This course covers Weather Deviation Tracking, which involves tracking deviations from expected weather patterns and assessing their impact on agricultural production, borrower viability, and rural credit exposures within the Agri & Rural Commercial Credit credit workflow. It focuses on monitoring abnormal climatic conditions such as delayed rainfall, droughts, excessive precipitation, temperature fluctuations, storms, and seasonal irregularities that may affect crop cycles, agri-enterprise operations, repayment capacity, and portfolio performance. The course emphasizes the use of weather-related indicators as part of structured early warning and monitoring frameworks for proactive credit risk identification and escalation. It evaluates key dimensions such as weather conditions, pest impact assessment, commodity price movements, and sector risk analysis, with each requiring independent validation and documented rationale before any credit action is finalized. It is distinct from broader operational procedure design, as it focuses specifically on structured identification, monitoring, escalation management, and breach response related to weather-driven stress signals affecting agri and rural credit exposures, while operational procedure design addresses wider workflow governance, institutional process structures, administrative controls, and operating procedures with separate evidence standards, ownership, and approval authority. Within Monitoring & Early Warning, the senior credit leader sets portfolio limits, governs exception criteria, and drives strategic alignment across the Agri & Rural Commercial Credit function, shaping escalation scope and portfolio-level priorities.