TotalEnergies bets $100m on climate-tech as decarbonisation becomes industry battleground

Onome Amuge

While governments gather in Belém, Brazil, for COP30 to renew global climate commitments, a parallel race is accelerating behind the scenes, driven not by pledges but by capital. TotalEnergies is sharpening this race by committing $100 million to Climate Investment’s Venture Strategy fund, sending one of the strongest signals yet that the oil and gas sector has entered a new phase where climate-tech investment is becoming a key competitive edge.

The French major’s commitment, unveiled during the conference, goes beyond routine corporate responsibility. It positions the company strategically within an evolving ecosystem of climate-aligned investments, one increasingly influenced by geopolitics, technology, and the urgent need to decarbonise heavy industries.

Climate Investment, originally created by the Oil and Gas Climate Initiative (OGCI) in 2015, now sits at the heart of this strategy. Over the last decade, it has backed 46 early- and growth-stage companies working on methane detection, carbon capture, and energy efficiency solutions; investments that have collectively avoided 133 million tonnes of CO₂e since 2019. Its evolution from an OGCI initiative to an independent technology-scaling vehicle, now recognised as a partner of the Oil & Gas Decarbonization Charter (OGDC) under a Memorandum of Understanding signed in July, places it at the centre of how the industry now seeks credible, measurable emissions reductions.

With the new partnership, Climate Investment will serve as a technical and strategic adviser to OGDC signatories; many of them national oil companies (NOCs) struggling with the dual pressure of rising demand for hydrocarbons and growing regulatory and investor expectations to decarbonise. 

TotalEnergies’ commitment signals a broader ambition to shape both the technological landscape and the collaborative framework driving decarbonisation across global oil and gas operations. The company positions itself not just as a funder but as one of OGDC’s most prominent champions, with Chairman and CEO Patrick Pouyanné serving as one of the initiative’s three global leaders alongside ADNOC’s Sultan Al Jaber and Saudi Aramco’s Amin Nasser.

Pouyanné emphasised that the investment will help scale proven solutions for the benefit of the OGDC community, calling on other International Oil Companies (IOCs) and NOCs to join the venture vehicle. 

TotalEnergies is already sharing its AUSEA methane-detection technology with national oil companies, reinforcing its OGMP 2.0 Gold Standard status and positioning itself as a leader in both methane monitoring and the standards that guide the industry. At the same time, Climate Investment–backed technologies are delivering measurable results in the field. Qnergy’s instrument-air pneumatics, for example, have already replaced gas-driven devices on about 400 well pads in the Barnett field in the United States, proving the immediate impact of deployable decarbonisation solutions.

For emerging markets, including African oil producers, these developments carry far-reaching implications. Access to low-carbon technologies and associated financing has often remained limited, slowing progress on methane abatement despite its outsized climate impact. The integration of Climate Investment into OGDC could create new avenues for technology transfer, especially for methane management, a topic increasingly prioritised by African regulators and investors.

Pratima Rangarajan, CEO of Climate Investment, highlighted this global relevance, describing the fund’s mission as investing in the next generation of global infrastructure and scaling solutions that create operational value for asset owners. 

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TotalEnergies bets $100m on climate-tech as decarbonisation becomes industry battleground

Onome Amuge

While governments gather in Belém, Brazil, for COP30 to renew global climate commitments, a parallel race is accelerating behind the scenes, driven not by pledges but by capital. TotalEnergies is sharpening this race by committing $100 million to Climate Investment’s Venture Strategy fund, sending one of the strongest signals yet that the oil and gas sector has entered a new phase where climate-tech investment is becoming a key competitive edge.

The French major’s commitment, unveiled during the conference, goes beyond routine corporate responsibility. It positions the company strategically within an evolving ecosystem of climate-aligned investments, one increasingly influenced by geopolitics, technology, and the urgent need to decarbonise heavy industries.

Climate Investment, originally created by the Oil and Gas Climate Initiative (OGCI) in 2015, now sits at the heart of this strategy. Over the last decade, it has backed 46 early- and growth-stage companies working on methane detection, carbon capture, and energy efficiency solutions; investments that have collectively avoided 133 million tonnes of CO₂e since 2019. Its evolution from an OGCI initiative to an independent technology-scaling vehicle, now recognised as a partner of the Oil & Gas Decarbonization Charter (OGDC) under a Memorandum of Understanding signed in July, places it at the centre of how the industry now seeks credible, measurable emissions reductions.

With the new partnership, Climate Investment will serve as a technical and strategic adviser to OGDC signatories; many of them national oil companies (NOCs) struggling with the dual pressure of rising demand for hydrocarbons and growing regulatory and investor expectations to decarbonise. 

TotalEnergies’ commitment signals a broader ambition to shape both the technological landscape and the collaborative framework driving decarbonisation across global oil and gas operations. The company positions itself not just as a funder but as one of OGDC’s most prominent champions, with Chairman and CEO Patrick Pouyanné serving as one of the initiative’s three global leaders alongside ADNOC’s Sultan Al Jaber and Saudi Aramco’s Amin Nasser.

Pouyanné emphasised that the investment will help scale proven solutions for the benefit of the OGDC community, calling on other International Oil Companies (IOCs) and NOCs to join the venture vehicle. 

TotalEnergies is already sharing its AUSEA methane-detection technology with national oil companies, reinforcing its OGMP 2.0 Gold Standard status and positioning itself as a leader in both methane monitoring and the standards that guide the industry. At the same time, Climate Investment–backed technologies are delivering measurable results in the field. Qnergy’s instrument-air pneumatics, for example, have already replaced gas-driven devices on about 400 well pads in the Barnett field in the United States, proving the immediate impact of deployable decarbonisation solutions.

For emerging markets, including African oil producers, these developments carry far-reaching implications. Access to low-carbon technologies and associated financing has often remained limited, slowing progress on methane abatement despite its outsized climate impact. The integration of Climate Investment into OGDC could create new avenues for technology transfer, especially for methane management, a topic increasingly prioritised by African regulators and investors.

Pratima Rangarajan, CEO of Climate Investment, highlighted this global relevance, describing the fund’s mission as investing in the next generation of global infrastructure and scaling solutions that create operational value for asset owners. 

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