TotalEnergies has signed a 21-year power purchase agreement (PPA) with Google to deliver 1 terawatt-hour of certified renewable electricity from the planned Citra Energies solar project in northern Malaysia. The long-term contract is equivalent to around 20 megawatts of capacity and will directly support Google’s data center operations in the country.
The solar plant, located in Kedah province, is scheduled to begin construction in early 2026, with the PPA set to take effect at financial close, expected in the first quarter of 2026.
The project was awarded in August 2023 by Malaysia’s Energy Commission under the country’s Corporate Green Power Programme (CGPP). TotalEnergies holds a 49% stake in the development, alongside local partner MK Land, which owns the remaining 51%.
The deal underscores the accelerating convergence between hyperscale data center growth and long-term renewable power procurement in emerging markets. Technology companies such as Google are increasingly seeking direct, long-duration PPAs to secure clean electricity in regions where grid decarbonization is still at an early stage.
For TotalEnergies, the agreement strengthens its position as a global provider of tailored power solutions for large industrial and digital clients, extending a partnership with Google that already includes renewable supply contracts in the United States.
Malaysia has emerged as a key regional hub for data centers, driven by strong digital demand, competitive operating costs, and supportive government policy. At the same time, rising electricity demand from energy-intensive digital infrastructure has intensified pressure on utilities and regulators to expand clean generation capacity.
The CGPP is central to this strategy, enabling corporate buyers to contract renewable electricity directly from new projects, rather than relying solely on the national grid mix. The TotalEnergies–Google agreement aligns with this framework by adding new solar capacity rather than reallocating existing supply.
TotalEnergies has been expanding its global PPA portfolio with major corporate buyers, including Amazon, Microsoft, Air Liquide, Saint-Gobain, and Merck, reflecting a broader trend toward long-term contracted revenues in the power sector.
As of late 2025, the French energy major had more than 32 gigawatts of installed renewable generation capacity worldwide and is targeting 35 gigawatts by year-end. The company aims to exceed 100 terawatt-hours of net electricity production by 2030, combining renewables with flexible assets such as gas-fired generation and energy storage.


