Yes! Enzymatic chemical production supplanting traditional fermentation is why Solugen exists. Historically, enzymatic production is used in only 3% of all chemical production processes. However, with CRISPR/Cas9 and the second wave of biotech, enzymes are becoming cheaper to engineer and even cheaper to mass-produce. People have tried fermentation to biofuels in the past, but it didn't work. Cells are really really good at making proteins, like enzymes, but they suck at making just a single chemical product. Downstream separations become a nightmare. We think it better that fermentation should be exclusively used to make enzymes and then those enzymes should be used to do single-chemical manufacturing. Our core technology revolves around designing and providing customers with the perfect scaled reactors for their enzymatic technologies. Fermentation reactors severely limit the capabilities of enzymes, and the reactors in the petrochemical industry are also ill-suited for enzyme manufacturing. We like to call our work "enzyme-reactor" fit!