This company is focused on cell-based milk components (especially milk fats/lipids) and has demonstrated “hybrid” dairy prototypes such as yoghurt that incorporate cultured milk fat. Its target markets span infant nutrition (breast milk components) and conventional dairy categories where fat is a key value driver.
Its approach uses mammary cell culture to produce milk ingredients: cells are cultivated outside the animal to generate specific components (notably fats) that can then be blended into finished foods. Reporting on its yoghurt prototype emphasised that the cultured component was milk fat, suggesting a phased approach (start with high-value components rather than full “whole milk” replication at scale).
Commercial stage: company materials and external profiles have described commercialisation expectations around 2026, but this should be read as aspirational until confirmed by product-market announcements and regulatory acceptance in specific jurisdictions.
Availability: there is no clear evidence of broad retail availability; outputs remain at prototype / development / partnership stages in the cited sources.
Timeline and regions: the most concrete public milestones are prototype demonstrations and investment/partnership narratives; country-by-country launch timelines are not firmly established in the cited materials.