Why aren’t other modern food technologies disruptive in the same way that Precision Fermentation is?

 |  6 May 2024

The fall in cost and rise in capabilities of Precision Fermentation (PF) has meant that it will be the first modern technology to disrupt the current food and agriculture system.

A disruption happens when the convergence of key technologies enables the creation of an entirely new product or service that is good enough to satisfy consumers’ desires and affordable enough that it offers a compelling value proposition relative to other existing options.

Precision Fermentation is the convergence of many technologies. The age-old process of fermentation is combined with precision biology, which includes modern information technologies like artificial intelligence, machine learning and the cloud, as well as modern biotechnologies like genetic engineering, synthetic biology, metabolic engineering, systems biology, bioinformatics and computational biology.

What makes PF disruptive is that the costs of these underlying technologies have caused the overall cost of PF to fall dramatically from what it once was. This in turn has allowed more companies to continually improve the technology such that its capabilities have risen as well.

In Rethinking Food and Agriculture, we found that PF will make protein production five times cheaper by 2030 and ten times cheaper by 2035 than existing animal proteins, before ultimately approaching the cost of sugar. They will be up to 100 times more land efficient, 10-25 times more feedstock efficient, 20 times more time efficient and 10 times more water efficient than animal products, and they will also produce less waste. This means that by 2030, modern food products will be higher quality and cost less than half as much to produce as the animal-derived products they replace.

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This is primarily a protein disruption driven by economics. The cost of modern proteins will be five times cheaper than existing animal proteins by 2030 and 10 times cheaper by 2035. Eventually, they will be nearly as cheap as sugar. They will also be superior in every key attribute–more nutritious, healthier, better tasting and more convenient, with almost unimaginable variety. This means that by 2030, modern food products will be higher quality and cost less than half as much to produce as the animal-derived products they replace.

Learn more about the disruption of food & agriculture.

Published on: 12/07/23

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