How did common farming led to decline in forest cover during colonial period.
Deforestation under colonial rule became more systematic and extensive as population increased over the centuries and the demand for food went up. The causes of deforestation were as follows:
First, the British directly encouraged the production of commercial crops like jute, sugar, wheat and cotton. The demand for these crops increased in nineteenth-century Europe where foodgrains were needed to feed the growing urban population and raw materials were required for industrial production.
Second, in the early nineteenth century, the colonial state thought that forests were unproductive. They were considered to be wilderness that had to be brought under cultivation so that the land could yield agricultural products and revenue, and enhance the income of the state.