 14.3% at the end of March 2025 due to the seasonal effect of working capital variation ($3.4 billion) and normalized gearing was 11% excluding this effect.

 

 

RETURN ON AVERAGE CAPITAL EMPLOYED (ROACE)

 

Twelve months ended December 31, 2024

 

In millions of dollars Exploration &
Production
Integrated
LNG
Integrated
Power
Refining &
Chemicals
Marketing &
Services
Company
             
Adjusted net operating income 9,905 4,941 2,068 1,499 1,345 19,125
Capital employed at 3/31/2024 64,968 36,678 22,890 9,360 8,013 141,494
Capital employed at 3/31/2025 65,397 42,998 23,740 8,404 6,840 147,764
ROACE 15.2% 12.4% 8.9% 16.9% 18.1% 13.2%

 

 

 

 

RECONCILIATION OF CAPITAL EMPLOYED (BALANCE SHEET) AND CALCULATION OF ROACE

 

 
In millions of dollars Exploration
&
Production

Integrated

LNG

Integrated
Power

Refining
&
Chemicals

Marketing
&
Services

Corporate Inter-
Company
Company
Adjusted net operating income 1st quarter 2025 2,451 1,294 506 301 240 (131)   4,661
Adjusted net operating income 4th quarter 2024 2,305 1,432 575 318 362 (173)   4,819
Adjusted net operating income 3rd quarter 2024 2,482 1,063 485 241 364 (76)   4,559
Adjusted net operating income 2nd quarter 2024  2,667 1,152 502 639 379 (253)   5,086
Adjusted net operating income (a) 9,905 4,941 2,068 1,499 1,345 (633) 0 19,125
                 
Balance sheet as of March 31, 2025                 
Property plant and equipment intangible assets net 84,198 29,006 13,997 12,203 6,716 672 146,792
Investments & loans in equity affiliates 4,181 16,501 9,988 3,967 1,050 0 35,687
Other non-current assets 3,668 2,140 1,500 659 1,030 223 9,220
Inventories, net 1,653 996 568 12,521 3,299 0 0 19,037
Accounts receivable, net 5,753 9,845 6,635 21,697 8,307 1,149 (28,504) 24,882
Other current assets 7,634 7,788 4,295 2,371 2,687 4,043 (6,395) 22,423
Accounts payable (6,612) (10,862) (7,559) (35,562) (9,514) (808) 28,363 (42,554)
Other creditors and accrued liabilities (10,737) (8,054) (3,988) (4,983) (5,475) (5,804) 6,536 (32,505)
Working capital (2,309) (287) (49) (3,956) (696) (1,420) 0 (8,717)
Provisions and other non-current liabilities (24,645) (4,362) (1,697) (3,377) (1,146) 910 (34,317)
Assets and liabilities classified as held for sale 304 0 1 0 85 0 390
Capital Employed (Balance sheet)  65,397 42,998 23,740 9,496 7,039 385 0 149,055
Less inventory valuation effect  0 0 0 (1,092) (199) 0 0 (1,291)
Capital Employed at replacement cost (b)  65,397 42,998 23,740 8,404 6,840 385 0 147,764
                 
Balance sheet as of March 31, 2024                
Property plant and equipment intangible assets net 84,713 25,054 13,626 12,089 6,508 665 142,655
Investments & loans in equity affiliates 2,889 14,387 8,831 4,142 1,007 0 31,256
Other non-current assets 3,626 2,500 1,280 715 1,236 31 9,388
Inventories, net 1,428 1,010 657 13,390 3,744 0 0 20,229
Accounts receivable, net 6,329 8,061 6,819 20,658 9,822 983 (28,474) 24,198
Other current assets 6,404 8,918 5,939 2,674 3,288 5,024 (11,632) 20,615
Accounts payable (6,347) (9,053) (6,565) (32,774) (10,361) (874) 28,327 (37,647)
Other creditors and accrued liabilities (9,053) (10,425) (6,071) (6,449) (5,656) (7,074) 11,779 (32,949)
Working capital (1,239) (1,489) 779 (2,501) 837 (1,941) 0 (5,554)
Provisions and other non-current liabilities (25,021) (3,774) (1,902) (3,678) (1,235) 830 (34,780)
Assets and liabilities classified as held for sale 0 0 276 131 0 0 407
Capital Employed (Balance sheet)  64,968 36,678 22,890 10,898 8,353 (415) 0 143,372
Less inventory valuation effect  0 0 0 (1,538) (340) 0 0 (1,878)
Capital Employed at replacement cost (c)  64,968 36,678 22,890 9,360 8,013 (415) 0 141,494
ROACE as a percentage (a/average(b+c))  15.2% 12.4% 8.9% 16.9% 18.1%     13.2%

 

 

 

 

GLOSSARY

 

Acquisitions net of assets sales is a non-GAAP financial measure and its most directly comparable IFRS measure is Cash flow used in investing activities. Acquisitions net of assets sales refer to acquisitions minus assets sales (including other operations with non-controlling interests). This indicator can be a valuable tool for decision makers, analysts and shareholders alike because it illustrates the allocation of cash flow used for growing the Company’s asset base via external growth opportunities. 

Adjusted EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Tax, Depreciation and Amortization) is a non-GAAP financial measure and its most directly comparable IFRS measure is Net Income. It refers to the adjusted earnings before depreciation, depletion and impairment of tangible and intangible assets and mineral interests, income tax expense and cost of net debt, i.e., all operating income and contribution of equity affiliates to net income. This indicator can be a valuable tool for decision makers, analysts and shareholders alike to measure and compare the Company’s profitability with utility companies (energy sector). 

Adjusted net income (TotalEnergies share) is a non-GAAP financial measure and its most directly comparable IFRS measure is Net Income (TotalEnergies share). Adjusted Net Income (TotalEnergies share) refers to Net Income (TotalEnergies share) less adjustment items to Net Income (TotalEnergies share). Adjustment items are inventory valuation effect, effect of changes in fair value, and special items. This indicator can be a valuable tool for decision makers, analysts and shareholders alike to evaluate the Company’s operating results and to understand its operating trends by removing the impact of non-operational results and special items. 

Capital Employed is a non-GAAP financial measure. They are calculated at replacement cost and refer to capital employed (balance sheet) less inventory valuations effect. Capital employed (balance sheet) refers to the sum of the following items: (i) Property, plant and equipment, intangible assets, net, (ii) Investments & loans in equity affiliates, (iii) Other non-current assets, (iv) Working capital which is the sum of: Inventories, net, Accounts receivable, net, other current assets, Accounts payable, Other creditors and accrued liabilities, (v) Provisions and other non-current liabilities and (vi) Assets and liabilities classified as held for sale. Capital Employed can be a valuable tool for decision makers, analysts and shareholders alike to provide insight on the amount of capital investment used by the Company or its business segments to operate. Capital Employed is used to calculate the Return on Average Capital Employed (ROACE). 

Cash Flow From Operations excluding working capital (CFFO) is a non-GAAP financial measure and its most directly comparable IFRS measure is Cash flow from operating activities. Cash Flow From Operations excluding working capital is defined as cash flow from operating activities before changes in working capital at replacement cost, excluding the mark-to-market effect of Integrated LNG and Integrated Power contracts, including capital gain from renewable projects sales and including organic loan repayments from equity affiliates. This indicator can be a valuable tool for decision makers, analysts and shareholders alike to help understand changes in cash flow from operating activities, excluding the impact of working capital changes across periods on a consistent basis and with the performance of peer companies in a manner that, when viewed in combination with the Company’s results prepared in accordance with GAAP, provides a more complete understanding of the factors and trends affecting the Company’s business and performance. This performance indicator is used by the Company as a base for its cash flow allocation and notably to guide on the share of its cash flow to be allocated to the distribution to shareholders. 

Debt adjusted cash flow (DACF) is a non-GAAP financial measure and its most directly comparable IFRS measure is Cash flow from operating activities. DACF is defined as Cash Flow From Operations excluding working capital (CFFO) without financial charges. This indicator can be a valuable tool for decision makers, analysts and shareholders alike because it corresponds to the funds theoretically available to the Company for investments, debt repayment and distribution to shareholders, and therefore facilitates comparison of the Company’s results of operations with those of other registrants, independent of their capital structure and working capital requirements. 

ESRS perimeter: the GHG emissions within the ESRS perimeter correspond to 100% of the emissions from operated sites, plus the equity share of emissions from non-operated and financially consolidated assets excluding equity affiliates. 

Free cash flow after Organic Investments is a non-GAAP financial measure and its most directly comparable IFRS measure is Cash flow from operating activities. Free cash flow after Organic Investments, refers to Cash Flow From Operations excluding working capital minus Organic Investments. Organic Investments refer to Net Investments excluding acquisitions, asset sales and other transactions with non-controlling interests. This indicator can be a valuable tool for decision makers, analysts and shareholders alike because it illustrates operating cash flow generated by the business post allocation of cash for Organic Investments. 

Gearing is a non-GAAP financial measure and its most directly comparable IFRS measure is the ratio of total financial liabilities to total equity. Gearing is a Net-debt-to-capital ratio, which is calculated as the ratio of Net debt excluding leases to (Equity + Net debt excluding leases). This indicator can be a valuable tool for decision makers, analysts and shareholders alike to assess the strength of the Company’s balance sheet. 

Normalized Gearing: indicator defined as the gearing excluding the impact of seasonal variations, notably on working capital. 

Net cash flow (or free cash flow) is a non-GAAP financial measure and its most directly comparable IFRS measure is Cash flow from operating activities. Net cash flow refers to Cash Flow From Operations excluding working capital minus Net Investments. Net cash flow can be a valuable tool for decision makers, analysts and shareholders alike because it illustrates cash flow generated by the operations of the Company post allocation of cash for Organic Investments and Acquisitions net of assets sales (acquisitions - assets sales - other operations with non-controlling interests). This performance indicator corresponds to the cash flow available to repay debt and allocate cash to shareholder distribution or share buybacks. 

Net investments is a non-GAAP financial measure and its most directly comparable IFRS measure is Cash flow used in investing activities. Net Investments refer to Cash flow used in investing activities including other transactions with non-controlling interests, including change in debt from renewable projects financing, including expenditures related to carbon credits, including capex linked to capitalized leasing contracts and excluding organic loan repayment from equity affiliates. This indicator can be a valuable tool for decision makers, analysts and shareholders alike to illustrate the cash directed to growth opportunities, both internal and external, thereby showing, when combined with the Company’s cash flow statement prepared under IFRS, how cash is generated and allocated for uses within the organization. Net Investments are the sum of Organic Investments and Acquisitions net of assets sales each of which is described in the Glossary. 

Organic investments is a non-GAAP financial measure and its most directly comparable IFRS measure is Cash flow used in investing activities. Organic investments refers to Net Investments, excluding acquisitions, asset sales and other operations with non-controlling interests. Organic Investments can be a valuable tool for decision makers, analysts and shareholders alike because it illustrates cash flow used by the Company to grow its asset base, excluding sources of external growth. 

Operated perimeter: activities, sites and industrial assets of which TotalEnergies SE or one of its subsidiaries has operational control, i.e. has the responsibility of the conduct of operations on behalf of all its partners. 

Payout is a non-GAAP financial measure. Payout is defined as the ratio of the dividends and share buybacks for cancellation to the Cash Flow From Operations excluding working capital. This indicator can be a valuable tool for decision makers, analysts and shareholders as it provides the portion of the Cash Flow From Operations excluding working capital distributed to the shareholder. 

Return on Average Capital Employed (ROACE) is a non-GAAP financial measure. ROACE is the ratio of Adjusted Net Operating Income to average Capital Employed at replacement cost between the beginning and the end of the period. This indicator can be a valuable tool for decision makers, analysts and shareholders alike to measure the profitability of the Company’s average Capital Employed in its business operations and is used by the Company to benchmark its performance internally and externally with its peers.

 

 

 

 

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF INCOME

 

TotalEnergies

 

(unaudited)

 

  1st quarter   4th quarter   1st quarter
(M$)(a) 2025   2024   2024
           
Sales 52,254   52,508   56,278
Excise taxes (4,355)   (5,393)   (4,395)
Revenues from sales 47,899   47,115   51,883
           
Purchases, net of inventory variation (30,855)   (30,342)   (33,780)
Other operating expenses (7,564)   (7,219)   (7,643)
Exploration costs (81)   (242)   (88)
Depreciation, depletion and impairment of tangible assets and mineral interests (2,998)   (2,715)   (2,942)
Other income 247   306   1,758
Other expense (291)   (341)   (315)
           
Financial interest on debt (725)   (786)   (708)
Financial income and expense from cash & cash equivalents 290   449   472
Cost of net debt (435)   (337)   (236)
           
Other financial income 318   319   306
Other financial expense (249)   (193)   (215)
           
Net income (loss) from equity affiliates 663   597   18
           
Income taxes (2,733)   (2,929)   (2,942)
Consolidated net income 3,921   4,019   5,804
TotalEnergies share 3,851   3,956   5,721
Non-controlling interests 70   63   83
Earnings per share ($) 1.69   1.72   2.42
Fully-diluted earnings per share ($) 1.68   1.70   2.40

 

(a) Except for per share amounts.          

 

 

 

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME

 

TotalEnergies

 

(unaudited)    

 

  1st quarter   4th quarter   1st quarter
(M$) 2025   2024   2024
Consolidated net income 3,921   4,019   5,804
           
Other comprehensive income          
           
Actuarial gains and losses -   (3)   (2)
Change in fair value of investments in equity instruments 12   142   40
Tax effect 1   36   (8)
Currency translation adjustment generated by the parent company 2,882   (5,125)   (1,506)
Items not potentially reclassifiable to profit and loss 2,895   (4,950)   (1,476)
Currency translation adjustment (2,017)   3,594   1,099
Cash flow hedge (833)   1,732   807
Variation of foreign currency basis spread 15   (13)   (15)
Share of other comprehensive income of equity affiliates, net amount (100)   76   (76)
Other 7   (1)   2
Tax effect 205   (441)   (219)
Items potentially reclassifiable to profit and loss (2,723)   4,947   1,598
Total other comprehensive income (net amount) 172   (3)   122
           
Comprehensive income 4,093   4,016   5,926
TotalEnergies share 4,007   4,001   5,870
Non-controlling interests 86   15   56

 

 

 

CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET

 

TotalEnergies

 

  March 31,
2025
  December 31,
2024
  March 31,
2024
(M$) (unaudited)       (unaudited)
           
ASSETS          

 

Non-current assets          
Intangible assets, net 34,543   34,238   33,193
Property, plant and equipment, net 112,249   109,095   109,462
Equity affiliates : investments and loans 35,687   34,405   31,256
Other investments 1,860   1,665   1,895
Non-current financial assets 2,231   2,305   2,308
Deferred income taxes 3,360   3,202   3,165
Other non-current assets 4,000   4,006   4,328
Total non-current assets 193,930   188,916   185,607
           
Current assets          
Inventories, net 19,037   18,868   20,229
Accounts receivable, net 24,882   19,281   24,198
Other current assets 22,423   23,687   20,615
Current financial assets 6,237   6,914   6,319
Cash and cash equivalents 22,837   25,844   25,640
Assets classified as held for sale 1,711   1,977   525
Total current assets 97,127   96,571   97,526
Total assets 291,057   285,487   283,133

 

LIABILITIES & SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY          
           
Shareholders' equity          
Common shares 7,231   7,577   7,548
Paid-in surplus and retained earnings 128,787   135,496   129,937
Currency translation adjustment (14,508)   (15,259)   (14,167)
Treasury shares (3,554)   (9,956)   (4,909)
Total shareholders' equity - TotalEnergies Share 117,956   117,858   118,409
Non-controlling interests 2,465   2,397   2,734
Total shareholders' equity 120,421   120,255   121,143
           
Non-current liabilities          
Deferred income taxes 12,621   12,114   11,878
Employee benefits 1,824   1,753   1,941
Provisions and other non-current liabilities 19,872   19,872   20,961
Non-current financial debt 45,858   43,533   38,053
Total non-current liabilities 80,175   77,272   72,833
           
Current liabilities          
Accounts payable 42,554   39,932   37,647
Other creditors and accrued liabilities 32,505   35,961   32,949
Current borrowings 13,134   10,024   17,973
Other current financial liabilities 897   664   481
Liabilities directly associated with the assets classified as held for sale 1,371   1,379   107
Total current liabilities 90,461   87,960   89,157
Total liabilities & shareholders' equity 291,057   285,487   283,133

 

 

 

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOW

 

TotalEnergies

 

(unaudited)

 

  1st quarter   4th quarter   1st quarter
(M$) 2025   2024   2024
           
CASH FLOW FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES          
           
Consolidated net income 3,921   4,019   5,804
Depreciation, depletion, amortization and impairment 3,086   2,971   3,036
Non-current liabilities, valuation allowances and deferred taxes 209   44   292
(Gains) losses on disposals of assets 25   (66)   (1,610)
Undistributed affiliates' equity earnings (423)   99   288
(Increase) decrease in working capital (4,232)   5,201   (5,686)
Other changes, net (23)   239   45
Cash flow from operating activities 2,563   12,507   2,169
           
CASH FLOW USED IN INVESTING ACTIVITIES          
           
Intangible assets and property, plant and equipment additions (4,222)   (3,680)   (3,420)
Acquisitions of subsidiaries, net of cash acquired (232)   (932)   (759)
Investments in equity affiliates and other securities (311)   (313)   (488)
Increase in non-current loans (568)   (658)   (538)
Total expenditures (5,333)   (5,583)   (5,205)
Proceeds from disposals of intangible assets and property, plant and equipment 301   314   337
Proceeds from disposals of subsidiaries, net of cash sold 117   654   1,218
Proceeds from disposals of non-current investments 1   220   34
Repayment of non-current loans 109   650   149
Total divestments 528   1,838   1,738
Cash flow used in investing activities (4,805)   (3,745)   (3,467)
           
CASH FLOW FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES          
           
Issuance (repayment) of shares:          
   - Parent company shareholders -   -   -
   - Treasury shares (2,152)   (1,977)   (2,006)
Dividends paid:          
   - Parent company shareholders (1,851)   (1,998)   (1,903)
   - Non-controlling interests (139)   (18)   (6)
Net issuance (repayment) of perpetual subordinated notes (1,139)   1,165   -
Payments on perpetual subordinated notes (128)   (82)   (159)
Other transactions with non-controlling interests (20)   (17)   (17)
Net issuance (repayment) of non-current debt 3,431   91   42
Increase (decrease) in current borrowings 150   (4,136)   3,536
Increase (decrease) in current financial assets and liabilities 718   (965)   271
Cash flow from / (used in) financing activities (1,130)   (7,937)   (242)
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents (3,372)   825   (1,540)
Effect of exchange rates 365   (653)   (83)
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the period 25,844   25,672   27,263
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the period 22,837   25,844   25,640

 

 

 

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY

 

TotalEnergies

 

(unaudited)

 

  Common shares issued Paid-in
surplus and
retained
earnings
Currency
translation
adjustment
  Treasury shares   Shareholders'
equity -
TotalEnergies
Share
Non-
controlling
interests
  Total
shareholders'
equity
 (M$) Number Amount   Number Amount    
As of January 1, 2024 2,412,251,835 7,616 126,857 (13,701)   (60,543,213) (4,019)   116,753 2,700   119,453
 Net income of the first quarter 2024 - - 5,721 -   - -   5,721 83   5,804
 Other comprehensive income - - 614 (465)   - -   149 (27)   122
 Comprehensive Income - - 6,335 (465)   - -   5,870 56   5,926
 Dividend - - - -   - -   - (6)   (6)
 Issuance of common shares - - - -   - -   - -   -
 Purchase of treasury shares - - - -   (30,581,230) (2,556)   (2,556) -   (2,556)
 Sale of treasury shares(a) - - - -   2,957 -   - -   -
 Share-based payments - - 59 -   - -   59 -   59
 Share cancellation (25,405,361) (68) (1,597) -   25,405,361 1,665   - -   -
 Net issuance (repayment) of perpetual subordinated notes - - (1,679) -   - -   (1,679) -   (1,679)
 Payments on perpetual subordinated notes - - (71) -   - -   (71) -   (71)
Other operations with non-controlling interests - - - -   - -   - (17)   (17)
 Other items - - 33 (1)   - 1   33 1   34
As of March 31, 2024 2,386,846,474 7,548 129,937 (14,167)   (65,716,125) (4,909)   118,409 2,734   121,143
 Net income from April 1 to December 31, 2024 - - 10,037 -   - -   10,037 190   10,227
 Other comprehensive income - - 1,822 (1,093)   - -   729 (17)   712
 Comprehensive Income - - 11,859 (1,093)   - -   10,766 173   10,939
 Dividend - - (7,756) -   - -   (7,756) (449)   (8,205)
 Issuance of common shares 10,833,187 29 492 -   - -   521 -   521
 Purchase of treasury shares - - - -   (89,882,002) (5,439)   (5,439) -   (5,439)
 Sale of treasury shares(a) - - (395) -   6,068,309 395   - -   -
 Share-based payments - - 497 -   - -   497 -   497
 Share cancellation - - 2 -   - (2)   - -   -
 Net issuance (repayment) of perpetual subordinated notes - - 1,103 -   - -   1,103 -   1,103
 Payments on perpetual subordinated notes - - (201) -   - -   (201) -   (201)
Other operations with non-controlling interests - - - -   - -   - (50)   (50)
 Other items - - (42) 1   - (1)   (42) (11)   (53)
As of December 31, 2024 2,397,679,661 7,577 135,496 (15,259)   (149,529,818) (9,956)   117,858 2,397   120,255
 Net income of the first quarter 2025 - - 3,851 -   - -   3,851 70   3,921
 Other comprehensive income - - (595) 751   - -   156 16   172
 Comprehensive Income - - 3,256 751   - -   4,007 86   4,093
 Dividend - - - -   - -   - (5)   (5)
 Issuance of common shares - - - -   - -   - -   -
 Purchase of treasury shares - - - -   (33,770,546) (2,633)   (2,633) -   (2,633)
 Sale of treasury shares(a) - - (413) -   6,209,016 413   - -   -
 Share-based payments - - 112 -   - -   112 -   112
 Share cancellation (127,622,460) (346) (8,395) -   127,622,460 8,622   (119) -   (119)
 Net issuance (repayment) of perpetual subordinated notes - - (1,219) -   - -   (1,219) -   (1,219)
 Payments on perpetual subordinated notes - - (77) -   - -   (77) -   (77)
Other operations with non-controlling interests - - - -   - -   - (20)   (20)
 Other items - - 27 -   - -   27 7   34
As of March 31, 2025 2,270,057,201 7,231 128,787 (14,508)   (49,468,888) (3,554)   117,956 2,465   120,421
(a)Treasury shares related to the performance share grants.          

 

 

 

INFORMATION BY BUSINESS SEGMENT

 

TotalEnergies

 

(unaudited)

 

 

 1st quarter 2025

Exploration
&
Production

Integrated
LNG
Integrated
Power

Refining
&
Chemicals

Marketing
&
Services

Corporate Intercompany Total
(M$)
External sales 1,569 3,088 5,967 22,627 19,001 2 - 52,254
Intersegment sales 8,727 3,252 684 6,811 156 25 (19,655) -
Excise taxes - - - (112) (4,243) - - (4,355)
Revenues from sales 10,296 6,340 6,651 29,326 14,914 27 (19,655) 47,899
Operating expenses (3,800) (4,956) (6,185) (28,648) (14,374) (192) 19,655 (38,500)
Depreciation, depletion and impairment of tangible assets and mineral interests (1,950) (391) (75) (339) (217) (26) - (2,998)
Net income (loss) from equity affiliates and other items 133 565 44 (8) (10) (36) - 688
Tax on net operating income (2,328) (275) (73) (83) (98) 74 - (2,783)
Adjustments (a) (100) (11) (144) (53) (25) (22) - (355)
 Adjusted net operating income 2,451 1,294 506 301 240 (131) - 4,661
Adjustments (a)               (355)
Net cost of net debt               (385)
Non-controlling interests               (70)
Net income - TotalEnergies share               3,851
                 
(a) Adjustments include special items, inventory valuation effect and the effect of changes in fair value.

 

The management of balance sheet positions (including margin calls) related to centralized markets access for LNG, gas and power activities has been fully included in the Integrated LNG segment.

Effects of changes in the fair value of gas and LNG positions are allocated to the operating income of Integrated LNG segment.

Effects of changes in the fair value of power positions are allocated to the operating income of Integrated Power segment.  

 

 

 1st quarter 2025

Exploration
&
Production

Integrated
LNG
Integrated
Power

Refining
&
Chemicals

Marketing
&
Services

Corporate Intercompany Total
(M$)
Total expenditures 3,047 902 936 242 172 34 - 5,333
Total divestments 358 10 58 6 97 (1) - 528
 Cash flow from operating activities 3,266 1,743 (399) (1,983) 568 (632) - 2,563

 

 

 

INFORMATION BY BUSINESS SEGMENT

 

TotalEnergies

 

(unaudited)              

 

 4th quarter 2024

Exploration
&
Production

Integrated
LNG
Integrated
Power

Refining
&
Chemicals

Marketing
&
Services

Corporate Intercompany Total
(M$)
External sales 1,496 2,890 6,137 21,540 20,440 5 - 52,508
Intersegment sales 9,382 2,968 765 7,207 168 70 (20,560) -
Excise taxes - - - (193) (5,200) - - (5,393)
Revenues from sales 10,878 5,858 6,902 28,554 15,408 75 (20,560) 47,115
Operating expenses (4,754) (4,431) (6,536) (27,616) (14,772) (254) 20,560 (37,803)
Depreciation, depletion and impairment of tangible assets and mineral interests (1,853) (326) (28) (250) (227) (31) - (2,715)
Net income (loss) from equity affiliates and other items 40 548 26 (90) 90 74 - 688
Tax on net operating income (2,163) (288) (70) (139) (215) (60) - (2,935)
Adjustments (a) (157) (71) (281) 141 (78) (23) - (469)
 Adjusted net operating income 2,305 1,432 575 318 362 (173) - 4,819
Adjustments (a)               (469)
Net cost of net debt               (331)
Non-controlling interests               (63)
Net income - TotalEnergies share               3,956
                 
(a) Adjustments include special items, inventory valuation effect and the effect of changes in fair value.
                 
The management of balance sheet positions (including margin calls) related to centralized markets access for LNG, gas and power activities has been fully included in the Integrated LNG segment.
Effects of changes in the fair value of gas and LNG positions are allocated to the operating income of Integrated LNG segment.

Effects of changes in the fair value of power positions are allocated to the operating income of Integrated Power segment.

                 
                 
 4th quarter 2024

Exploration
&
Production

Integrated
LNG
Integrated
Power

Refining
&
Chemicals

Marketing
&
Services

Corporate Intercompany Total
(M$)
Total expenditures 1,983 1,904 529 630 458 79 - 5,583
Total divestments 295 247 1,038 132 106 20 - 1,838
 Cash flow from operating activities 4,500 2,214 1,201 3,832 778 (18) - 12,507

 

 

 

INFORMATION BY BUSINESS SEGMENT

 

TotalEnergies

 

(unaudited)              

 

 

 1st quarter 2024

Exploration
&
Production

Integrated
LNG
Integrated
Power

Refining
&
Chemicals

Marketing
&
Services

Corporate Intercompany Total
(M$)
External sales 1,318 2,659 7,082 24,533 20,671 15 - 56,278
Intersegment sales 9,735 3,495 790 8,143 269 63 (22,495) -
Excise taxes - - - (170) (4,225) - - (4,395)
Revenues from sales 11,053 6,154 7,872 32,506 16,715 78 (22,495) 51,883
Operating expenses (4,444) (4,784) (7,565) (30,888) (16,096) (229) 22,495 (41,511)
Depreciation, depletion and impairment of tangible assets and mineral interests (1,917) (321) (97) (376) (206) (25) - (2,942)
Net income (loss) from equity affiliates and other items 97 495 (615) 68 1,480 27 - 1,552
Tax on net operating income (2,261) (284) (40) (255) (108) 55 - (2,893)
Adjustments (a) (22) 38 (1,056) 93 1,530 (4) - 579
 Adjusted net operating income 2,550 1,222 611 962 255 (90) - 5,510
Adjustments (a)               579
Net cost of net debt               (285)
Non-controlling interests               (83)
Net income - TotalEnergies share               5,721
                 
(a) Adjustments include special items, inventory valuation effect and the effect of changes in fair value.
                 
The management of balance sheet positions (including margin calls) related to centralized markets access for LNG, gas and power activities has been fully included in the Integrated LNG segment.
Effects of changes in the fair value of gas and LNG positions are allocated to the operating income of Integrated LNG segment.

Effects of changes in the fair value of power positions are allocated to the operating income of Integrated Power segment.

 

 

 1st quarter 2024

Exploration
&
Production

Integrated
LNG
Integrated
Power

Refining
&
Chemicals

Marketing
&
Services

Corporate Intercompany Total
(M$)
Total expenditures 2,294 565 1,739 435 144 28 - 5,205
Total divestments 306 50 62 38 1,281 1 - 1,738
 Cash flow from operating activities 3,590 1,710 (249) (2,129) (108) (645) - 2,169

 

 

 

EXHIBIT 99.2

 

RECENT DEVELOPMENTS

 

The term “TotalEnergies” or the “Company” in this exhibit is used to designate TotalEnergies SE and the consolidated entities that are directly or indirectly controlled by TotalEnergies SE. The entities in which TotalEnergies SE directly or indirectly owns a shareholding are separate and independent legal entities.

 

TotalEnergies confirms the first interim dividend of €0.85/share for fiscal year 2025, an increase of 7.6% compared to 2024

 

On April 29, 2025, the Board of Directors of the Company (the “Board of Directors”) met, under the chairmanship of Mr. Patrick Pouyanné, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, and decided on the distribution of a first interim dividend of 0.85 €/share for fiscal year 2025, an increase of 7.6% compared to the three interim dividends paid for fiscal year 2024 and identical to the final ordinary dividend for fiscal year 2024. This increase is in line with the shareholder return policy announced by the Board of Directors in February 2025.

 

This interim dividend will be paid in cash exclusively, according to the following timetable:

 

  Shareholders American Depositary Shares
holders
     
Ex-dividend date October 1, 2025 September 30, 2025
     
Payment date October 3, 2025 October 22, 2025

 

Antwerp platform adapts to energy transition challenges and market trends

 

On April 22, 2025, TotalEnergies’ Antwerp platform provided an update on its investments for the future and announces plan to reconfigure its petrochemicals operations to strengthen competitiveness. A key industrial site for TotalEnergies for more than 75 years, the Antwerp platform is based on an integrated business model, which guarantees the resilience of its operations.

 

Adapting to accelerate decarbonization of the platform and the transportation industry

 

Thanks to green hydrogen, the Antwerp platform is speeding up its own decarbonization. As part of a 200 MW Air Liquide electrolyzer project, TotalEnergies has signed a tolling agreement for 130 MW dedicated to the annual production of 15,000 tons of green hydrogen for its Antwerp platform. Upstream of the electrolyzer, TotalEnergies is expected to supply green electricity thanks to its OranjeWind offshore wind project. Scheduled for the end of 2027, the project aims to reduce CO2 emissions at the Antwerp site by up to 150,000 tons per year and contribute to the European targets (RED III) for renewable energy in transport.

 

Thanks to the production of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), Antwerp is expected to contribute to its aviation customers’ energy transition, helping them meet the challenge of reducing their carbon footprint. An initial project to produce 50,000 tons a year of SAF via coprocessing is expected to be implemented at the Antwerp platform in 2025. Coprocessing is a SAF production method that enables the simultaneous treatment of hydrocarbons and biomass in a conventional refining unit.

 

Thanks to process electrification and battery-based energy storage, the platform is contributing respectively to the decarbonization of its industrial operations and to the growing need to balance Belgian and European high-voltage transmission grids. With a power rating of 25 MW and capacity of 75 MWh, Antwerp’s battery storage system is TotalEnergies’ biggest in Europe. Commissioned last year, it helps offset the intermittency of renewable energies to encourage their development.

 

Adapting to meet changing market needs and address overcapacity in petrochemicals

 

Alongside these future-focused developments, the Antwerp platform is also facing considerable overcapacity in the petrochemicals market. In the light of the significant surplus of ethylene expected in Europe, TotalEnergies thus intends to cease operating its oldest steam cracker in Antwerp by the end of 2027.

 

Indeed, the latter was historically dependent on a major contract with a third-party user of the ethylene produced, which recently decided not to renew it by the end of 2027. As a result, the steam

 

 

 

 

cracker, which is not integrated to TotalEnergies' downstream polymer production, will no longer have any outlets for its ethylene production.

 

The unit shutdown will allow the site to focus on its more recent steam cracker, whose ethylene production is entirely consumed by TotalEnergies' industrial units in Antwerp and Feluy. The reconfiguration will be conducted without any layoffs.

 

The 253 employees concerned will each be offered a solution aligned with their personal situation: retirement or an internal transfer to another position based at the Antwerp site. This project is subject to the legally required employee consultation and notification process, which TotalEnergies planned to initiate with representatives of Antwerp platform employees in late April.

 

United States: First oil from the ballymore offshore field

 

On April 21, 2025, TotalEnergies announced the start of production from the deepwater Ballymore field offshore U.S., in which the Company has a 40% interest alongside operator Chevron (60%).

 

Located 120 kilometers off the Louisiana coast and launched in May 2022, Ballymore has a total daily gross production capacity of 75,000 barrels of oil per day and 50 million cubic feet of gas per day tied back to the Chevron operated Blind Faith floating production unit. At plateau, Ballymore is expected to represent close to 30,000 boe/d net of cash-accretive production for TotalEnergies. The project utilizes existing infrastructure as well as standardized equipment to ensure lower development costs and lower emission intensity.

 

Liquefied Natural Gas: TotalEnergies to supply 400,000 tons of LNG per year for 15 years in the Dominican Republic

 

On April 15, 2025, TotalEnergies signed an agreement (HoA) with Energia Natural Dominicana (ENADOM), the Joint Venture between AES Dominicana and Energas in the Dominican Republic, for the delivery of 400,000 tons of LNG per year. Subject to the finalization of the SPAs, this agreement is set to start in mid-2027, for 15 years, with the price indexed to Henry Hub.

 

This agreement is expected to enable ENADOM to supply natural gas to the 470 MW combined-cycle power plant, currently under construction, which is expected to increase the country's electricity generation capacity. This project contributes to the energy transition of the Dominican Republic by reducing its dependence on coal and fuel oil through the use of a less carbon-intensive energy source, natural gas.

 

Liquefied Natural Gas: TotalEnergies to offtake 1.5 Mtpa of LNG from the future Train 4 of Rio Grande LNG Facility

 

On April 15, 2025, TotalEnergies signed a Sales and Purchase Agreement (SPA) with NextDecade to buy 1.5 million tons per annum (Mtpa) of liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the future Train 4 liquefaction unit at the Rio Grande LNG facility. The SPA, of a duration of twenty years, is subject to NextDecade taking a positive Final Investment Decision (FID) on Train 4.

 

TotalEnergies holds a 16.7% stake in the first phase of the Rio Grande LNG facility, which consists in 3 LNG trains currently under construction in southern Texas. TotalEnergies previously agreed to purchase 5.4 Mtpa of the approximately 17.5 Mtpa produced by the first phase, which is expected to start up in 2027. TotalEnergies also holds a 17.5% stake in NextDecade, Rio Grande’s shareholder and operator.

 

Integrated Power: TotalEnergies closes three international acquisitions of renewable portfolios

 

On April 2, 2025, following the agreements signed in 2024, TotalEnergies confirmed the closing of its acquisitions of VSB Group, a European wind and solar developer with extensive operations in Germany, and SN Power, which develops hydropower in Africa, particularly Uganda. TotalEnergies also announced new deals with renewables developer RES, with a view to acquiring renewables projects in Alberta, and the closing of a first project acquisition.

 

Europe: TotalEnergies has closed the acquisition of VSB, and is strengthening its integrated electricity business, particularly in Germany

 

This deal strengthens TotalEnergies’ integrated electricity business in Germany, which represents half of VSB’s portfolio, adding to the recent acquisitions of battery storage developer Kyon Energy and energy manager Quadra Energy, as well as the Company’s offshore wind positions in the country.

 

 

 

 

VSB’s more than 15 GW pipeline is also expected to increase TotalEnergies’ renewables pipeline in Europe to over 40 GW of capacity, in addition to the 7 GW already in operation or under construction. Given its targeted strategy for certain key European markets, the Company has decided to start the divestment process for the VSB-developed Puutionsaari project in Finland (440 MW wind and solar).

 

Africa: TotalEnergies has closed the acquisition of SN Power and is pursuing the implementation of its multi-energy strategy, particularly in Uganda

 

The acquisition of SN Power is expected to allow TotalEnergies to implement its multi-energy strategy in Uganda, where the Company is already active in exploration and production. The Bujagali hydropower plant (225 MW), for example, meets more than 25% of the country’s peak electricity demand. The transaction gives TotalEnergies a 28.3% stake in Bujagali, currently operating in Uganda, and a stake in two other projects under development in Rwanda (206 MW) and Malawi (360 MW). The deal also gives TotalEnergies a team of hydropower development experts, strengthening its competencies in this field.

 

Canada: TotalEnergies has signed agreements to acquire certain wind and solar projects and closed the acquisition of a solar farm in Alberta

 

The Company has signed agreements with RES to acquire certain wind and solar projects under development in Alberta, amounting to total capacity of more than 800 MW. TotalEnergies has also just closed the acquisition of Big Sky Solar (184 MW), a solar facility in Alberta that was commissioned at the end of February. More than two thirds of the electricity produced by Big Sky Solar is expected to be sold under a long-term power purchase agreement (PPA). The remainder is expected to be sold on the electricity market by TotalEnergies, which also expects to sell the carbon credits generated by the facility under Alberta’s regulated carbon emissions program.

 

Clarification: The Grandpuits Conversion into a Zero-Crude Platform continues and TotalEnergies is expected to meet all its commitments

 

On March 31, 2025, the company announced that the ongoing conversion of the Grandpuits refinery is entering a key phase. Over 1,200 people are working on the project, which includes the launch of an advanced plastics recycling unit, the first in France to use this particular technology, and the construction of a biorefinery for the production of Sustainable Aviation Fuels (SAF). Once completed, this vast project aims to be the Company’s first zero-crude platform.

 

The complex construction operation, for which as much of the site's equipment as possible is reused, requires the mobilization and expertise of all the employees who know the Grandpuits site. Some projects due to arrive in the second phase — biogas and mechanical recycling — have been suspended and the employees who were to join them are assigned, with their agreement, to the success of the first two major projects. In line with its plans at the outset of the project in 2020, TotalEnergies confirms that 250 jobs will be maintained at Grandpuits following the conversion.

 

Within a few months, Grandpuits is expected to be able to produce 10,000 tons a year of pyrolysis oil from recycled plastic, and from the beginning of 2026, up to 230,000 tons a year of Sustainable Aviation Fuel.

 

Norway: TotalEnergies and partners launch the 2nd phase of Northern Lights CCS project

 

On March 27, 2025, TotalEnergies and its partners, Equinor and Shell, announced the Final Investment Decision (FID) of the second phase of the Northern Lights development, which is expected to increase the project transport and storage capacity from 1.5 million to more than 5 million tons of CO2 per year from 2028.

 

The first phase of Northern Lights is completed and ready to receive CO2 from industrial emitters. Operations are expected to start this summer, with the first CO2 transportation by ship from Heidelberg Materials’ cement factory in Brevik, Norway and its injection and permanent storage into a reservoir 2,600 meters below the seabed, off the coast of Øygarden, western Norway.

 

The second phase represents an investment of NOK 7.5 billion (~$700 million) and leverages existing onshore and offshore infrastructures. This expansion includes new onshore storage tanks, pumps, a jetty, injection wells and transport vessels - which are all expected to be completed for a start-up by the second half of 2028.

 

This FID of this second phase follows the signing of a 15-year commercial agreement between Northern Lights and the Swedish district energy provider, Stockholm Exergi, for the cross-border transport and storage of 900,000 tons of biogenic CO2 emissions annually, starting in 2028. Stockholm

 

 

 

 

Exergi is the 5th company to commit with Northern Lights for transport and storage of its CO2 emissions, after Heidelberg Materials and Celsio in Norway, Yara in the Netherlands and Ørsted in Denmark. In addition, Northern Lights is in advanced discussions with several large European industrial customers to market the remaining storage capacity.

 

TotalEnergies publishes its Sustainability & Climate 2025 Progress Report and further strengthens its emissions reduction targets

 

On March 27, 2025, TotalEnergies published its Sustainability & Climate - 2025 Progress Report, which presents the progress of its transition strategy. This report completes the sustainability report that was integrated into the Universal Registration Document in application of the CSRD1.

 

TotalEnergies sees, in 2024, the rewards of its integrated and balanced multi-energy strategy

 

This strategy, which combines profitable growth and sustainable development, is anchored on two pillars: oil & gas (notably LNG) and electricity (notably renewable), the energy at the heart of the transition. It proved its relevance once again this year: TotalEnergies was the most profitable Major for the third year in a row with a 14.8% ROACE2, while also being the Major that invests the most in the energy transition, with close to $5 billion invested in 2024 in low carbon energies, primarily in electricity and renewables.

 

In hydrocarbons, TotalEnergies continues to develop and produce oil & gas in a responsible manner thanks to its low-cost, low-emission portfolio, as illustrated by its 2024 achievements in emissions reductions:

 

-Scope 1+2 greenhouse gas emissions from operated oil & gas facilities3 (100%) : -36% compared to 2015

 

-Decrease in the Scope 1+2 emissions intensity of upstream oil & gas activities to 17 kg CO2e/boe, in continuous improvement since 2020

 

- Methane emissions already among the lowest in the peer group: -55% compared to 2020; exceeded the -50% target in 2025 a year ahead of schedule

 

In gas, a transition energy that complements the intermittency of renewables in electricity generation and is a virtuous alternative for countries burning coal for power generation, TotalEnergies estimates that its LNG sales contributed to its clients avoiding about 65 Mt of CO2e emissions in 2024. TotalEnergies believes that sharing technologies and best practices is essential if the entire sector is to evolve. As such, the Company has been a very active contributor to the Oil & Gas Decarbonization Charter (OGDC) since its creation at the end of 2023. This large-scale initiative now brings together 55 national and international companies representing almost 45% of the world’s oil and gas production, working together to reduce the industry's GHG emissions, notably methane.

 

In electricity, TotalEnergies continues to build a profitable and differentiated business model, which is quickly becoming one of the Company’s cash engines. In 2024, TotalEnergies invested $4 billion in Integrated Power, increased its net electricity production by 23%, and passed the 10% milestone of electricity in its sales mix. This growth contributed to lowering the lifecycle carbon intensity of the Company’s energy products sold by 16.5% in 2024 compared to 2015, exceeding the initial target of -14%.

 

In 2025, TotalEnergies stays the course and further strengthens its emissions reduction targets

 

Thanks to its achievements to date, TotalEnergies stays the course of its strategy and is now the Major most committed to the energy transition. The Company has decided to further enhance its emissions reduction targets for 2025:

 

-Methane emissions from our operated facilities4 (100%): new target of -60% in 2025 compared to 2020 (vs -50% previously), along with the deployment of continuous detection means for emissions at all our upstream operated assets

 

 

1 Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive

2 Return On Average Capital Employed

3 Operated oil & gas facilities: facilities operated by the Company as part of its Upstream oil and gas activities as well as in its Refining & Chemicals and Marketing & Services segments. Facilities for power generation from renewable sources or natural gas, such as combined-cycle natural gas power plants are therefore excluded from this perimeter and are reported in the overall Scope 1&2.

 

 

 

 

-Scope 1+2 emissions from our operated facilities (100%): < 37 Mt CO2e in 2025 (vs < 38 Mt previously)

 

-Lifecycle Carbon intensity of energy products sold: new target of -17% in 2025 compared to 2015 (vs -15% previously).

 

Report presentation at 2:00 PM (Paris time)

 

The Sustainability & Climate – 2025 Progress Report was presented online by Mr. Aurélien Hamelle, President Strategy & Sustainability, and Ms. Namita Shah, President OneTech. The presentation was followed by a Q&A session. The event was webcasted on the totalenergies.com website from 2:00 PM (Paris time). Presentation deck and the report was available on the website.

 

Mozambique LNG: TotalEnergies welcomes the launch of official investigations in Mozambique

 

On March 26, 2025, following allegations of human rights abuses raised by media outlets in 2024 that would have been committed by members of Mozambique’s Defence and Security Forces in the Afungi Peninsula in the Cabo Delgado province around the summer of 2021, Mozambique LNG (TotalEnergies 26.5%) has asked in November 2024 the Mozambican authorities to open a formal investigation into such allegations, in order to ascertain what happened.

 

On the occasion of his meetings end of January with the new authorities of Mozambique, notably the President Daniel Chapo, Patrick Pouyanné, CEO of TotalEnergies, stressed the importance of such an investigation being conducted in accordance with the rule of law and sovereignty of the Mozambican state.

 

TotalEnergies welcomes the announcement made on 4 March 2025 by the Attorney General of Mozambique who confirmed that a criminal investigation had been opened into these allegations. Mozambique LNG will fully cooperate with the authorities in this respect.

 

In addition, TotalEnergies has also requested the intervention of the Mozambican Commission on Human Rights (CNDH) to conduct its own investigation into these allegations. We are pleased that the CNDH confirmed on 25 March 2025 that it will carry out its own assessment of all relevant information to ensure that the facts are duly ascertained and that the rights of the parties involved are fully respected. In particular, the CNDH has stated that it will follow the investigation launched by the Mozambican judicial authorities to ensure that it is conducted in a transparent, fair and impartial manner.

 

Germany: TotalEnergies Pursues Growth in Electricity by Launching Six New Battery Storage Projects

 

On March 26, 2025, on the occasion of Patrick Pouyanné’s participation in the Europe 2025 conference in Berlin, and in connection with the Company’s integrated development in the country’s electricity sector, TotalEnergies announced investment decisions for six battery storage projects. In total, these projects amount to 221 MW of new storage capacity and an investment outlay of €160 million.

 

These projects were developed by Kyon Energy, a TotalEnergies affiliate acquired in 2024, and most are expected to use next-generation batteries supplied by Saft, a TotalEnergies affiliate and leader in advanced battery technology. Construction began at the end of 2024, and commissioning is planned for early 2026.

 

The launch of these projects marks a major milestone in TotalEnergies’ development of battery energy storage capacity in Germany, where the Company has operations in the production, trading, aggregation and commercialization of clean firm power. This storage capacity is expected to allow TotalEnergies to contribute to the resilience of the German power system, by reducing congestion and adding flexibility in order to quickly boost the country’s renewables sector.

 

TotalEnergies expands its integrated power operations in Germany

 

These batteries round out TotalEnergies’ German electricity portfolio, which consists of:

 

§7 GW4 of onshore wind and solar in development and 200 MW1 installed or under construction;

 

§6.5 GW net of offshore wind in development;

 

§2 GW of storage capacity in development and 321 MW under construction;

 

 

4 Subject to the closing of the VSB acquisition

 

 

 

 

§9 GW of electricity aggregation capacity managed by Quadra Energy ;

 

§6,900 developed and operated charge points, including 1,100 with high-power charging.

 

Energy storage, a key part of our integrated electricity strategy

 

Energy storage plays a key role in offsetting the intermittence of renewable power. Their development is therefore necessary to enable TotalEnergies to offer Clean Firm Power to its customers, i.e. the continuous, stable supply of renewable electricity. Batteries also help to maximize the value of TotalEnergies’ portfolio, especially through its trading activities. The Company leverages the expertise of its Saft affiliate for the supply of the best battery storage systems for its needs.

 

Convening of the Annual Shareholders’ Meeting on May 23, 2025

 

On March 24, 2025, The Company announced that the Board of Directors of TotalEnergies SE met on March 19, 2025 under the chairmanship of Mr. Patrick Pouyanné, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. It has decided to convene the Ordinary and Extraordinary Shareholders’ Meeting of the Corporation on Friday, May 23, 2025. The Notice of Meeting will be published soon in France's BALO (Bulletin des Annonces Légales et Obligatoires) and will be available on the Company's website. The Board of Directors also approved the documents that will be submitted to shareholders at the Annual Meeting, including the Management Report.

 

Company Governance

 

The directorships of Mrs. Lise Croteau, Mrs. Maria van der Hoeven, Mr. Jean Lemierre as well as Mrs. Emma de Jonge, director representing employee shareholders, expire at the end of the Annual Shareholders' Meeting on May 23, 2025.

 

On the proposal of the Governance and Ethics Committee, the Board of Directors decided to submit to the Shareholders’ Meeting on May 23, 2025 the renewal for a period of three years of the directorships of Mrs. Lise Croteau.

 

In view of the corporate governance practice of the Corporation’s Board of Directors, according to which a director must not reach the age of 75 during her or his term of office, Mrs. Maria van der Hoeven and Mr. Jean Lemierre did not seek the renewal of their mandates.

 

The Board of Directors warmly thanks Mrs. Maria van der Hoeven for her exceptional contribution to the Board who for almost 10 years provided the Board with the benefit of her knowledge of the global energy economy, the challenges of the energy transition and the associated geopolitical issues. In her capacity as Chair of the Audit Committee since 2021, Maria van der Hoeven has notably overseen this Committee's work on taking account of regulatory developments in extra-financial reporting.

 

The Board of Directors would also like to express its special thanks to Mr. Jean Lemierre, who provided the Board throughout his term of office with the benefit of his long experience of the financial world, both in France and internationally as well as of governance of large French companies. His opinion was invaluable to the work of the Board and its committees, notably the Governance and Ethics Committee and the Strategy & CSR Committee.

 

The Board of Directors has decided to propose to the Shareholders’ Meeting the appointment of two new independent directors, Mrs. Helen Lee Bouygues and Mr. Laurent Mignon, for a three-year term, replacing Mrs. Maria van der Hoeven and Mr. Jean Lemierre.

 

Of Korean origin and American and French nationality, Mrs. Helen Lee Bouygues has been residing in France since 2004. She holds a MBA from Harvard Business School. For over 25 years, she has been supporting the strategic transformation of leading French and international companies. Thanks to her extensive experience as a director and member of audit committees of listed companies, such as Neoen SA and Viridien SA (formerly CGG), Helen Lee Bouygues has developed a broad understanding of the various challenges faced by companies, particularly in the energy sector. She will thus bring her financial and strategic expertise to the Board.

 

Mr. Laurent Mignon, a French national, a graduate from HEC and from the Executive Program at Stanford, is Chairman of the Executive Board (Président du Directoire) of Wendel, an investment company, and Chairman of the Board of Directors of Bureau Veritas, in which Wendel holds a controlling interest in Bureau Veritas and fully consolidates.

 

 

 

 

He will bring to the Board his leading expertise in the banking and financial sector and the wealth of his experience in investments and general management of listed companies. Throughout his career, he has successfully led the transformation and development of the companies he has managed, with a constant desire to create sustainable value.

 

The appointment of a new director representing employee shareholders, replacing Ms. Emma de Jonge, will also be submitted to the vote of the Shareholders’ Meeting. The Board will recommend to the Shareholders’ Meeting the candidacy of Ms. Valérie Della Puppa-Tibi, presented by the collective investments fund (FCPE) TotalEnergies Actionnariat France (TAF), i.e., the largest employee shareholding fund in terms of share of capital held (4.82% of the Corporation's capital as of December 31, 2024). Ms. Valérie Della Puppa-Tibi, who was already a member of the Board of Directors from 2019 to 2022, will therefore immediately be able to contribute fully to the work of the Board. The Board thanks Ms. Emma de Jonge for her active contribution to the work of the Board.

 

At the end of the Shareholder’s Meeting on May 23, 2025, if the Board proposed resolutions are approved, the Board of Directors will be composed of 14 members, of whom 8 will be French and 6 Internationals. The proportion of independent directors as defined by the AFEP-MEDEF Code will stand at 82%, in line with best standards. The proportion of women and men will be 45% and 55% respectively.

 

Sustainability & Climate - 2025 Progress Report

 

During the Shareholders’ Meetings of 2023 and 2024, in response to consultative resolution projects submitted at the initiative of shareholders, the Board of Directors reaffirmed its strong commitment to shareholder dialogue and invited shareholders who wish to open a debate with the Board of Directors to place an item on the agenda of the Shareholders’ Meeting as provided for in the French Commercial Code, emphasizing that "this would be a better way to engage in dialogue with shareholders in the future”.

 

In a context of major regulatory changes (CSRD) and controversies regarding the practice of Say on Climate through consultative resolutions, the Board of Directors conducted a review of the practices of its peers, market developments, and a consultation with shareholders and proxy advisors to gather their expectations regarding Say on Climate.

 

Following this review, the Board of Directors decided to include a formal item for debate (without a resolution submitted to the shareholders' vote) on the agenda of the Shareholders’ Meeting on May 23, 2025, concerning the Sustainability & Climate - 2025 Progress Report. This report accounts for the progress made in implementing the Corporation’s ambition in terms of sustainable development and energy transition towards carbon neutrality, as well as its objectives in this area by 2030.

 

The Board of Directors intends to make this practice of including an item on the agenda a permanent feature at future shareholders’ meetings. In the event of a significant change in the strategy, a consultative vote by shareholders on the Sustainability & Climate strategy would be initiated by the Board of Directors.

 

The Board of Directors reminds that it is entitled not to accept the inclusion of consultative shareholder resolutions on the agenda that would encroach on the Board's own competencies under French law, particularly in matters of governance or strategy, as confirmed by the President of the Nanterre Commercial Court in relation to the Corporation’s 2024 Shareholders’ Meeting. However, it invites shareholders who wish to do so to propose items for debate on the agenda of the Shareholders’ Meeting or to question the Board through written questions.

 

The Sustainability & Climate - 2025 Progress Report was presented online on March, 27 2025, followed by a Q&A session. The event was webcasted live on totalenergies.com from 2:00 pm (Paris time). The Report and presentation material was available on the website.

 

Germany: TotalEnergies and RWE join forces on green hydrogen to decarbonize the Leuna refinery

 

On March 12, 2025, in line with its 2030 ambition to decarbonize the hydrogen used in its European refineries, TotalEnergies signed an agreement with the German developer RWE to supply 30,000 tons a year of green hydrogen to the German Leuna refinery for fifteen years, beginning in 2030.

 

The green hydrogen is expected to be produced by a 300 MW electrolyzer, built and operated by RWE in Lingen. Green hydrogen storage is expected to be provided locally. The green hydrogen is expected to be delivered by a 600 km pipeline to the gates of the refinery and aims to prevent the site’s emission of some 300,000 tons of CO2 beginning in 2030. This is one of the largest quantity of green hydrogen ever contracted from an electrolyzer in Germany.

 

 

 

 

Offshore Wind: TotalEnergies and Partners Inaugurate 640 MW Yunlin Wind Farm in Taiwan

 

On March 4, 2025, during a ceremony held in Taipei, TotalEnergies and its partners announced the successful inauguration of the Yunlin offshore wind farm in Taiwan, which is now fully operational and generating renewable electricity at its planned capacity of 640 MW.

 

A new milestone for TotalEnergies in Asia

 

TotalEnergies holds a 29.46% stake in Yunneng Wind Power Co., Ltd., the joint venture responsible for the project. The other stakeholders include Skyborn Renewables with 31.98%, EGCO Group with 26.56%, and Sojitz with 12%.

 

The development and construction of the Yunlin project were led by Skyborn with the support of the other partners. Following the Commercial Operations Date (COD), expected in June 2025, TotalEnergies will take the lead in technical operations management, whilst Skyborn Renewables will continue to lead other management services.

 

In Asia, TotalEnergies owns a renewable energy portfolio (solar, wind, batteries) of over 23 GW gross, across all stages, from development to construction and operation. Of this capacity, 50% is already operational or under construction.

 

One of the largest offshore wind farms in Taiwan

 

The Yunlin offshore wind farm is located about 15 kilometers off the west coast of Taiwan, at water depths of up to 35 meters. The project consists of 80 wind turbines, each with 8 MW capacity. The electricity generated is fed into the Taiwanese grid and contracted to Taiwan Power Company (TPC) through two 20-year Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) at an average rate of $165/MWh.

 

The Yunlin offshore wind farm produces 2.4 TWh of renewable electricity per year, powering over 600,000 Taiwanese households and reducing CO2 emissions by approximately 1.2 million tons.

 

Jeunes Agriculteurs and TotalEnergies Strengthen Their Partnership for the Energy Transition of the Agricultural World

 

On February 26, 2025, TotalEnergies and Jeunes Agriculteurs (JA) announced the signing of a cooperation protocol aimed at supporting young farmers in the energy transition, thus contributing to the sustainability of their farming activities and attracting younger generations to agriculture.

 

Since 1986, TotalEnergies has partnered with Jeunes Agriculteurs through its involvement as a founding member of the "Terres Innovantes" endowment fund and as a premium partner of "Terres de JIM," an annual event that promotes and enhances the farming profession. The new cooperation framework signed today between TotalEnergies and Jeunes Agriculteurs covers the following areas:

 

·The development of sustainable energy solutions adapted to farms and agricultural sectors (biogas, agrivoltaics).

 

·Supporting young farmers in implementing more energy-efficient practices.

 

·Technological innovation through the implementation of pilot agri-energy projects and their experimental monitoring.

 

·Financing energy transition projects that comply with the plans and future contracts developed by Jeunes Agriculteurs.

 

TotalEnergies and Jeunes Agriculteurs share a common desire to provide solutions and tools adapted to the challenges and needs of farmers. This will be reflected in collaboration between their teams through working groups, meetings, and experience sharing.

 

Biogas in France: TotalEnergies Starts Its 2nd Largest Unit in Normandy

 

On February 26, 2025, TotalEnergies announced the commissioning of BioNorrois, its 8th biomethane production unit5 in France, located in Fontaine-le-Dun (Normandy). It is expected to inject 153 GWh of biomethane per year into the natural gas transport network operated by GRTgaz, equivalent to the average annual gas consumption of more than 30,000 inhabitants.

 

 

5 In France, TotalEnergies operates 8 biomethane production units, which inject renewable gas into the gas network, and 8 biogas production units providing electricity and heat through cogeneration.

 

 

 

 

The French sugar group Cristal Union, partner in the project and 10% shareholder, is expected to provide beet pulp, residues from its adjacent production site, to the biomethane plant, which is expected to represent up to 80% of the 185,000 tons of organic materials used.

 

The 150,000 tons of digestate (natural fertilizer, co-product of anaerobic digestion) produced annually by the unit is expected to be fully utilized by Cristal Union and the Norman cooperative NatUp with partner farms, to support them in their transition to the use of sustainable and locally produced fertilizers. This new territorial installation aims to save more than 5,500 tons of chemical fertilizers each year and avoid emitting 30,000 tons of CO2.

 

The development of BioNorrois is the result of consultation with all local stakeholders, including more than 130 farmers and agri-food industries as well as local administrations and officials, allowing the project to adapt to the needs of the territory.

 

TotalEnergies Joins Forces with Air Liquide to Decarbonize its Refineries in Northern Europe with Green Hydrogen

 

On February 18, 2025, In line with its 2030 ambition to decarbonize the hydrogen used in its European refineries, TotalEnergies signed agreements with Air Liquide to develop two projects in the Netherlands, for the production and delivery of some 45,000 tons a year of green hydrogen produced using renewable power, generated mostly by the OranjeWind offshore wind farm, developed by TotalEnergies (50%) and RWE (50%). These projects aims to cut CO2 emissions from TotalEnergies’ refineries in Belgium and the Netherlands by up to 450,000 tons a year and contribute to the European renewable energy targets in transport.

 

Green hydrogen production by TotalEnergies and Air Liquide

 

The two companies have signed an agreement to set up a joint venture, equally held by TotalEnergies (50%) and Air Liquide (50%), which is expected to build and operate a 250 MW electrolyzer near the Zeeland refinery. This project is expected to enable the production of up to 30,000 tons of green hydrogen a year, most of which is expected to be delivered to Zeeland’s platform. The electrolyzer is expected to be commissioned in 2029 and aims to cut the site’s CO2 emissions by up to 300,000 tons a year. This project represents a global investment of around €600 million for both partners and has made requests for support under European and national subsidy programs. Project funding will also be sought by the partners.

 

Supplying TotalEnergies’ Antwerp platform with green hydrogen

 

In addition, as part of Air Liquide's 200 MW ELYgator electrolyzer project located in Maasvlakte (Netherlands), TotalEnergies has signed a tolling agreement for 130 MW to be dedicated to the production of 15,000 tons per year of green hydrogen for the TotalEnergies platform in Antwerp. Under this agreement, TotalEnergies is expected to supply the renewable electrons produced by the OranjeWind project to Air Liquide to be transformed into green hydrogen. The project is expected to be operational by the end of 2027 and aims to reduce CO2 emissions at the Antwerp site by up to 150,000 tons per year.

 

TotalEnergies and the decarbonization of its European refineries

 

TotalEnergies is committed to reducing the carbon footprint of producing, converting and supplying energy to its customers. One of the pathways identified by the Company is using low-carbon hydrogen to decarbonize its European refineries, a move that should help reduce its annual CO2 emissions by around three million tons by 2030. In order to fully decarbonize the hydrogen used in its European refineries, TotalEnergies has already contracted over 170,000 tons of green hydrogen annually at: La Mède, Grandpuits and Normandy in France, Leuna in Germany and its refineries in Belgium and the Netherlands.

 

TotalEnergies, Masdar and EPointZero Sign Framework for Action to Drive Clean Energy Access in Africa and Asia

 

On February 17, 2025, Abu Dhabi Future Energy Company PJSC – Masdar, the UAE’s clean energy leader, TotalEnergies and EPointZero, the decarbonization arm of 2PointZero, a transformational global investment platform, signed a Framework for Action (FFA) agreement to drive access to clean energy in emerging markets and developing economies in Africa and Asia.

 

The agreement follows the UAE President His Highness Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan’s visit to France and meeting with French President His Excellency Emmanuel Macron, where they reaffirmed the strong strategic partnership between the two countries and discussed developing

 

 

 

 

collaboration in key sectors such as climate action, energy, artificial intelligence and advanced technology.

 

Under the agreement, Masdar and TotalEnergies will strengthen their cooperation to provide reliable and sustainable electricity to local communities in Africa and support its long-term energy systems transformation, and to jointly develop some new clean energy opportunities in Southeast Asia. TotalEnergies and EPointZero will aim to explore partnership opportunities to support India’s clean energy ambitions, including through solar, wind and energy storage, to contribute to the country’s decarbonization efforts.

 

The FFA signing was witnessed by H.E. Dr. Sultan Al Jaber, UAE Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology, Chairman of Masdar, Patrick Pouyanné, Chairman and CEO of TotalEnergies, and H.E Mariam Almheiri, Group CEO of 2PointZero. The agreement was signed at the third plenary meeting of the UAE-France High Level Business Council in Paris on February 16 by Masdar’s Chief Executive Officer, Mohamed Jameel Al Ramahi, Stéphane Michel, TotalEnergies President for Gas Renewable and Power, and Peter Abraam, Chief Strategy and Growth Officer of IHC.

 

The FFA brings together these major companies under the Council’s umbrella to work together to expand their capabilities and increase access to clean energy in emerging markets and developing economies in Africa and Asia.

 

The UAE-France High Level Business Council was launched in July 2022 in the presence of UAE President His Highness Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan and Emmanuel Macron, President of the French Republic, with the aim of promoting economic exchanges and conveying the voice of UAE and French businesses to the highest public authorities, as well as to identify and implement private cross-investment projects.

 

The Council held its first plenary meeting in January 2023 and serves as an important catalyst for innovation and collaboration, reinforcing the UAE and France’s joint commitment to a sustainable, low-carbon future. The two nations have maintained a Comprehensive Strategic Energy Partnership since 2022 and launched the UAE-France Bilateral Climate Investment Platform last year.

 

TotalEnergies and ENI sign an agreement with Cyprus and Egypt for the export of Cyprus Block 6 gas through Egypt

 

On February 17, 2025, in the presence of President of Egypt Abdel Fattah El-Sisi and President of Cyprus Níkos Christodoulídis, TotalEnergies and ENI, partners in Cyprus offshore Block 6 (TotalEnergies 50%, ENI 50% operator), signed a Host Government Agreement (HGA) with the Arab Republic of Egypt and the Republic of Cyprus related to the development of Block 6 gas resources.

 

Signed during the Egypt Energy Show (EGYPES) with the Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources of the Arab Republic of Egypt, Karim Badawi, and the Minister of Energy, Commerce and Industry of the Republic of Cyprus, George Papanastasiou, this agreement is a key milestone towards the development of the Cronos gas field. Located in Cyprus Block 6, Cronos field was discovered in 2022 and successfully appraised in February 2024.

 

The agreement provides a framework allowing the Cronos gas to be processed in the existing Zohr facilities offshore Egypt and then liquefied in the Damietta LNG plant in Egypt, for export to European markets.

 

Following the signature of this agreement, the Block 6 partners are expected to proceed with the Cronos Development and Production Plan, in close collaboration with Cyprus authorities.

 

In Cyprus, TotalEnergies also has interests in Block 11 (50%, operator), Block 7 (50%, operator), and Block 8 (40%).

 

The "UAE-France High-Level Business Council" meeting was held with the participation of over 50 entities to Strengthen economic and investment cooperation

 

On February 17, 2025, The UAE-France High-Level Business Council held its third plenary meeting in Paris, co-chaired by H.E Dr. Sultan Al Jaber, UAE Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology, Managing Director and Group CEO of ADNOC and Patrick Pouyanné, Chairman and CEO of TotalEnergies. The meeting was attended by H.E Eric Lombard, French Minister of Economics and Finance and H.E Laurent Saint-Martin, French Minister of Foreign Trade, along with the participation of over 50 Emirati and French entities representing government, semi-government, and private sectors.

 

In his opening remarks, H.E Dr. Sultan Al Jaber conveyed the greetings of the UAE leadership, reaffirming the UAE’s long-standing bilateral relations with France spanning over 50 years and

 

 

 

 

emphasized the commitment to continue strengthening the bilateral relations within the framework of a strategic partnership to achieve the shared aspirations of both nations for sustainable economic and social growth.

 

H.E Dr. Al Jaber emphasized that the meeting comes at a pivotal moment for both the UAE and France following the signing of the landmark ‘UAE-France Framework for Cooperation in Artificial Intelligence’ Agreement, witnessed by His Highness Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, President of the United Arab Emirates and His Excellency, President Emmanuel Macron. This framework aims to enhance digital infrastructure and support the development of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies by establishing a 1-gigawatt AI complex, with investments ranging between €30 billion and €50 billion.

 

He emphasized also the important role of the Council in advancing bilateral economic ties and elevating them to new heights, stressing the importance of joint work to increase cooperation and achieve tangible results in strategic and priority sectors.

 

H.E Dr. Al Jaber shared the UAE experience in promoting investments that promote sustainable economic development, citing examples of global specialized institutions and companies, such as MGX, the UAE’s world-leading AI investor, and XRG, the UAE’s newly established international energy investment company, intends to drive value through strategic investments across gas, chemicals, low-carbon fuels, clean technologies and energy infrastructure.

 

Mr. Eric Lombard praised the dynamism of the bilateral economic relationship between France and the United Arab Emirates which has led to ambitious joint projects, particularly in artificial intelligence and ecological transition, two strategic objectives shared by our countries. France's Minister of the Economy, Finance and Industrial Sovereignty welcomed the UAE's contribution of up to €50Bn for the development in France of Europe's largest AI campus, announced on the margins of the AI Summit, which demonstrates that the two countries are aware of the stakes involved in the AI revolution.

 

Mr. Pouyanné said he was delighted that the High Council, which he welcomed to Paris for its third plenary meeting, was continuing to foster economic cooperation between the two countries. This structure has gradually established itself as a key player in facilitating the concrete implementation of commercial partnerships between French and Emirati companies in key areas such as energy, transport, investment and artificial intelligence. At once a forum for reflection, dialogue and action, the High Council has proved to be highly useful for the development of Franco-Emirati economic relations, which we should see continue to strengthen.

 

The Council reviewed the achievements made through the working groups over the past year, including the activation of the AI and Advanced Technology Working Group and holding the first regional business development meeting, in Masdar City, Abu Dhabi, which aims to enhance cooperation in priority sectors and create joint initiatives among the Council's members and working groups. The meeting engaged over 30 companies from both countries to explore new projects and economically viable opportunities.

 

The Council also commended the diverse partnerships that exist between Emirati and French companies across various sector, including, energy, climate, transportation, logistics, investments, and AI. It called for doubling efforts to expand and create new cooperation and to strengthen partnerships across various sectors to enhance industrial integration and create a more resilient economic environment.

 

During the meeting, several joint strategic projects were showcased, including the inauguration of the CMA Terminals container terminal at Khalifa Port on December 12, 2024. This joint venture between Abu Dhabi Ports Group (30%) and France’s CMA CGM (70%) represents an investment worth of AED 3.1 billion. As part of this project, Abu Dhabi Ports Group also launched its first inland dry port facility in Al Fayah, designed as an extension of the CMA Terminals station. It is strategically located between Abu Dhabi and Dubai, connected by land to Khalifa Port and serves as an inland container warehouse, enhancing supply chain efficiencies and reducing transportation costs.

 

The Business Council also showcased the “TAQANA Energy Solutions” facility at the Industrial City of Abu Dhabi (ICAD), a partnership between the Arab Development Establishment and Schneider Electric.

 

The partnership is focused on developing advanced energy solutions to support industrial growth in the UAE.

 

During the meeting, several partnerships were signed between private sector companies from both countries, including:

 

 

 

 

1.A partnership framework between Masdar, TotalEnergies, and 2PointZero to support clean energy in emerging markets and developing economies in Africa and Asia.

 

2.A memorandum of cooperation between ADNOC and Veolia on optimizing water consumption, in areas such as water recycling, reducing water use, minimizing the carbon footprint, and developing action plans for water loss reduction in the short, medium, and long term.

 

3.A partnership between Abu Dhabi Ports and the French company Pascal to develop AI-driven solutions, including integrating AI models, quantitative analysis, and advanced algorithm development.

 

The meeting concluded with participants affirming their commitment to accelerating the implementation of programs and initiatives and expanding cooperation in priority sectors for both countries. The council also adopted its roadmap for the next year, focusing on implementing agreed-upon projects, exploring more cooperation opportunities between the private sectors of both countries, and holding the second regional business development meeting on the sidelines of the 4th edition of the “Make it in the Emirates” forum from May 19-22, 2025, in Abu Dhabi.

 

Bilateral Trade between the UAE and France

 

It is worth noting that trade relations between the two countries have witnessed significant increase, with non-oil trade increasing by 21.3% in 2024, reaching approximately AED 44 billion, compared to AED 36.7 billion in 2023.

 

Additionally, the UAE hosts the largest number of French companies operating in the Middle East, with about 600 companies employing more than 30,000 employees. The UAE is France's second-largest investor in the GCC.

 

About The UAE-France High Level Business Council

 

The UAE-France High Level Business Council was launched in Paris on the Occasion of H.H. Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed AL NAHYAN, President of the United Arab Emirates, state visit to France in July 2022, where President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed AL NAHYAN and French President Emmanuel MACRON witnessed and praised the launch of the UAE-France Business Council with a view to increasing further bilateral business opportunities for the benefit of both nations. The Council held its first meeting on 30th January 2023 in Abu Dhabi, which resulted in discussions on methane emissions reduction between TotalEnergies and ADNOC and the launch of a bilateral partnership to accelerate clean energy, focusing on the decarbonization of Hard-to-Abate (HTA) Industries.

 

India: TotalEnergies to Supply GSPC with 400,000 Tons of LNG per year from 2026

 

On February 12, 2025, during a ceremony held in New Delhi on the sidelines of the India Energy Week, TotalEnergies and the Gujarat State Petroleum Corporation Limited (GSPC), a state-owned oil and gas company, announced the signing of a long-term Sale and Purchase Agreement (SPA) for a term of ten years starting in 2026. Under this agreement, TotalEnergies is expected to supply GSPC with 400,000 tons of liquefied natural gas (LNG), amounting to six cargoes per year.

 

The LNG, sourced from TotalEnergies' global portfolio and delivered to terminals on India's west coast, is expected to primarily serve GSPC's industrial customers. It is also expected to supply Indian households for domestic use, businesses, and service stations for vehicles running on Compressed Natural Gas (CNG), such as auto-rickshaws.

 

In India, natural gas will play a pivotal role in the energy transition. As a cleaner alternative for industrial activities, cooking and transportation, it enhances air quality by reducing greenhouse gas emissions and pollution.

 

 

 

 

FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

 

This document may contain forward-looking statements (including forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995), notably with respect to the financial condition, results of operations, business activities and strategy of TotalEnergies. This document may also contain statements regarding the perspectives, objectives, areas of improvement and goals of TotalEnergies, including with respect to climate change and carbon neutrality (net zero emissions). An ambition expresses an outcome desired by TotalEnergies, it being specified that the means to be deployed do not depend solely on TotalEnergies. These forward-looking statements may generally be identified by the use of the future or conditional tense or forward-looking words such as “will”, “should”, “could”, “would”, “may”, “likely”, “might”, “envisions”, “intends”, “anticipates”, “believes”, “considers”, “plans”, “expects”, “thinks”, “targets”, “commits,” “aims” or similar terminology. Such forward-looking statements included in this document are based on economic data, estimates and assumptions prepared in a given economic, competitive and regulatory environment and considered to be reasonable by TotalEnergies as of the date of this document.

 

These forward-looking statements are not historical data and should not be interpreted as assurances that the perspectives, objectives or goals announced will be achieved. They may prove to be inaccurate in the future, and may evolve or be modified with a significant difference between the actual results and those initially estimated, due to the uncertainties notably related to the economic, financial, competitive and regulatory environment, or due to the occurrence of risk factors, such as, notably, the price fluctuations in crude oil and natural gas, the evolution of the demand and price of petroleum products, the changes in production results and reserves estimates, the ability to achieve cost reductions and operating efficiencies without unduly disrupting business operations, changes in laws and regulations including those related to the environment and climate, currency fluctuations, technological innovations, meteorological conditions and events, as well as socio-demographic, economic and political developments, changes in market conditions, loss of market share and changes in consumer preferences, or pandemics such as the COVID-19 pandemic. Additionally, certain financial information is based on estimates particularly in the assessment of the recoverable value of assets and potential impairments of assets relating thereto.

 

Readers are cautioned not to consider forward-looking statements as accurate, but as an expression of the Company’s views only as of the date this document is published. TotalEnergies SE and its subsidiaries have no obligation, make no commitment and expressly disclaim any responsibility to investors or any stakeholder to update or revise, particularly as a result of new information or future events, any forward-looking information or statement, objectives or trends contained in this document. In addition, the Company has not verified, and is under no obligation to verify any third-party data contained in this document or used in the estimates and assumptions or, more generally, forward-looking statements published in this document.

 

The information on risk factors that could have a significant adverse effect on TotalEnergies’ business, financial condition, including its operating income and cash flow, reputation, outlook or the value of financial instruments issued by TotalEnergies is provided in the most recent version of the Universal Registration Document which is filed by TotalEnergies SE with the French Autorité des Marchés Financiers and the latest annual report on Form 20-F filed with the SEC.

 

Additionally, the developments of environmental and climate change-related issues in this document are based on various frameworks and the interests of various stakeholders which are subject to evolve independently of our will. Moreover, our disclosures on such issues, including climate-related disclosures, may include information that is not necessarily "material" under US securities laws for SEC reporting purposes or under applicable securities law.

 

Cautionary Note to U.S. Investors – The SEC permits oil and gas companies, in their filings with the SEC, to separately disclose proved, probable and possible reserves that a company has determined in accordance with SEC rules. We may use certain terms in this press release, such as “potential reserves” or “resources”, that the SEC’s guidelines strictly prohibit us from including in filings with the SEC. U.S. investors are urged to consider closely the disclosure in the Form 20-F of TotalEnergies SE, File N° 1-10888, available from us at 2, place Jean Millier – Arche Nord Coupole/Regnault - 92078 Paris-La Défense Cedex, France, or at the Company website totalenergies.com. You can also obtain this form from the SEC by calling 1-800-SEC-0330 or on the SEC’s website sec.gov.

 

 

 

 

Exhibit 99.3

 

CAPITALIZATION AND INDEBTEDNESS OF TOTALENERGIES

(unaudited)

 

The following table sets out the unaudited consolidated capitalization and long-term indebtedness, as well as short-term indebtedness, of TotalEnergies SE and the consolidated entities directly or indirectly controlled by TotalEnergies SE (collectively, “TotalEnergies”) as of March 31, 2025, prepared on the basis of IFRS. Currency amounts are expressed in U.S. dollars (“dollars” or “$”) or in euros (“euros” or “€”).

 

    At March 31, 2025  
       
    (in millions of dollars)  
Current financial debt, including current portion of non-current financial debt      
Current portion of non-current financial debt   4,914  
Current financial debt   8,220  
Current portion of financial instruments for interest rate swaps liabilities   544  
Other current financial instruments — liabilities   353  
Financial liabilities directly associated with assets held for sale   63  
Total current financial debt   14,094  
Non-current financial debt   45,858  
Non-controlling interests   2,465  
Shareholders’ equity      
Common shares   7,231  
Paid-in surplus and retained earnings   128,787  
Currency translation adjustment   (14,508 )
Treasury shares   (3,554 )
Total shareholders’ equity — TotalEnergies share   117,956  
Total capitalization and non-current indebtedness   166,279  

 

As of March 31, 2025, TotalEnergies SE had an issued share capital of 2,270,057,201 ordinary shares with a par value of €2.50 per share, of which 49,468,888 were treasury shares. For more information on the delegations of authority and powers granted to the Board of Directors with respect to share capital increases and authorization for share cancellation, see Exhibit 15.1 (section 4.4.2, chapter 4) to the Annual Report on Form 20-F for the year ended December 31, 2024, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on March 31, 2025.

 

As of March 31, 2025, approximately $8,684 million of TotalEnergies’ non-current financial debt was secured and $37,174 million was unsecured, and all of TotalEnergies’ current financial debt of $14,094 million was unsecured. As of March 31, 2025, TotalEnergies had no outstanding guarantees from third parties relating to its consolidated indebtedness.

 

For more information about TotalEnergies’ off-balance sheet commitments and contingencies, see Note 13.1 of the Notes to TotalEnergies’ audited Consolidated Financial Statements in its Annual Report on Form 20-F for the year ended December 31, 2024, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on March 31, 2025.

 

Except as disclosed herein, there have been no material changes in the consolidated capitalization, indebtedness and contingent liabilities of TotalEnergies since March 31, 2025.