Key Takeaways
- TotalEnergies struck a deal with the Department of the Interior to exit all U.S. offshore wind lease holdings
- The company will receive approximately $928 million reimbursement for previously purchased wind leases
- Capital will be redirected toward U.S. oil, gas, and LNG development starting in 2026
- Major projects include Texas-based Rio Grande LNG facility and Gulf of America oil extraction
- Shares of TTE declined 1.03% following the announcement
TotalEnergies finalized an arrangement with the U.S. Department of the Interior on Monday that allows the company to exit its offshore wind lease commitments while receiving complete reimbursement for lease expenditures.
The European energy company plans to channel approximately $928 million toward U.S.-based oil, natural gas, and liquefied natural gas operations — marking a strategic shift from renewable energy assets to hydrocarbon development.
The arrangement aligns with the current administration’s “Energy Dominance Agenda.” Interior Secretary Doug Burgum characterized offshore wind as “one of the most expensive, unreliable, environmentally disruptive, and subsidy-dependent schemes ever forced on American ratepayers.”
TotalEnergies CEO Patrick Pouyanné characterized the reallocation as a “more efficient use of capital” within U.S. markets. TTE shares declined 1.03% during trading, while crude oil futures (CL) experienced a more pronounced 9.51% decrease.
Investment Allocation Details
The $928 million capital redeployment will target two primary areas throughout 2026. The first allocation supports development of Trains 1 through 4 at the Rio Grande LNG facility in Texas. The second portion funds conventional upstream oil operations in the Gulf of America alongside shale gas extraction.
The Rio Grande LNG facility, designed for 29 million tonnes annual capacity, represents a cornerstone of this strategy. Pouyanné emphasized LNG exports to European markets and fuel supply for domestic data centers as primary applications for this investment.
Regarding wind assets, TotalEnergies is relinquishing two separate leases. The first, located in the Carolina Long Bay region, was acquired for $133 million during 2022. The second, situated in the New York Bight area, cost $795 million in 2022 — representing the majority of the reimbursement amount.
Both lease agreements will face termination by federal authorities once TotalEnergies confirms the capital deployment into designated oil and gas ventures.
TotalEnergies has committed to avoiding any future offshore wind project development within United States territories.
Transaction Framework
The reimbursement operates under specific conditions. TotalEnergies must initially deploy the $928 million into approved U.S. energy ventures before the government terminates the leases and processes the refund.
Attorney General Pamela Bondi positioned the agreement as beneficial for energy costs and national security, stating it “prioritizes affordability for hardworking American consumers over the prior administration’s ideological, ineffective energy policies.”
Natural gas futures (NG) declined 5.12% during the same trading session, though the extent to which this movement connects to the TotalEnergies announcement versus broader market dynamics remains uncertain.
TTE equity positions closed Monday’s session down 1.03%.

