Here are the top business stories making the headlines in the morning newspapers.
UK inflation rate eases but still near 40-year high
The UK inflation rate has eased slightly although prices are still continuing to rise at nearly their fastest rate in 40 years.
Inflation - a measure of price rises - dipped to 9.9% in the 12 months to August, from 10.1% in July, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said.
Soaring living costs are eating into household budgets, with prices rising faster than wages.
Falling petrol prices were the main reason the pace of inflation eased. Petrol prices fell by 14.3p per litre between July and August, while diesel prices also dipped.
Decarbonised energy system could save trillions
A move to a decarbonised energy system by 2050 is likely to save at least £10trillion compared to continued use of fossil fuels.
Energy Voice says this is according to a study published by Oxford University researchers.
The paper describes a "win-win scenario" in which a rapid transition to an entirely clean energy system results in lower system costs than one based on fossil fuels.
The study considers three transition scenarios covering no, slow (by 2070) and fast (by 2050) transitions.
"There is a pervasive misconception that switching to clean, green energy will be painful, costly and mean sacrifices for us all - but that's just wrong," said Professor Doyne Farmer, who leads the team that conducted the study at the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School.
"Completely replacing fossil fuels with clean energy by 2050 will save us trillions."
Professor Farmer said that clean alternatives are already cheaper than fossil fuels in many situations, and will become more so across "almost all applications" in the coming years.
US inflation still unexpectedly high
Inflation in the US remained unexpectedly high last month - news that drove Wall Street to its worst day in more than two years.
Prices rose 8.3% in the 12 months through August, the Labor Department said - faster than the 8.1% that economists had expected.
That was down from 8.5% in July - driven by lower fuel costs.
But the prices of food, housing and medical care continued to surge, disappointing investors.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average sank nearly 4%, the S&P 500 dropped 4.3%, and the Nasdaq plunged more than 5%.
The BBC says it marked the steepest day of declines since June 2020.
For US President Joe Biden, whose approval ratings fell below 40% earlier this year amid cost-of-living concerns, the report was also a troubling sign ahead of the national elections in November. They will determine whether Mr Biden's Democrats maintain their slim control of Congress.
Record total for wind turbine orders
Global wind turbine orders hit 43 gigawatts in the second quarter of the year, a new record.
According to research carried out by Wood Mackenzie, that figure equates to more than £15billion.
Energy Voice says it also represents a 36% year-on-year rise in orders - driven primarily by activity in China.
With ambitious decarbonisation targets, China aims to support an estimated average build of more than 55 GW a year over the next decade.
In Q2 alone, the East Asian giant accounted for a record 35 GW of activity, and is at 45 GW so far in 2022.
Annual sales to drop at Ocado
Ocado has warned that annual sales will drop because customers are trading down to value products and buying less overall amid a worsening cost-of-living crisis.
The online grocer, which is owned partly by Marks & Spencer, said sales rose 2.7% from a year ago in the 13 weeks to August 28, an improvement from the drop in the previous quarter.
However, shoppers are putting less in their baskets and looking for cheaper products. The value of the average basket fell 6%, from £123 to £116.
The Guardian says shares closed down nearly 15% yesterday - making Ocado the FTSE 100's biggest faller.