At Daisho Media Partners Japan (DMPJ), we help international SMEs and Japanese exporters navigate a sustainability market that exceeded ¥130 trillion in 2023 and now accounts for roughly 23% of Japan’s GDP. As Japan advances toward carbon neutrality by 2050 — backed by a Green Transformation (GX) strategy mobilizing ¥150 trillion in public-private investment — we deliver bilingual, regulation-ready environmental solutions built for long-term ecological impact and commercial advantage.
Practical guidance on SSBJ disclosure, the GX-ETS carbon market, EcoAction 21 and ISO 14001 certification, J-Credit revenue, and the government subsidies — covering 40–75% of project costs — that are reshaping how businesses operate in Japan.

Building a Sustainable Future for Businesses
Transitioning to Cleaner Energy Sources
Reducing Environmental Footprints
Meeting Global Environmental Standards
Building Environmentally Conscious Operations
Growing at 5.9% a Year
Reporting That Cascades to SMEs
Funding That De-Risks Investment
Benchmarking Scope 1 to 3 emissions and mapping every eligible GX subsidy and J-Credit opportunity.
Crafting customized roadmaps aligned with SSBJ, CSRD, and your sector’s certification path.
Transitioning operations to clean energy through Feed-in Premium, PPAs, and J-Credit integration.
Securing EcoAction 21, ISO 14001, and sector certifications while unlocking 40 to 75% subsidies.
Building SSBJ-ready data systems and tracking ROI as regulations tighten through 2027 to 2029.

Renewable Energy & CleanTech
Eco-Friendly Manufacturing
Retail & Consumer Goods
Sustainable Fashion & Textiles
Food & Agriculture
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Learn 8 evaluation criteria for selecting the best sustainability consulting partner for Japan marke
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Practical guide to green certification and ESG compliance in Japan — EcoAction 21, J-Credit, SSBJ di
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The Sustainability Standards Board of Japan (SSBJ) sets Japan’s mandatory sustainability disclosure framework. It phases in from the fiscal year ending March 2027 for companies above ¥3 trillion in market capitalization, extending to ¥1 trillion in 2028 and ¥500 billion in 2029. Even if your company sits below those thresholds, your larger customers will request Scope 3 emissions data well ahead of their own deadlines — the cascade analysts call the “Sustainability 2026 Problem.”
A comprehensive program typically runs 1–3% of annual revenue over an 18-to-24-month cycle, while focused consulting engagements range from roughly ¥2 million for a gap analysis to ¥15 million for multi-phase implementation. Certification is often the first concrete cost: EcoAction 21 starts near ¥150,000 for Level 1 and scales to ¥750,000 for Level 3, while ISO 14001 begins around ¥500,000.
METI’s flagship SME program covers up to 70% of eligible project costs (a 40% base rate), rising to as much as 75% in designated GX Strategy Regions. The GX Demand Creation subsidy allocates ¥210 billion for companies procuring decarbonized electricity, and the J-Credit Scheme lets you convert verified emissions reductions into tradeable revenue. Tokyo, Osaka, and Aichi run prefectural top-ups that stack on top of national programs.
Most cross-border Japanese SMEs — roughly 68% — run a hybrid model, keeping a small internal function while outsourcing regulatory compliance and certification. With only 8.5% of Japan’s workforce holding Green Transformation expertise, an in-house specialist costs ¥10–15 million a year and takes 12–18 months to ramp, whereas an external partner reaches operational capability in weeks. The right answer depends on your deadlines, budget, and whether you need bilingual reporting.
EcoAction 21 is Japan’s SME-focused environmental management system: 30–50% cheaper than ISO 14001, it pre-qualifies you for most domestic subsidies and is increasingly accepted by Japanese supply-chain partners. ISO 14001 carries more weight in EU and North American markets. Many SMEs start with EcoAction 21 to unlock funding, then layer ISO 14001 once a clear export pathway emerges.