Here are the top business stories making the headlines in the morning newspapers.
Storegga in new venture across the Atlantic
UK-based decarbonisation developer Storegga has launched a new Americas business.
It will seek and develop decarbonisation and "clean fuel" opportunities across the Americas region, including the US, Canada, Latin America and the Caribbean.
Storegga currently has carbon capture and storage (CCS), direct air capture, and hydrogen projects in development in Scotland, as well as in the US with Talos Energy and Norway with Sval Energi.
The company intends for its new business to scale up quickly.
Energy Voice says that David Cook will lead the venture, with the support of Randy Wheeler.
Mr Cook joins following his role as chief executive of Norwegian Energy Company, but also draws on experience across oil and gas and renewables groups such as INEOS, Orsted, Taqa and BP.
Tickets move by British Airways
British Airways has halted sales of tickets on short-haul flights from Heathrow Airport until August 8 as disruption to air travel continues.
The move is due to the cap on daily passenger numbers that the UK's largest airport has imposed over the summer.
The BBC says the sales suspension will affect BA's flights to domestic and European destinations.
Thousands of air travellers have been hit by disruption in recent weeks, including last-minute cancellations.
Airports and airlines, which cut jobs during Covid lockdowns, have found it difficult to recruit enough staff as demand for holidays has returned.
Truss calls Sturgeon 'an attention seeker'
Liz Truss has branded Nicola Sturgeon an "attention-seeker" and told a Tory leadership hustings in Exeter on Monday that the Scottish First Minister should be "ignored".
To rapturous applause at the event in Devon - the latest stop on the campaign trail for Ms Truss and Rishi Sunak - the Foreign Secretary said she would block another Scottish independence referendum and said " the best thing we can do with Nicola Sturgeon is ignore her".
Ms Truss said: "I'm sorry, she's an attention-seeker, that's all she is. What we need to do is show the people of Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales what we are delivering for them and make sure our policies are delivering for them right across the United Kingdom."
It comes as Penny Mordaunt announced her support for Ms Truss in the race to be prime minister.
The Telegraph says the former defence secretary, who was knocked out of the race herself in the final round of voting among Tory MPs, introduced Ms Truss at the event in Exeter.
Oligarchs laundering illegal wealth are targeted
Oligarchs using UK property to launder illegal wealth are being targeted by a new register which has come into force.
Any anonymous foreign company seeking to buy UK land or property will need to reveal the true owner.
Foreign firms that refuse to disclose their true owner could face fines of up to £2,500 per day or up to five years in prison.
The BBC says the register comes amid economic sanctions in response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Foreign organisations who already own land in the UK will have a six-month period to register their beneficial owner or managing officer.
Business Minister Lord Callanan said: "We have been clear that the UK is a place for legitimate business only, and to ensure we are free of corrupt elites with suspicious wealth we need to know who owns what.
"By getting this first-of-its-kind register up and running at breakneck speed, we are lifting the curtain and cracking down on those criminals attempting to hide their illicitly-obtained wealth."
End of the road for Hinkley Point B
The nuclear power station that has generated more electricity than any other in the UK has finally been switched off.
Hinkley Point B in Somerset has been making power since 1976 and currently contributes about 3% of the UK's total power needs.
Switching Hinkley off will mean more electricity made from gas, which is at a record high price at the moment.
Industry experts have predicted the cost of energy in the UK will have to rise as a result.
The BBC says Hinkley B has, simply put, reached the end of its life.
When it was planned in the 1960s it was expected to operate only just into the new century.
The first switch-off date was then planned for 2016, but careful management of the technology kept it running. In 2012 EDF, the energy firm that owns the plant, announced that it could continue safely until 2022.
EDF said: "Hinkley B has reliably produced zero-carbon electricity for over 46 years and will complete its generating phase as the most productive nuclear site the UK has ever had."
Be careful what you chuck out...
Almost 10 years ago James Howells threw away a hard drive during a clear out - forgetting about the Bitcoin on it.
Now, with the Bitcoin worth an estimated £150million, he is planning to spend millions digging up a Newport landfill in a bid to find the lost hard drive.
The BBC reports that, if recovered, Mr Howells said he would give 10% of the proceeds to turn the city into a crypto-currency hub.
But the Welsh council said excavating the site would pose an ecological risk.
Mr Howells, an IT engineer, accidentally threw away the hard drive in 2013 after mining 8,000 Bitcoins in the early stages of the currency's development.