Inside HGRAF Stock , How a Tiny Canadian Company Is Trying to Build the First Real Graphene Supply Chain
For the most of the past fifteen years, graphene has been the material that nearly no one in sophisticated manufacturing has really used, but everyone has heard about it. On paper, the promise has been immense. A single atomic layer of carbon that is lighter than nearly anything in the materials engineer’s drawer, more conductive than copper, and far stronger than steel. It has always been the same issue.
It has been extremely challenging to produce it in actual scale, at a price that makes sense for an industrial client, and with consistent purity. HydroGraph Clean Power, a tiny Canadian business that is traded in the US under the ticker HGRAF, is attempting to close that gap. The stock is now trading at roughly $5.05 on Thursday, May 14, down 2.70% for the session. As a result, it is more likely to be found in specialized materials newsletters and Seeking Alpha threads than on CNBC.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Company | HydroGraph Clean Power Inc. |
| Listings | OTCQB: HGRAF / CSE: HG |
| Founded | 2017 |
| Headquarters | Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada |
| Production Site | Manhattan, Kansas (current) → Austin, Texas (Spring 2026 + new 70,000 sq ft facility by year-end) |
| CEO | Kjirstin Breure |
| Sector | Specialty Materials / Advanced Carbon |
| Core Product | FGA-1, 99.8% pure fractal graphene |
| Production Process | Patented “explosion synthesis” |
| Reactor Name | Hyperion |
| Reactor Capacity | ~10 tons/year each |
| Reactor Dimensions | ~6 ft × 6 ft × 18 ft |
| Current Production | ~1 ton/month (single Hyperion reactor) |
| New Reactors Commissioned | January and February 2026 (2 additional units) |
| Texas Facility Target Capacity | 350+ tons/year (5 reactors planned) |
| Total Graphene Produced to Date | ~1 ton |
| Current Inventory | 500+ kg |
| Customer Count | 60+ |
| Commercial Pipeline | 75+ projects (medical devices, composites, coatings) |
| Stock Price (May 14, 2026) | ~$5.05 (down -2.70% on the session) |
| Price (April 28, 2026) | $5.746 |
| Market Capitalization | ~$200 million (~CAD level, varies by source) |
| Notable 2026 Regulatory Wins | U.S., UK, and EU clearances for commercial graphene sales |
| GEIC Tier | Tier 1 (since January 6, 2026) at the University of Manchester |
| Certification | Graphene Council Verified Graphene Producer® |
When you sit down with the technology, it is quite bizarre. Graphene is created from acetylene and oxygen using HydroGraph’s “explosion synthesis” method, which involves a controlled detonation within a reactor known as Hyperion. FGA-1, or 99.8% pure fractal graphene, emerges from each reactor batch in a remarkably homogeneous form, according to the business and independent testing conducted under the Graphene Council’s Verified Graphene Producer® program.
Each Hyperion unit is rated for producing about 10 tons of graphene annually and is about the size of a large shipping container, measuring about 6 by 6 by 18 feet. A considerably larger 70,000 square foot facility in Texas that will contain five Hyperion units is expected to open by the end of this year, with a potential capacity exceeding 350 tons annually. Two more reactors were scheduled for commissioning in January and February of 2026.
This is an intriguing speculative wager rather than a proven business because of the numbers, which are clearly stated. Since its founding, HydroGraph has produced about one ton of graphene overall, according to the most current shareholder communications. The company keeps about 500 kg of inventory. With a pipeline of more than 75 projects involving composites, coatings, and medical devices, it provides services to over 60 clients.
By any standard financial measure, revenue is still quite low. That’s the whole wager. In just a few years, HGRAF will go from generating about twelve tons a year to a 350-ton business inside Texas if the company’s reactor scale-up truly fulfills what management has promised. If not, the stock chart is likely to resemble the majority of speculative graphene investments made in the last ten years.
The stock managed to climb up toward $5.75 in late April before declining, which can be explained by a few genuinely positive developments in 2026. HydroGraph reported in February that it has gained commercial-sale clearances for its graphene products in the US, UK, and EU. This is the kind of regulatory milestone that subtly eliminates a significant obstacle for industrial buyers.
The company received a dedicated laboratory inside one of the most reputable academic graphene facilities in the world when it expanded its partnership with the University of Manchester’s Graphene Engineering Innovation Centre from Tier 2 to Tier 1 in January. Applications in coatings, composite reinforcement, and copper conductivity enhancement are being studied as industrial relationships begin to expand.

The structural concerns, however, remain superficial. The specialty materials business is known for its patience. No matter how pure, a new graphene product must pass years of industrial customer validation before it appears on an invoice in large quantities. This has been made plain by Seeking Alpha analysts monitoring the stock, who acknowledge the speculative nature of the move while referring to 2026 as a “pivotal year” if new business wins truly materialize.
Speaking with stockholders gives the impression that they are basically taking a risk based more on the reactor count than the revenue line. The key is the Texas facility in particular. The production ramp may be delayed until 2027 because to construction slippage or commissioning delays, and small-cap clean-tech companies are rarely given another chance.
Here, it’s difficult to ignore the larger cultural context. For the majority of the past ten years, software, artificial intelligence, and electric vehicles have eclipsed materials science. Graphene firms have come and gone, leaving a path of unmet promises and disgruntled investors. However, the underlying chemistry has continued to progress, and certain producers—including HydroGraph—are beginning to appear more reliable than the last wave.
Larger comparable companies, such as First Graphene in Australia and NanoXplore in Quebec, have also successfully navigated the arduous process of qualification and large-scale manufacturing, with varying but usually improving outcomes. HGRAF is more specialized, smaller, and perhaps more reliant on the success of this one 2026 ramp.