This course covers Natural Calamity Impact Assessment, which involves assessing the impact of floods, droughts, cyclones, pest infestations, and other natural calamities on borrower viability within the Agri & Rural Commercial Credit credit workflow. It focuses on evaluating how environmental and disaster-related events affect agricultural production, livestock health, rural business continuity, borrower cash flows, repayment capacity, collateral quality, and overall exposure performance. The course emphasizes structured monitoring and early warning practices to identify the severity, duration, and financial implications of calamity-related disruptions, enabling timely escalation, risk mitigation, and credit response decisions. It evaluates key dimensions such as the impact of floods, droughts, and other calamities on borrower viability, along with weather-related risk assessment, with each requiring independent validation and documented rationale before any credit action is finalized. It is distinct from the broader credit approval process, as it focuses specifically on structured identification, impact assessment, escalation management, and breach response related to environmental disruptions, borrower stress signals, and exposure deterioration within agri and rural credit portfolios, while the credit approval process addresses wider borrower sanctioning, lending decisions, portfolio administration, and institutional credit governance with separate evidence standards, ownership, and approval authority. Within Monitoring & Early Warning, the credit analyst executes the assessment, completes documentation, and flags exceptions for manager review within Agri & Rural Commercial Credit credit files, shaping escalation scope and operational priorities.