Strategic Significance
This discourse marks the end of CRISPR's "discovery phase" and the onset of the "industrialization phase." The transition from lab results to one-off, eight-figure treatments like the one received by Baby KJ reveals a brutal bottleneck: biotech innovation now depends as much on logistics, manufacturing, and regulatory policy as on molecular biology.
Who Should Care
- Biotech Investors: The future of the industry is in companies solving delivery and manufacturing, not just those perfecting the edit.
- Policy Makers: The warning about the "brain drain" and the 24% drop in NSF grants suggests that biotechnology is becoming a key theater for geopolitical dominance.
- Ethics Advocates: The move toward creating regulatory "buckets" signals that we are rapidly approaching a moment where genetic enhancement will drift from fiction to a policy-making reality.
Contrarian Takeaway
Despite the AI-centric investment cycle, the hardest problems in biology remain fundamentally resistant to simulation. The smartest investment may not be in models that claim to replace scientists, but in the dull, expensive, and necessary infrastructure required to actually perform wet-lab experiments at scale.
