Here are the stories making the business headlines across Scotland and the UK this morning.
Aberdeen Harbour wall starts to crumble following Storm Babet
The North Pier at Aberdeen Harbour has started to crumble into the North Sea following the impact of Storm Babet.
Strong winds and waves pounded the north-east coast during the storm, which has now caused damage to the pier.
Jordan Harkins, a spokesperson for the Port of Aberdeen, said the authority is aware of the damage.
He said: “Assessments and temporary repairs are underway until we fully assess the damage.
“There are no current restrictions to operations.”
Former TSB bank in Aberdeen on auction with price of £500,000
A former TSB bank in Aberdeen is up for auction with a guide price of £500,000.
The Union Terrace property is a former savings bank building as well as two residential flats and will go under the hammer.
It is located in the centre of Aberdeen and overlooks Union Terrace Gardens.
The bank has been a listed building since 1967 for its Italian renaissance and windows.
It was most recently a TSB bank before it shut in 2016.
Air fares poised to increase as amount planes pay to fund air traffic control rises
Air fares are set to increase further as the UK aviation authority has upped the costs airline pay to fund air traffic control.
Each plane will have to pay an additional £17 a journey after the UK Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) increased the contribution from £47 to £64 per aircraft.
It follows hundreds of flight cancellations and long delays in August as the National Air Traffic Services (NATS) reported a "technical issue" which affected its flight planning system. An independent review into the events is taking place.
The air traffic control operator, called NERL (NATS En Route Limited), is attempting to recover revenue that was lost during the pandemic when air travel came to a standstill and fund high-quality service levels in the future.
After a year of Elon Musk, what's next for X?
A year ago, having just bought Twitter, Elon Musk walked into its HQ carrying a sink. "Let that sink in" he quipped - then fired a large swathe of staff.
It was the first flavour of what has been a 12-month whirlwind of erratic change - not least the renaming of the company to X.
In some ways, X has been remarkably resilient. Despite rivals old and new circling, it survives.
However, with advertisers wary and user metrics shaky, what's next for X?