Ben Lamm Sparks Global Buzz With Bold Prediction About Engineering New Life

By Chukwudi Onyewuchi on November 25, 2025 at 1:00 PM EST

Ben Lamm
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In the fast-moving world of biotech innovation, few figures have commanded attention in 2025 the way Ben Lamm has.

As founder and CEO of Colossal Biosciences, he has transformed what sounded like science fiction into a high-stakes, headline-dominating movement.

His company’s mission, once dismissed as sensational, now sits at the center of global discussions about climate solutions, genetics, and the future of life itself.

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The Vision That Turned Ben Lamm Into A Biotech Disruptor

Ben Lamm and Peter Jackson
Colossal Biosciences

Ben Lamm’s rise began with a concept that seemed almost too audacious to be real: bringing extinct species back into the modern world.

Colossal Biosciences quickly earned a reputation as the first true “de-extinction” company, aiming to resurrect creatures like the woolly mammoth and the dire wolf, animals that captured imaginations when their early prototypes went viral this year.

However, Colossal’s mission extends far beyond shock value.

Lamm brought a Silicon Valley mindset into synthetic biology: scale fast, pursue the impossible, and prove skeptics wrong.

Backed by his background in AI and software ventures, he reimagined how genetics and computation could work together, and he convinced investors.

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With more than $500 million secured, Colossal has evolved from a buzzworthy idea into a formidable scientific enterprise.

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Inside Lamm’s Expanding Scientific Empire

Ben Lamm at SXSW London
Colossal Biosciences

The past year marked a turning point for Lamm and his team.

While the public remained fixated on mammoths lumbering across tundra simulations, Colossal quietly built the technologies required to make de-extinction feasible.

Their research into synthetic wombs, next-generation gene-editing tools, and ecological reconstruction created breakthroughs with implications far beyond any one species.

Even Ben Lamm’s highest-profile projects come with deeper purposes. The mammoth initiative is designed to support Arctic grassland restoration as part of a climate-mitigation effort dubbed Pleistocene Park.

In his view, the return of these giant herbivores could reshape landscapes in ways that slow permafrost melt.

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To move ambitions this large, Lamm has positioned himself as the conductor of a scientific orchestra, one who attracts elite researchers, investors, and government partners by promoting a grand, almost mythical vision: a future where humanity can undo some of the ecological damage it has caused.

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Ben Lamm Responds To Critics As Momentum Builds

Ben Lamm in front of Jurassic World sign
Colossal Biosciences

Of course, any mission this radical draws controversy. Critics argue that de-extinction distracts from protecting endangered species already in crisis.

Some claim that resurrecting long-gone creatures is a vanity pursuit rather than a conservation strategy.

Lamm counters that Colossal’s work fuels essential biological breakthroughs with wide-ranging benefits for wildlife and humans alike.

To him, the company’s high-risk scientific approach complements, rather than competes with, traditional conservation.

According to Lamm, Colossal’s next chapter will only accelerate.

In a chat with The Blast, he said, "2026 is shaping up to be a breakthrough year for Colossal. We’re scaling faster than ever — not just in headcount and technology, but in global impact. The partnerships we’re building across government and conservation groups, are opening doors we couldn’t have imagined even a few years ago."

Lamm added, "This year is all about accelerating our science, expanding internationally, and creating meaningful alliances that move both de-extinction and conservation forward at a pace the world hasn’t seen before."

His confidence reflects a company shifting from ambitious theory to practical global influence.

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Lamm Envisions a Rapid Acceleration of Biological Innovation

Romulus and Remus
Colossal Biosciences

Ben Lamm’s most stirring and controversial remarks arrived when The Hollywood Reporter asked him about his ultimate goal in reviving extinct species and reshaping biology.

His answer hinted at a future that borders on science fantasy but is rooted in rapidly advancing technology.

He said, "I just sat with the Crown Prince of Dubai last week, and he turned to me and he goes, ‘I think this is all just going to get faster.’ And I agree with him. I had never thought of it like that or said that, but I think AI, access to things like Quantum, are just going to make everything that we’re working on go faster. And I think that will just get better and better over time.”

Ben Lamm Outlines How Synthetic Biology Could Redefine Life Itself

horses
Colossal Biosciences

From there, he expanded the vision even further, adding, "And I think this world of leveraging synthetic biology to be able to engineer life, shape life to direct evolution of life, powered with deep computational biology and AI and modeling, will allow us as humans to build everything from how do you bring back mammoths to how do you clean up the oceans with plastic and everything. So I really think synthetic biology in the next 5 to 10 years is going to change everything."

To Lamm, de-extinction is just the beginning. Synthetic biology, accelerated by AI and quantum computing, may give humanity the power to redesign ecosystems, restore damaged environments, and reimagine what species can be.

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