 Extractivism has contributed significantly in incinerating the planet, causing climate change and other environmental crisis, and as such, there is an urgent need to address the issue. Now, these four parts of discussion are the School of Ecology training organized by Health of Mother Earth Foundation, HOMEF, details in this report. In the last 12 years, Nigeria has witnessed consistent floods happening around the river's Nigerian Bainway, as well as the Niger Delta region. Communities were inundated by over three metres of floodwater, which often took its toll on the crop and season. Health of Mother Earth Foundation, HOMEF, ease of the opinion that there is no better time than now to address these issues, hence the thematic session on Extractivism, Climate Change and Food and Security. Extractivism is a very colonial idea that makes governments believe that the best way to utilize the gifts of nature, what we call natural resources, to extract it no matter what. The harms, the damage, the dispolation of environment, the destruction of our territories are not taken into account. According to the National Bureau of Statistics in 2022, the nation's economy was largely driven by the non-oil sector, which accounted for 95.66% of growth, while the oil sector contributed 4.34%. Experts believe the forecast should shift more to agriculture. And for the integrity, analysts say Nigerians need to understand the genetic modifications to agricultural produce is not the solution. We used to have a thriving manufacturing sector, we used to have a thriving textile industry. We used to have granite pyramids, we had, you know, rubber plantations, we had things were thriving, we had businesses thriving, opportunities for commerce thriving, but as Nigeria's oil production increased gradually from 5,000 barrels a day to 6,000, 7,000, 1 million, up to 2.4 million barrels a day, as the production increased, we saw a deliberate and clear decline in other productive sectors. Our worry for those of us from developing countries is that they make it seem as food insecurity is peculiar to developing countries or developing countries. Food insecurity is a global matter and the issue of food insecurity is not because globally we do not produce enough food, no, it remains more of the issue of access, availability and stability. Presently in Nigeria, you can't find Naira to buy food. So if you go to the village, you will see food vended in the market and it will lock up a vendor selling the food, insist on collecting Naira note that he doesn't want to transfer. You will go home not having access to food. The consensus here is that the impact of extractivism can be reversed by deliberate policies by government that is willing to win itself of dependence on crude oil and foresee fields.