This company’s core product is ovalbumin (the main egg-white protein) marketed as a functional ingredient (“Bioalbumen®”) for industrial food applications that currently rely on egg whites. The target customers are food manufacturers seeking egg-white functionality with improved supply stability.
Its technology uses precision fermentation (not animal cell culture): the company’s spinout materials describe a scalable fermentation process using a fungal production organism (reported as Trichoderma reesei in EU project materials) to produce ovalbumin. This is a “bioidentical protein” strategy—make the key egg protein rather than recreate the whole egg.
Commercial stage: reporting and public materials describe progress toward regulatory readiness in the US (including “no questions” style correspondence discussed in industry coverage), alongside facility siting plans in the US for scale-up.
Availability: no broad retail “egg” product is documented; the commercial path is ingredient supply.
Timeline and regions: the US is a key near-term market focus (scale-up facility planning), while other regions depend on local novel-food regulatory processes.