What Precision Fermentation Is
Precision fermentation is a biotechnology process that programs microorganisms to produce specific molecules. Yeast, bacteria, or fungi are given genetic instructions to manufacture a target protein, fat, enzyme, or flavor compound. The microbes consume sugar feedstock, grow in steel bioreactors, and secrete the desired molecule. The output is purified, and the result is molecularly identical to the animal-derived original.
This is not new science. The pharmaceutical industry has used precision fermentation to produce human insulin since the 1980s. Cheesemakers have used fermentation-produced chymosin (rennet) for over 30 years; it now accounts for roughly 90% of the global rennet market. What has changed is the target: applying the same production method to food-grade proteins, fats, and ingredients at industrial scale.
The food industry interest centers on a specific promise: producing the functional molecules in animal products (whey, casein, collagen, egg white, heme) without the animal. No feedlot. No dairy herd. No slaughterhouse. Just a bioreactor running on sugar and electricity.