Here are the top business stories making the headlines in the morning newspapers.
Gas storage facility reopens
British Gas owner Centrica has reopened its giant gas storage facility to boost the UK's supply over the winter.
The energy firm said site would allow for "cheaper gas" to be stored for the colder months and help "reduce or stabilise costs" for households.
Earlier this month, the UK energy regulator said homes could face power cuts of up to three hours if gas supplies run low.
Centrica said reopening Rough was "not a silver bullet for energy security".
But it said: "It is a key part of a range of steps which can be taken to help the UK this winter."
Centrica said the UK has some of the lowest levels of gas storage in Europe at nine days, compared to Germany at 89 days, France at 103 days and the Netherlands at 123 days.
The reopening of the facility will increase the UK's gas storage capacity by 50%, Centrica said today.
The BBC says the Rough gas field was mothballed in 2017 when the government refused to subsidise it.
Another rail walkout
ScotRail is being hit by yet another strike tomorrow.
RMT members are taking part in a 24-hour walkout, as the result of a pay dispute.
ScotRail says this means there will be only a very limited number of services on just a handful of routes.
There will be no services north of the central belt.
Musk finally does Twitter deal
The world's richest man, Elon Musk, this morning completed his
£38.1billion takeover of Twitter.
He
tweeted "the bird is freed" in an apparent reference to the deal
closing.
A
number of top executives, including the boss, Parag Agrawal, have reportedly
been fired.
It
brings to a close a saga that saw Twitter go to court to hold the billionaire
to the terms of a takeover deal that he had tried to escape.
Twitter
has not yet confirmed the takeover, but an early investor in the company told
the BBC that the deal had been completed.
Firefighters at Holyrood
Hundreds of firefighters gathered outside the Scottish Parliament yesterday to call for increased pay and staffing.
Members of the Fire Brigade Union are being balloted on a 5% pay offer - which union leaders are recommending they reject.
Another ballot is expected to take place on strike action if firefighters refuse the offer.
The Scottish Government has said pay for firefighters is negotiated through UK-wide bargaining arrangements.
However, it added that it had provided a further £9.5million this year to support fire service delivery and modernisation.
The BBC says the demonstration outside Holyrood drew about 500 firefighters from across the country.
Strike ballot suspended
Scotland's largest health union has suspended its strike ballot of NHS staff and is consulting on a revised pay offer.
The Scottish Government made a fresh proposal on Friday that would see a hike of £2,205 per worker.
Unison has announced it will suspend plans to ballot its members on industrial action to consider the deal.
But other health unions are continuing to recommend members reject the offer and vote for strike action.
Unison, which represents 50,000 health service workers involved in the dispute, said the latest Scottish Government proposal was "significantly different from the previous offers" and added it was "right that its NHS members decide whether they are willing to accept it".
The proposed Scottish government deal is for a flat rate increase per person, backdated to April.
The BBC says the new offer means an average salary increase of 7% with the lowest paid gaining more than 11% and qualified nursing staff receiving up to 8.45%.
Prime Minister not at climate summit
Rishi Sunak has been accused of "a failure of leadership", after No.10 said he would not attend the COP27 climate summit in Egypt next month.
Opposition parties and environmental groups said the decision by the Prime Minister suggested the government was not taking the climate crisis seriously enough.
Downing Street said the PM had "other pressing domestic commitments including preparations for the autumn budget.
The BBC says Mr Sunak's predecessor Liz Truss had been due to attend the conference.
A Downing Street spokeswoman said the UK would be represented by outgoing COP president Alok Sharma, and other ministers.
"We remain committed to net-zero and to leading international and domestic action to tackle climate change. The UK is forging ahead of many other countries on net-zero," she added.