You take a protective device of current rating C, the minimum current carrying capacity of a live conductor connected to this protective device is C (or 0.725C for semi enclosed fuses), however the cable is grouped with other cables so limiting the current that can be taken on the live conductors so now the minimum CCC is C/cg, but the cable is in a high ambient temperature so the minimum CCC of the cable is now C/cg*ca.
The minimum to which the current carrying capacity of the cable can be taken is C/cg*ca therefore you have calculated the minimum CCC of the live conductors by taking into account the type of protective device, the ambient temperature and the grouping.
The volt drop does not enter into the CCC calculation, it may be very relevant for compliance but not for current carrying capacity.