SunHydrogen has made a big move to strengthen its position in the Asian clean energy market. The company officially set up a permanent Japanese subsidiary, SunHydrogen Japan GK, on April 7, 2026. This action is not just a bureaucratic formality, but it is a strategic move that will unlock government funding and ties between local businesses.
Getting the Japanese government funding unlocked
The main reason for the subsidiary’s creation is to unlock government funding and ties and take advantage of Japan’s large public investment when it comes to green hydrogen. The New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization – NEDO of Japan has set aside about 30 billion yen, which is equivalent to about $260 million USD, for field tests of photocatalytic hydrogen panels as part of its ARPChem program.
A registered domestic corporate entity is a must for bidding on these kinds of projects, which, by the way, SunHydrogen could not do until now.
A Senior Research Scientist at the University of Tokyo, Dr. Taro Yamada, is in charge of the new subsidiary. Dr. Yamada is also a co-author of the landmark 2021 Nature study that showed photocatalytic hydrogen production on a 100-square-meter scale. This was a big step forward for the NEDO-backed ARPChem initiative. Since December 2023, he has been working with SunHydrogen, and he was also a key player in the test results that the company released in February 2025.
Making the Honda R&D Alliance Stronger
The new organization not only makes it possible for SunHydrogen to get public funds, but it also gives the company a stable institutional base for working with Honda Research and Development. Honda is already working with SunHydrogen, testing its modules on rooftops in Tochigi and helping to make a hydrogen panel that is ready to be installed. This growing engineering relationship will have a permanent base in Japan through the Japanese subsidiary.
A Plan for Development Across Three Continents
This expansion is another step in SunHydrogen’s plan to build a development network that is spread out over a wide area. The company’s main technology is still being improved at its headquarters in Coralville, Iowa, USA. The company also runs a pilot project at the ProtoHub in Austin, Texas. CTF Solar GmbH in Germany, a subsidiary of the Chinese conglomerate CNBM, is in charge of manufacturing development. Their short-term goal is to make 1,000 full-format hydrogen modules that are each 1.92 m² in size.
You can buy SunHydrogen shares on the OTCQB market. The business hasn’t made any money yet. The company is adding more partners, but the big question that still needs to be answered is whether this can lead to large-scale commercial production. The share price is currently about 54% lower than its 52-week high from July 2025, which shows that there is still some uncertainty.



























