Oil refinery towers silhouetted against a hazy sky for an article about the TotalEnergies greenwashing ruling

French court finds TotalEnergies guilty of greenwashing in a world first

A Paris court has ruled that TotalEnergies, one of the world’s largest oil companies, deceived the public with its climate commitments — and ordered the company to publicly correct the record. The Paris Judicial Court found that claims about “carbon neutrality by 2050” and being a “major player in the energy transition” were misleading, because the company continued expanding oil and gas production while making those promises. Legal experts are calling it the first greenwashing ruling of its kind against a fossil fuel company anywhere in the world.

At a glance

  • Greenwashing ruling: The Paris Judicial Court found TotalEnergies’ climate claims deceptive under existing consumer protection law, setting a global legal precedent.
  • Court-ordered remedy: TotalEnergies must remove the misleading statements from its website and display the court’s full judgment prominently for 180 days.
  • Advocacy win: Friends of the Earth France brought the case, showing that civil society organizations can successfully challenge corporate climate messaging in court.

Why the greenwashing ruling matters

The case rested on a straightforward principle: you cannot claim to be leading the energy transition while simultaneously investing billions in new fossil fuel extraction. The court agreed.

Critically, the legal tool that made this possible was consumer protection law — not new climate legislation. That detail has major implications. It means similar challenges could be brought in many countries without waiting for new regulations to pass. The United Nations Environment Programme has documented a sharp rise in climate litigation globally over the past five years, and this ruling is likely to accelerate that trend.

Friends of the Earth France, which brought the case, called it a blueprint for legal teams across Europe and beyond. ClientEarth, which monitors corporate climate claims closely, has noted that this kind of litigation puts real pressure on companies to align their public statements with their actual capital spending.

What the court actually ordered

The remedy is designed to be visible. TotalEnergies must display the court’s judgment on its website for 180 days — not buried in a footnote, but visible to anyone who visits. The misleading statements must come down entirely.

That kind of remedy is unusual. Courts more often issue fines or injunctions that the public never sees. Here, the judgment itself becomes part of the company’s public communication — a meaningful shift in how accountability is defined and enforced.

A signal to the whole energy sector

The ruling sends a message well beyond TotalEnergies. Any company making broad climate commitments in its marketing now faces measurable legal risk if those commitments aren’t backed by actual strategy and investment.

The Paris court explicitly referenced scientific guidance in its reasoning — an unusual move that ties judicial decisions directly to climate science. The International Energy Agency has stated clearly that reaching net zero by 2050 requires no new fossil fuel development beyond projects already approved. The court drew on exactly that kind of guidance.

The European Commission’s Green Claims Directive, currently moving through legislative channels, aims to standardize what companies can and cannot say about their environmental credentials across the E.U. This ruling gives that effort additional legal and political weight. Renewables now account for at least 49% of global power capacity — meaning the transition is real and measurable, which makes false claims about participating in it easier to identify and challenge in court.

What remains unresolved

TotalEnergies has indicated it will appeal, and the case could look different at higher court levels. Legal systems vary significantly across countries, so what works in France under consumer protection law may face different obstacles elsewhere. Enforcement is also a genuine question — monitoring compliance takes sustained pressure from civil society groups over time.

Still, the precedent exists now. The burden has shifted, at least in France: companies must be prepared to show that their public climate claims match the full picture of how they actually spend money and make decisions. That is a higher bar. It is also a fairer one.

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For more on this story, see: Reuters

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