Here are the business stories making the headlines across Scotland and the UK this morning.
Fierce Beer offers jobs to BrewDog staff after sale
Aberdeen-based Fierce Beer is looking to offer jobs to those affected by the recent BrewDog bar closures across the city.
And the company is considering taking on some of BrewDog’s vacant pub premises.
Managing director Dave Grant, who co-founded Fierce Beer with David McHardy in 2014, said many of their own team are former BrewDog employees, and the brewery is actively seeking to bring more on board.
Glasgow Central's main station to remain closed until next week
The main train station at Glasgow Central will remain closed for the rest of this week following a huge fire that destroyed a neighbouring building.
Scotland's busiest railway station has been shut since Sunday, when a blaze spread from a vape shop on Union Street through a B-listed Victorian building.
A fire break between the Union Corner building - which was destroyed in the blaze - and the external wall of the station is thought to have stopped Sunday's inferno spreading further.
British Airways to suspend UK repatriation flights
British Airways (BA) has announced it is pausing repatriation flights to the UK from Oman due to "reduced demand", in addition to cancelling more flights across the Middle East.
Limited tickets remain on sale for two scheduled services from Muscat to London Heathrow on 11 and 12 March, after which the flights will pause, BA said.
BA flights to and from Amman in Jordan, Bahrain, Doha in Qatar, Dubai and Tel Aviv in Israel have also been cancelled until 28 March, and services to Abu Dhabi – a winter only route for the airline – will not restart until October.
Lego bets on Formula 1 for its push into US market
Lego is betting on the growing popularity of partnerships, such as the one it has with Formula 1, to help extend its lead over rival toymakers.
The Danish group, known for its interlocking plastic bricks, plans to expand its footprint in the US, its largest market, despite political tensions stemming from the Iran war and President Trump’s tariff regime.
Niels Christiansen, its chief executive, said: “There is momentum in the US market. It hasn’t stalled. It’s growing. It’s more a question of who will win in that market.” He added that there were no signs of a recession in the US, with consumers continuing to spend.
University tuition fees system is a 'mess', says Clegg
Sir Nick Clegg, the former Liberal Democrat leader, has said the current university tuition fee system is a "mess".
Pressed on his time in government when - while deputy prime minister - higher tuition fees were introduced, Sir Nick said he would take any criticism of his role "on the chin".
But he told the BBC he was not responsible for changes made afterwards, including the repeated freezing of the graduate repayment threshold, which he said contributed to a system that was now "deeply unfair".