While not a mainstream food “egg” brand, this company is relevant to cultivated eggs because it has commercialised cell-cultured ingredients derived from avian biology—specifically, it has marketed cell-cultured “egg” components (e.g., Cellament) for applications such as cosmetics and ingredient markets. This represents an adjacent but genuine animal-cell-culture “egg-derived” product pathway.
Its approach uses animal cell culture as a platform: cultivate cells under controlled conditions and harvest produced biomolecules (an approach that can translate across species and products). In this framing, “eggs” are less about replicating fried eggs and more about harnessing egg-linked cell systems to produce functional biomaterials.
Commercial stage: the company describes its cell-cultured ingredient product line as commercial/for sale in non-food markets, which is materially ahead of most “cultivated egg for food” ambitions that remain dominated by precision fermentation.
Availability: available as an ingredient product in non-food channels (e.g., cosmetics), not as a consumer food egg.
Timeline and regions: the company’s egg-linked offerings are already marketed for non-food use; expansion into food-grade egg products would require distinct regulatory work not evidenced as a confirmed near-term launch in the cited sources.