CULT Food Science Corp. (“CULT” or the “Company”) (CSE: CULT) (OTC: CULTF) (FRA: LN0) is a disruptive food technology platform pioneering the commercialization of lab-grown meat and cellular agriculture to reshape the global food industry.
The tech and the company are getting lots of attention.
Investors must understand that the meat that CULT produces is not plant-based, fake or made of dirt and grass. It is meat. The difference is how it is made. Lab-grown meat: The company harvests a small sample of cells from a living animal and cultivates the sample to grow outside of the animal’s body, shaping the fully formed sample into cuts of meat. Fish fillets, hamburgers, and bacon would all have the same taste consumers know, and love, and no animals would need to be bred, confined, or slaughtered to create these actual meat products.
There was one hilarious story about a taste test when one of the contestants refused to believe that the Lab-Grown Chicken wasn’t authentic!
One obvious benefit of food tech is that it stops the slaughtering cattle and other mammals.
CULT partners use Cellular technology for seafood, coffee, dairy, chocolate and several food technology development companies.
Cellular agriculture is an emerging technology that produces food usually derived from animals (meat, seafood, eggs, milk products) using cell culture methods instead of live animals. This can also be referred to as lab-grown foods or cell-based foods.
A little over a year later, the shares were CDN0.05. They moved up to CDN0.40 cents, and volumes increased. Shares are now CDN0.30 cents.
Cult’s flagship product, Noochies!, is an advanced cellular agricultural technology employed to create pet food products with superior nutrition profiles and ethical standards. Noochies! recently introduced the world’s first freeze-dried, high-protein, nutrient-rich pet treats made without factory farming.
Investors are witnessing a potential investment at the vanguard of a vast (and ultimately disruptive and profitable sector0. Based on current information, I see no reason, not to grab a few shares.