Here are the top business stories making the headlines in the morning newspapers.
Windfall tax under fire from Ping
North Sea minnow Ping Petroleum has criticised the UK Government's windfall tax and decried "out of alignment" regulators overseeing the industry.
Charles Taylor, wells manager at the Malaysian-owned operator, was discussing challenges ahead for Ping's Avalon project in the UK at the Subsea Expo in Aberdeen.
Avalon is a 20million-barrel development, hailed by the regulator as a "trail-blazer" for its plans to be one of the first schemes to decarbonise its production through use of floating offshore wind for its power.
But Energy Voice says Mr Taylor pointed to the windfall tax and regulatory issues as barriers for its project and the wider industry.
Apache cancels drilling contract
US-headquartered Apache has cancelled a drilling contract in the UK sector.
Energy Voice says the operator has taken a $12.4million (£10million) hit as it called off a deal with Diamond Offshore more than a year earlier than planned.
Apache entered the deal for the Ocean Patriot rig in May last year, which was intended to keep the vessel operating at the Beryl area in the North Sea through to August 2024.
Asked for the reasoning behind the cancellation, Apache cited the UK windfall tax as making its North Sea portfolio "less competitive" for returns.
Energy-investments warning
There are claims Westminster's fiscal interventions have made the UK "one of the most unstable economies" for energy investments.
Energy Voice says Nick Dalgarno ,of investment bank Piper Sandler, delivered the scathing verdict during a session at the Subsea Expo in Aberdeen.
Delivering an update on the state of play for UK mergers and acquisitions, he said the oil and gas industry should have been "more vociferous" in its opposition to the government's windfall tax.
Tesco and Aldi now rationing vegetables
Britain's biggest retailer Tesco has become the fourth supermarket in the UK to begin rationing the amount of vegetables customers can buy.
It has joined Aldi in announcing that it has started limiting purchases to three items per person across peppers, cucumbers and tomatoes.
Asda and Morrisons had already revealed they are restricting how many tomatoes, cucumbers, lettuce and peppers customers are allowed to buy following the squeeze on supplies.
The Telegraph says it leaves Sainsbury's as the only member of Britain's five largest supermarkets not to have imposed limits on shoppers.
The British Retail Consortium said it expects disruption to last a few weeks as supermarkets manage a poor harvest in southern Spain and Morocco.
Automated housework
Within a decade, around 39% of the time spent on housework and caring for loved ones could be automated, experts say.
Researchers from the UK and Japan asked 65 artificial intelligence (AI) experts to predict the amount of automation in common household tasks in 10 years.
The BBC says experts predicted grocery shopping was likely to see the most automation.
New London venue for Bowie collection
David Bowie fans will get an unprecedented look into his life, work and legacy after the V&A museum acquired the rock star's archive.
The collection includes more than 80,000 letters, lyrics, photos, stage designs, music awards and costumes.
It also features several instruments owned by the musician, including the Stylophone he played on his breakout 1969 single Space Oddity.
The BBC says the archive will go on display in 2025 in a new east London venue.
The David Bowie Centre for the Study of Performing Arts, in the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, will provide a "sourcebook for the Bowies of tomorrow", said Tristram Hunt, director of the V&A.
Steel jobs being lost
Unions have warned on the future of UK steelmaking after British Steel announced it will shut its coking ovens in Scunthorpe and cut up to 260 jobs.
The BBC says the Chinese-owned firm blamed an "unprecedented" rise in energy costs and demands to be greener.
The biggest steelworkers' union said the cuts could have a "catastrophic impact" on steel production in the UK.