| The entire point of the "Future and Emerging Technologies" FET Flagship program (where the HBP got it's money) was to fund risky, daring and ambitious technology projects. Here's an article about the Human Genome Project from 1990:
http://www.nytimes.com/1990/06/05/science/great-15-year-proj... "The critics argue that the human genome project has been sold on hype and glitter, rather than its scientific merits, and that it will drain talent, money and life from smaller, worthier biomedical efforts." "They also doubt that the project can be completed in anything close to its original deadline and budget." "it will have generated enormous reams of uninterpretable and often useless data" "it's hyped science" "Everybody I talk to thinks this is an incredibly bad idea" "Some critics have begun aggressive letter-writing campaigns" The exact same arguments that were used 25 years ago to discredit the HGP are now resurfacing to criticize the HBP. And with genome sequencing now below 1000$, that article has become almost laughable. |
That said, it's an immensely valuable resource that pays back in many ways (it's a map which can be used for discovery science).
It's not entirely clear it drained talent and money from other projects in a way that was a net negative for science and society.