Accessing platform chemicals produced from CO2 and nitrogen through sustainable methods presents a valuable opportunity for innovation. Addressing global demands necessitates collaboration across sectors, utilizing renewable energy alongside CO2 and nature’s catalysts, including enzymes and microbial cells through biotransformation. These natural catalysts function effectively under ambient conditions, facilitating environmentally sustainable solutions. In line with this vision, ECOMO promotes interdisciplinary collaboration, uniting expertise in bioelectrocatalysis, biohybrid materials science, organic synthesis, technical microbiology, and process engineering. The project focuses on three innovation areas: (1) bioelectrochemical conversion of CO2 to CO, (2) microbial gas fermentation of CO to acetate, and (3) metabolic engineering to convert acetate and ammonia into small molecule amines. This strategy aims to produce high-value diamine monomers, which are vital for established polymeric materials like polyamides. ECOMO is dedicated to creating new bio-based and biohybrid modules that integrate seamlessly with existing bioreactor infrastructure to enable specialty chemical production from CO2. The fermentation process uses engineered microbial strains capable of utilizing CO as a carbon source and energy carrier. A noteworthy innovation includes generating CO in situ from CO2 via mediated electron transfer to hydrogel polymer beads containing immobilized CO-dehydrogenase enzymes within acetate-forming bacterial cultures. This advancement harmonizes electrochemical and biocatalytic processes. By effectively demonstrating diamine production, ECOMO diversifies the range of CO2-derived products, increasing the availability of essential chemical building blocks. The initiative focuses on reducing dependence on fossil-derived resources, highlighting its relevance and potential for significant scientific, economic, and societal impact. ECOMO’s innovative approach addresses critical challenges in CO2 and nitrogen management. By aiming for operations near room temperature, it seeks to lower energy requirements compared to conventional industrial methods, such as the Haber-Bosch process for ammonia. The modular sub-technologies developed are anticipated to generate job opportunities, benefiting the economy and society as a whole.