

HyperSolar’s technology, like any other in the development stage, is far from proven. In 2019, SunHydrogen demonstrated 1000 hours of continuous hydrogen production utilising Gen 1 cell technology, which allowed it to then focus on scaling up the technology. It sits far below all-time highs achieved in 2015, and investors are being driven by both technological potential and a potential undervaluation. The stock jumped nearly 90% before consolidating at its current price point, up around 30%. Investors appear enthused, to say the least, buying the stock on heavy volume. Research is allowing a vision for a commercially-viable, first generation product to come into focus. So far focused on foundational research, this announcement marks a new phase of development for HyperSolar. HYSR hopes to eventually achieve fuel costs around 1/3 that of current retail hydrogen prices. The potential for localized hydrogen generation, fueled by solar power, is consequently immense.Įarly this morning, HYSR announced that they had “successfully applied its proprietary 3-dimensional oxygen catalyst within a fully integrated hydrogen production device that uses readily available triple-junction amorphous silicon solar cells.” The significant takeaway for potential investors is this: the most vital technology underpinning HyperSolar’s approach appears to be viable.

Hydrogen-based energy systems offer powerful advantages, but the difficulty of producing and transporting hydrogen is itself a major obstacle to the widespread adoption of these technologies. HyperSolar has been focused on developing an innovative technology for using solar power, combined with any stock of water, to create hydrogen. HyperSolar (HYSR): tech breakthrough sends solar-hydrogen stock shooting up. This stock provides some extra strategic diversification, as it is also tightly integrated into hydrogen production. Today’s Top Performer comes from the solar energy sector, still experiencing explosive growth as improved technologies continue to push its price point closer to fossil fuels in more and more markets.
