Food is the last great industrial system to be broken by electrons and software.

For most of human history, food production barely changed. We hunted, then farmed, then industrialised farming β€” but the core model stayed the same: land, animals, labour, weather, and time.

That model is now breaking.

Just as energy is shifting from fossil fuels to electrons, and transport from ICE to EVs, food is entering its own phase-change moment. Not an optimisation. A replacement.

This is not a tweak to agriculture β€” it’s the Second Domestication: the shift from land-bound biology to programmable biology.

Welcome to the disruption of food and agriculture.


The Old Model Is Failing (Even If It Still Feeds Us)

Industrial agriculture achieved scale β€” but at enormous cost:

β€’ Extreme land use and deforestation
β€’ Water stress and soil depletion
β€’ Methane and nitrous oxide emissions
β€’ Antibiotic resistance
β€’ Ethical strain in animal treatment
β€’ Fragile, globalised supply chains

This isn’t a moral argument. It’s a systems one.

The current model is capital‑intensive, biologically inefficient, geographically constrained, and increasingly volatile. It relies on living organisms (animals and crops) that convert inputs into food with terrible conversion efficiency.

That worked when alternatives didn’t exist.

They now do.


RethinkX Was Right β€” Biology Is Becoming Software

RethinkX, led by Tony Seba, has a consistent track record across energy, transport, and now food: identify technologies that collapse cost curves and unlock exponential adoption.

Their core insight for food is simple but profound:

Biology is being reprogrammed.

Instead of growing entire animals or plants to harvest small amounts of protein, fat, or nutrients, we are learning to produce those components directly β€” using microbes, fermentation, and precision biology.

When production moves from fields and feedlots into tanks and reactors, everything changes:

β€’ Cost curves bend downward
β€’ Output becomes predictable
β€’ Geography stops mattering
β€’ Inputs collapse
β€’ Scaling becomes exponential

This is not farming as we know it.

It’s manufacturing food.


Precision Fermentation: The Engine Room

Precision fermentation uses engineered microorganisms (yeasts, fungi, bacteria) to produce specific molecules:

β€’ Proteins
β€’ Fats
β€’ Enzymes
β€’ Dairy components
β€’ Nutraceuticals

The process is already familiar β€” we’ve used fermentation for beer, wine, yoghurt, insulin, and enzymes for decades.

What’s new is precision.

Instead of letting biology run wild, we instruct it.

The result: identical molecules to those found in animal products β€” without the animal.

No pasture.
No slaughter.
No antibiotics.
No feed.

Just inputs β†’ bioreactor β†’ output.

And like all manufacturing, once it scales, costs fall relentlessly.


Cultivated (Clean) Meat: From Concept to Reality

Cultivated meat β€” often called clean meat or cell‑based meat β€” grows real animal tissue directly from cells.

It is not plant‑based.
It is not synthetic.

It is meat.

But it bypasses the animal entirely.

Early versions were expensive and clumsy. That phase is ending.

Costs are falling because:

β€’ Growth media is improving
β€’ Bioreactors are scaling
β€’ Automation is accelerating
β€’ Learning curves are compounding

This mirrors early solar, batteries, and EVs.

The question is no longer if it works β€” but how fast it scales.


Dairy Is the First Domino

Dairy is likely to be the first major agricultural system to fall β€” not because it’s controversial, but because it’s molecular.

Milk is not an animal product. It’s a recipe: proteins, fats, sugars, and water.

We’re already seeing the early substitution phase play out at scale. Soy, oat, almond, and other plant‑based milks have grown from niche alternatives into mainstream staples in supermarkets and cafΓ©s worldwide β€” not because of ideology, but because they are cheaper, shelf‑stable, and easier to scale.

This matters because the dairy industry already operates on tight margins. Rising input costs, energy volatility, feed prices, water constraints, and debt loads are leaving producers with little buffer. Even small demand leakage creates outsized stress β€” and the data is already showing strain across multiple dairy regions.

Precision fermentation already produces identical dairy proteins without cows, pasture, feed, antibiotics, or weather risk. Once these inputs undercut traditional dairy on cost β€” which they are rapidly approaching β€” substitution accelerates quietly and irreversibly.

This won’t look like a food revolution.

It will look like a supply‑chain upgrade.

And once dairy falls, the rest of animal agriculture is no longer conceptually protected.


Animals Move Out of the Supply Chain

This shift forces a difficult but unavoidable reckoning.

For thousands of years, animals were essential to food production.

Soon, they won’t be.

When protein, fats, dairy, and even leather can be produced cheaper, cleaner, and more reliably without animals, they exit the economic equation.

That doesn’t mean animals disappear.

It means their role changes.

From industrial input β†’ ethical choice.
From commodity β†’ companion.
From necessity β†’ stewardship.

This is not ideology.

It’s what happens when superior systems arrive.


The S‑Curve Is Inevitable

Food disruption will follow the same pattern seen everywhere else:

  1. Dismissal (“too expensive”, “unnatural”)
  2. Early adoption in niche markets
  3. Cost parity
  4. Rapid substitution
  5. Collapse of legacy models

The tipping point is cost.

Once alternative proteins undercut conventional meat and dairy β€” not on subsidies, but on economics β€” adoption accelerates violently.

Incumbent agriculture will resist.

So did coal.
So did oil.
So did ICE automakers.

The outcome was never in doubt.


Food Joins the Bettrification Stack

Energy β†’ electrified
Transport β†’ electrified
Manufacturing β†’ automated

Food is next.

This is Bettrification applied to biology β€” turning the most fundamental human input from a land‑ and time‑bound process into a manufacturing one.

β€’ Fewer inputs
β€’ Higher yields
β€’ Lower costs
β€’ Less land
β€’ Less water
β€’ Less suffering

Not because we became better people.

Because the math changed.


The Decade Ahead

The 2020s will be remembered as the decade food stopped being grown and started being built.

Just as solar didn’t replace coal by persuasion β€” but by cost curves β€” food will change the same way.

Quietly at first.
Then all at once.

This isn’t a trend.

It’s a phase change.

And it’s already underway.


What I Track Here

As this transition accelerates, this section will focus on the hard signals β€” not the hype:

β€’ Precision fermentation scale‑up and unit economics
β€’ Cultivated meat cost curves and bioreactor breakthroughs
β€’ Regulatory approvals, bottlenecks, and inflection points
β€’ Incumbent agriculture pushback β€” and where it fails
β€’ Land‑use shifts, rewilding potential, and water impacts
β€’ The moment cost parity flips adoption from niche to mainstream


A Note From History

In 1931, Winston Churchill wrote in Fifty Years Hence:

β€œWe shall escape the absurdity of growing a whole chicken in order to eat the breast or wing, by growing these parts separately under a suitable medium.”

He wasn’t wrong β€” just early.

What was missing then is now finally in place: collapsing cost curves, programmable biology, automation, and industrial-scale manufacturing. The ducks are lined up.


References & Further Reading

β€’ RethinkX β€” Rethinking Food & Agriculture 2020–2030 (Tony Seba et al.)

β€’ RethinkX β€” Precision Fermentation Overview

β€’ RethinkX β€” The Future of Food & Agriculture

β€’ Big Think β€” Will the Livestock Industry Collapse?

β€’ Cultivated Meat (Clean / Cell-Based Meat) β€” Overview