.
AI_133px.jpg
ai
Artificial Intelligence
.
cryptography
crypto
Cryptography
.
materialscience
nano
Materials Science
.
neuroscience
neuroscience
Neuroscience
.
nuclear
nuclear
Nuclear Technologies
.
robotics
robotics
Robotics
.
semiconductor
semiconductors
Semiconductors

KEY TAKEAWAYS

•   Biotechnology is burgeoning, contributing around 5 percent to the US GDP with a historical doubling time of about seven years. 

•   Synthetic biology is third-generation biotechnology, complementing domestication and breeding (the first generation) and gene editing (the second generation).

•   The United States is struggling to grasp the scale of the bio-opportunity, the strategic ramifications unique to network-enabled biotechnologies, and the possibilities and perils of distributed biomanufacturing.

Icons_card_Biotech.png

Overview

Biotechnology creates products or services in partnership with biology. For example, skin microbes can be engineered to combat skin cancer and essential medicines can be brewed from yeast at industrial scales. Biotechnology, already a huge industry—5 percent of GDP— is expected to grow greatly. Synthetic biology, a subset of biotechnology, builds on genetic engineering to focus on improving the composition and functions of living systems. DNA sequencing and synthesis are two fundamental technologies underlying synthetic biology. DNA sequencers are machines that read or decode specific DNA molecules, while synthesizers write user-specified sequences of DNA. The cost of sequencing a human genome has fallen from $10,000 to around $600 in the last decade, while the cost of gene synthesis dropped from $4/base (2003) to $0.04/base (2023).

 

Key Developments

Synthetic biology has applications in medicine, agriculture, manufacturing, and sustainability. DNA and RNA synthesis underlie all mRNA vaccines, including those for COVID-19. Synthetic biology can also cultivate drought-resistant crops and enable cells to be programmed to manufacture medicines or fuel on an agile, distributed basis. 

The “superpower” of the internet—the ability to rapidly move information—can amplify the “superpower” of biology: the ability to grow and assemble complex objects locally. For example, DNA sequencers and synthesizers connected to the internet could routinely allow researchers to distribute vaccines against viruses around the world faster than a pandemic can spread. Developed wisely, such capabilities could lead to biodefense and public health systems operating at light speed. Ignored or mismanaged, such capabilities could result in widespread access to bioterror capabilities or worse. Artificial intelligence will likely supercharge synthetic biology, starting with molecular, pathway, and cellular design.

Over the Horizon

For biology to develop fully as a technology, careful attention and sustained support for improving the methods underlying biotechnology overall are essential. Whoever develops the tools for measuring, modeling, and making with biology has a chance of being world leading. Whoever first unlocks routinization and coordination of labor in biotechnology workflows and commercialization will cement their leadership. Careful consideration of such needs and opportunities reveals gaps in the nation’s portfolio (e.g., the National Institute of Standards and Technology should be resourced to develop and advance standards and reference materials undergirding a networked bioeconomy). 

The building blocks for a federal strategic vision released in 2022 (including the National Engineering Biology Research and Development Initiative, National Biotechnology and Biomanufacturing Initiative, National Security Memorandum 15, and National Security Commission on Emerging Biotechnology) tend to focus on applications and outcomes. Yet each offers important openings for creating support for foundational bioengineering research; these opportunities must be seized via active multilateral efforts to provide advice and input. The recently launched Global Forum on Technology at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) offers an important additional platform for coordination among democracies.

“Patient capital,” both private and public, is crucial for foundational research, since many biotechnologies have long development scales. Such long-term capital must be sustained in times of ebb and flow in the pace of scientific advancement. Although mRNA vaccines came into widespread public knowledge in 2021, their history began thirty years ago, a history that offers humbling lessons regarding lack of vision and support among institutions and programs now happy to claim credit for success. 

From a strategic perspective, we are tracking four areas of significant consequence and opportunity: 
(1) progress toward constructing life from scratch (e.g., building a cell); 
(2) advances in electrobiosynthesis (i.e., growing biomass starting from renewable electricity and atmospheric carbon); 
(3) advances in next-generation DNA synthesis, including a potential return to desktop synthesis; and 
(4) progress toward profitability (e.g., when synthetic biology companies realize and sustain significant profits). 

 

REPORT PREVIEW: Biotechnology Synthetic Biology

Faculty Council Advisor

drew-endy_profilephoto.jpg
Drew Endy
Author
Drew Endy

Drew Endy is the Martin Family University Fellow in Undergraduate Education (bioengineering), codirector of degree programs for the Hasso Plattner Institute of Design (the d.school), core faculty at the Center for International Security and Cooperation (CISAC), and senior fellow (courtesy) of the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. He serves as president and director of the Biobricks Foundation and director of the iGEM Foundation and the Biobuilder Educational Foundation. His research focuses on the foundations of synthetic biology along with broader societal aspects. He earned a PhD in biotechnology and biochemical engineering from Dartmouth College.

View Bio
drew-endy_profilephoto.jpg
Drew Endy

Drew Endy is the Martin Family University Fellow in Undergraduate Education (bioengineering), codirector of degree programs for the Hasso Plattner Institute of Design (the d.school), core faculty at the Center for International Security and Cooperation (CISAC), and senior fellow (courtesy) of the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. He serves as president and director of the Biobricks Foundation and director of the iGEM Foundation and the Biobuilder Educational Foundation. His research focuses on the foundations of synthetic biology along with broader societal aspects. He earned a PhD in biotechnology and biochemical engineering from Dartmouth College.

Access the Complete Report

Read the complete report.

Explore

Date Range
CONTENT TYPE

Select Content Type

  • News
  • Article
  • Videos
  • Podcasts
  • Events
AUTHORS

Select Author

  • Condoleezza Rice
  • John Taylor
  • Jennifer Widom
  • Amy Zegart
  • Herbert Lin
  • Hon. Jerry McNerney
  • Hon. Robert Gates
  • Hon. Steven Chu
  • Hon. Susan M. Gordon
  • John Hennessy
  • Lloyd B. Minor
  • Mary Meeker
  • Peter Scher
  • Thomas M. Siebel
  • Zhenan Bao
  • Dan Boneh
  • Yi Cui
  • Simone D’Amico
  • Drew Endy
  • Siegfried Glenzer
  • Mark A. Horowitz
  • Fei-Fei Li
  • Allison Okamura
  • Kang Shen
  • Eric Schmidt
  • Steven Koonin
  • Sally Benson
  • Norbert Holtkamp
  • Martin Giles
FOCUS AREAS

Biotechnology and Synthetic Biology

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Biotechnology and Synthetic Biology
  • Sustainable Energy Technologies
  • Cryptography
  • Materials Science
  • Neuroscience
  • Nuclear Technologies
  • Robotics
  • Semiconductors
  • Space
  • Technology Test Page
  • Lasers
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Biotechnology and Synthetic Biology
  • Cryptography
  • Materials Science
  • Neuroscience
  • Robotics
  • Semiconductors
  • Sustainable Energy Technologies
  • Space
Date (field_date)
Read More
The Interconnect Logo
News
Books
CFR and the Stanford Emerging Technology Review Launch New Podcast Series on Frontier Technologies

Frontier technologies are transforming international relations and the U.S. economy. As a result, more bridges between science and engineering labs, Washington, DC, and the world of business are needed. The Hoover Institution and Stanford University’s School…

February 12, 2025
Read More
SETR in DC | Feb. 25, 2025
Events
Books
The Stanford Emerging Technology Review 2025: Frontier Tech For A New Geopolitical Era

The Hoover Institution and the School of Engineering at Stanford University invite you to a panel discussion for the launch of the Stanford Emerging Technology Review 2025 report in Washington, DC.

Read More
Hoover Institution fellow Drew Endy testifies before the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission at a hearing on "Made in China 2025—Who Is Winning?"
News
Books
Drew Endy: Made In China 2025—Who Is Winning?

Hoover Institution fellow Drew Endy testifies before the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission at a hearing on "Made in China 2025—Who Is Winning?"

February 06, 2025 by Drew Endy
Read More
Bio-Strategies and Leadership Holds Inaugural Congressional Fellowship Program on Biotechnology Strategy
Events
Books
Bio-Strategies and Leadership Holds Inaugural Congressional Fellowship Program on Biotechnology Strategy

Drew Endy, a Hoover science fellow and senior fellow and Martin Family University Fellow in Undergraduate Education (Bioengineering) at Stanford University, convened nearly two dozen Hoover and Stanford experts, policymakers, and business leaders earlier this…

October 18, 2024
Read More
Tech Track II 2024
Events
Books
Government Officials, Hoover Fellows, and Silicon Valley Leaders Discuss Cooperation at Sixth Annual Tech Track II Symposium

Fifty US government officials, scholars from the Hoover Institution, Stanford University scientists and engineers, technology experts, venture capitalists, and business leaders convened at the Sixth Annual Tech Track II Symposium hosted by the Hoover…

December 16, 2024
Read More
Drone
Article
Books
Technology Applications By Policy Area

This chapter explores applications from each of the ten technology fields described in the report as they may relate to five important policy themes: economic growth, national security, environmental and energy sustainability, health and medicine, and civil…

February 07, 2025
Read More
Globe
Article
Books
Cross-Cutting Themes

One of the most important and unusual hallmarks of this moment is convergence: emerging technologies are intersecting and interacting in a host of ways, with important implications for policy. This chapter identifies themes and commonalities that cut across…

February 07, 2025
Read More
Stanford
Article
Books
Executive Summary

This report offers an easy-to-use reference tool that harnesses the expertise of Stanford University’s leading science and engineering faculty in ten major technological areas: artificial intelligence, biotechnology and synthetic biology, cryptography, lasers…

February 07, 2025
Read More
Binary
Article
Books
Foreword

Emerging technologies are transforming societies, economies, and geopolitics. Never have we experienced the convergence of so many technologies with the potential to change so much, so fast, and at such high stakes. This report is intended to help readers…

Read More
Marc Andreessen: It’s Morning Again In America
Videos
Books
Marc Andreessen: It’s Morning Again In America

The interview also delves into the technological and political evolution of Silicon Valley and Andreessen’s own shifting political affiliations from left to right, along with his vision for leveraging technology to drive societal progress, the role of…

January 14, 2025

You May Also Like

.
Molecular Structure Conceptual stock photo
Biotechnology: Reshaping Nature And Life Itself
.
Technology istock
The Care and Feeding of Transformative Tech
.
SETR Synthetic Bio Video
The Future Of Synthetic Biology
overlay image