In terms of science research, the impact has been unparalleled. It's hard to find a molecular biology paper that doesn't owe a ton to having the full human genome sequence. There have also been technology side effects. Just like defense projects fueled the early market for silicon-based semiconductors, the HGP kick-started a market for sequencing machines that is generating a huge revolution in sequencing technology where costs are now falling 5x-10x per year, which is quite a bit faster than Moore's law.
In terms of finding genetic causes of disease, this happens every day, and is practically mundane, but there are two complications towards getting to cures. First, most disease is far far more complicated than a single gene; any single gene may account for just a percent or two of what we call the same disease. Second, knowing which gene is broken does not provide a cure for that disease; even for a given small molecule, determining if it will interact with a gene's protein or have any effect on that protein's structure or function is a task that physics has not been able to tackle. Additionally, the genome has only been available for a mere decade, and for many if not most diseases, the process of going from a known gene target an approved drug is going to take far longer than 10 years.
So the HGP has fueled a huge amount of discovery, is the foundation of nearly all human biology research, and is completely indispensable, but in terms of new cures for various diseases it has not delivered, yet, but really it shouldn't have to.
In terms of finding genetic causes of disease, this happens every day, and is practically mundane, but there are two complications towards getting to cures. First, most disease is far far more complicated than a single gene; any single gene may account for just a percent or two of what we call the same disease. Second, knowing which gene is broken does not provide a cure for that disease; even for a given small molecule, determining if it will interact with a gene's protein or have any effect on that protein's structure or function is a task that physics has not been able to tackle. Additionally, the genome has only been available for a mere decade, and for many if not most diseases, the process of going from a known gene target an approved drug is going to take far longer than 10 years.
So the HGP has fueled a huge amount of discovery, is the foundation of nearly all human biology research, and is completely indispensable, but in terms of new cures for various diseases it has not delivered, yet, but really it shouldn't have to.