The precision fermentation shakeout clarifies what the food transition actually looks like. It does not look like replacing biological systems with engineered ones. It looks like working with biological systems more intelligently.
Black soldier fly farming converts organic waste into protein at industrial scale. The economics work because BSF operations generate revenue from two directions: waste processing tipping fees (someone pays you to take the waste) and protein sales (you sell the larvae as animal feed). The organism does the work. The energy input is a fraction of bioreactor-based production because the insect is its own bioreactor, temperature-regulated by its own metabolism, fed on material that would otherwise be a disposal cost.
Biochar delivers 89.4% of global durable carbon removal by volume (Q2 2025, Puro.earth data) on a fraction of the capital that flowed into precision fermentation. It improves soil yields by an average of 14.45% across meta-analyses. It generates carbon credits at $131-164 per tonne of CO2e with 500+ year permanence. The unit economics close because biochar serves multiple revenue streams simultaneously: carbon credits, soil amendment sales, waste processing, and agricultural yield gains.
Regenerative agriculture reduces input costs (synthetic fertilizer, pesticides) while maintaining or improving yields over 3-5 year transition periods. It builds soil organic carbon, improves water retention, and increases biodiversity. The economic case does not require a technological breakthrough. It requires adoption of practices that natural systems have been running for millions of years.
The pattern is consistent. The food technologies that scale are the ones that cooperate with biological systems rather than attempting to engineer substitutes for them. Insects, biochar, and regenerative soil practices work because they leverage the metabolic infrastructure that evolution already optimized. Precision fermentation works only in the narrow band where conventional biology cannot deliver a specific molecule at a specific purity at a competitive price.
The Real Food Transition: What Scales
Precision Fermentation
24% of molecules viable
Cultivated Meat
$37/kg cost floor
Capital migrating from engineered substitutes to biological cooperation
BSF Farming
Dual revenue: waste + protein
Biochar
89.4% of durable CDR
Regen Agriculture
Lower inputs, stable yields
Sources: GFI 2023, Puro.earth Q2 2025, meta-analyses