Decarbonizing our operated sites (Scope 1 and 2) is at the heart of our ambition to supply more energy while reducing GHG emissions. TotalEnergies is committed to reducing the carbon footprint associated with the production, transformation and supply of energy to its customers. One of the levers identified by the Company is the use of low-carbon(1) hydrogen to decarbonize its European refineries, which would reduce their direct CO2 emissions by up to three million tons a year by 2030.
Hydrogen: a Driving Force Behind the Decarbonization of Our Refineries in Europe
Hydrogen: a Driving Force Behind the Decarbonization of Our Refineries in Europe
06/18/2025
|Modified on 05/07/2026
Hydrogen is an energy carrier that can be produced using various processes:
- Low-carbon hydrogen: Hydrogen whose energy content comes from non renewable sources and that meets a required level of greenhouse gas emission reduction compared to the fossil fuel comparator(2).
- Renewable hydrogen: Hydrogen produced through electrolysis of water (in an electrolyzer, powered by electricity) and with the electricity stemming from renewable sources (green hydrogen). Renewable hydrogen can also be produced by reforming biogas (instead of natural gas) or by the biochemical conversion of biomass, provided the process meets the applicable sustainability requirements. For renewable hydrogen production, greenhouse gas emissions over the entire life cycle are close to zero(3).
In September 2023, TotalEnergies launched a call for tender to use up to 500 kt/year of hydrogen consumed in its European refineries from 2030. Four types of projects are being launched to help develop a European low-carbon hydrogen market:
- biohydrogen production units using biomass gas produced in our biorefineries. This biohydrogen will be used in particular to produce sustainable aviation fuels (SAF);
- electrolyzer projects powered by TotalEnergies renewable electrons, through:
- either joint venture projects between TotalEnergies and a partner,
- or tolling contracts for electrons supplied by TotalEnergies;
- long-term third-party purchases of green hydrogen.
In 2024, we announced a project for a renewable hydrogen production unit to be built and operated by Air Liquide on our La Mède platform. With a capacity of 25,000 tonnes of hydrogen per year, this unit will recycle co-products from the TotalEnergies biorefinery. The hydrogen will then be used by the biorefinery to produce biodiesel and Sustainable Air Fuels (SAF). Adaptation of the platform will reduce the biorefinery's GHG emissions by 130,000 tonnes per year from 2028 onwards.
On our Grandpuits platform, Air Liquide is building a unit to produce around 20,000 tonnes per year of renewable hydrogen, thanks to the recycling of residual biogas from the biorefinery. In addition, this unit will be equipped from the outset with Air Liquide's CryocapTM CO2 capture technology, enabling it to contribute to reducing the platform's carbon footprint by capturing over 110,000 tonnes per year of CO2 and reusing it in agri-food and industrial applications.
The renewable, low-carbon hydrogen thus produced will be used primarily by the biorefinery for the production of sustainable jet fuel. This investment will avoid the emission of 150,000 tonnes of CO2e per year, compared with existing processes.
TotalEnergies has signed long-term tolling agreements with Air Liquide to supply renewable electricity to dedicated electrolysis capacity operated by partners, who in turn supply us with green hydrogen. The aim is to decarbonize the Normandy and Antwerp sites.
As part of Air Liquide's 200 MW electrolyzer project, TotalEnergies has signed a tolling agreement to dedicate 130 MW of this electrolyzer to the production of 15,000 tonnes per year of green hydrogen for the Antwerp platform. Upstream of the electrolyzer, TotalEnergies will supply renewable electrons produced by the OranjeWind wind farm to Air Liquide for use in the production of green hydrogen. The project is scheduled to be operational by the end of 2027, and will reduce GHG emissions at the Antwerp site by up to 150,000 tonnes a year.
In 2023, TotalEnergies and Air Liquide have signed an agreement for the long-term supply of green, low-carbon hydrogen to the Gonfreville platform in Normandy. The project will supply 10,000 tonnes of green hydrogen per year to the TotalEnergies platform in Normandy, and up to 5,000 tonnes of low-carbon hydrogen from the second half of 2026. It comprises two integrated components:
- The production of green, low-carbon hydrogen by the Normandy electrolyzer, built and operated by Air Liquide, with a total electrical capacity of 200 MW. TotalEnergies will have access to half of this production capacity, corresponding to the quantity of hydrogen delivered to its refinery.
- The supply by TotalEnergies of around 700 GWh per year of renewable, low-carbon electricity to power Air Liquide's 100 MW electrolyzer, a volume corresponding to the share of hydrogen delivered to the TotalEnergies Normandy refinery.
In June 2024, TotalEnergies and Air Products announced an agreement for the annual supply of 70,000 tonnes of green hydrogen to the Refining & Chemicals sites in Europe for a period of 15 years from 2030. This green hydrogen will be produced from green ammonia imported by Air Products and will reduce CO2 emissions by up to 700,000 tonnes of CO2e per year.
In Germany, TotalEnergies and VNG, a German natural gas distribution company, signed an agreement in June 2023 to supply green hydrogen to the TotalEnergies Leuna refinery. The green hydrogen will be produced using renewable electricity from a 30 MW electrolyzer built and operated by VNG and its partner Uniper. This agreement will contribute to the emissions reduction of the Leuna refinery by reducing GHG emissions by up to 80,000 tons of CO2e per year by 2030.
Also in Germany, TotalEnergies signed an agreement with RWE in March 2025 for the long-term supply of 30,000 tons per year of green hydrogen to its Leuna refinery. The green hydrogen will be produced by a 300 MW electrolyzer built and operated by RWE in Lingen. Delivered via a 600 km pipeline to the Leuna refinery, which must be implemented by the German authorities, it will avoid the emission of around 300,000 tons of CO2e per year, from 2030 onwards.
Map of secure supply of low-carbon hydrogen
at our RC sites to date (March 2025)
(1) Hydrogen produced from non-renewable resources but with greenhouse gas emissions below a maximum threshold. For example, hydrogen produced from natural gas by the steam reforming process combined with a CO2 capture and storage (CCS) process. In Europe, the maximum greenhouse gas emission threshold for low-carbon hydrogen is the same as for renewable hydrogen, i.e. 3.38 kg CO2e/kg H2, according to European Directive 2018/2001, known as RED II. In common parlance, low-carbon hydrogen is often considered to include renewable hydrogen. ↑
(2) In Europe, this reduction level is 70%, corresponding to a life cycle emission level for hydrogen of 3.38 kg CO2e/kg H2, according to the methodology of the European Directive 2018/2001 (RED II).↑
(3) In Europe, the maximum greenhouse gas emission threshold for renewable hydrogen is 3.38 kg CO2e/kg H2 over the life cycle, according to the methodology of European Directive 2018/2001 (RED II).↑