Here are the top business stories making the headlines in the morning newspapers.
'International humiliation' for Scotland due to cut in rail services
Scotland will face international humiliation if a dispute which has crippled rail services is not resolved by the summer, it has been warned.
SNP ministers were told on Tuesday that a series of major events within the coming months, such as the 150th Open Championship in St Andrews in July, would be thrown into chaos if a normal timetable is not restored.
A third of ScotRail services have been axed after some drivers stopped working voluntary overtime amid a row over pay, just weeks after the operator was nationalised by the Scottish Government.
A pay offer of a 2.2% rise has been branded completely inadequate by unions amid the cost-of-living crisis.
The Telegraph says most major services are ending several hours early, which city and town-centre businesses have said could cripple them as they are still recovering from the pandemic.
MSP Willie Rennie, the former Liberal Democrat leader, told Jenny Gilruth, the SNP transport minister, that 300,000 people were visiting St Andrews for the Open Golf tournament and that substantially more trains than normal, rather than less, were needed for a "one-off showcase".
RMT workers vote for a national strike
Railway workers have voted to go on national strike threatening major summer travel disruption across the UK.
Members of the RMT union have voted in favour of strike action across Network Rail and 13 train-operating companies.
General secretary Mick Lynch said "members want a decent pay rise, job security and no compulsory redundancies".
The Department for Transport said strikes should always be the last resort not the first.
A spokesperson told the BBC: "It is hugely disappointing and premature that the RMT is calling for industrial action before even entering discussions."
Skills passport on way next year
Plans have been set out on creation of a "critical" and long-awaited skills passport to help oil and gas workers transition into renewables.
High cost of retraining and the "pointless" duplication of certification requirements are a major barrier to the workforce making the shift, according to Energy Voice.
Led by skills body Opito, the initiative aims to have the digital skills passport built and ready to roll out in Q2 of next year, and fully operational following testing by Q4.
Glencore Energy UK admits bribery
A subsidiary of the mining and commodities trading giant Glencore has pleaded guilty to seven counts of bribery in a London court.
The firm also said it will pay more than £800million to resolve similar claims with the US and Brazil.
The UK's Serious Fraud Office said it had exposed "profit-driven bribery and corruption" across Glencore Energy UK's oil operations in five African nations.
The BBC says the firm will find how much it must pay in fines at a sentencing in June.
Bid for gene-edited crops north of the border
The Scottish Government is being asked to consider allowing gene-edited crops to be grown in Scotland.
UK cabinet minister George Eustice wants his plans to allow gene-edited crops to be grown in England to be extended to both Scotland and Wales.
Mr Eustice has written to the Scottish and Welsh governments to urge them to reconsider their opposition to the technique.
The BBC says gene editing allows scientists to change a plant or animal's DNA.
Scientists can engineer crops that are more disease or drought resistant, without adding genetic material from another species.