Here are the top business stories making the headlines in the morning newspapers.
Sir Keir gives mixed message on oil and gas
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer yesterday said that oil and gas will be used in the UK "for many, many years" after unions raised concerns about his party's energy plans.
His comments appear to be at odds with recent messages coming from the party on the future of the offshore sector.
GMB general secretary Gary Smith has warned that Scottish Labour will lose seats over a “stupid” and “catastrophic” ban on new North Sea oil developments.
He told the Daily Record that knocking back all future licence requests would hit jobs and be seen as an “attack” on Scotland.
But Sir Keir has now tried to reassure Mr Smith that oil and gas will continue to be part of the UK's energy strategy for decades.
The Labour leader yesterday said: “I think we have a once-in-a-generation opportunity now to seize the jobs of the future.
"Oil and gas will be part of that, because where there is existing licences they will go on to the 2050s and so oil and gas will be part of our energy mix for many, many years to come.
“But we need to seize the opportunities for the next generation of jobs. And that is in renewables, it is in nuclear.”
Plea for Scots to use less water
Scots have been asked to use less water - especially in their gardens - following weeks of dry weather.
The request from the Scottish Water comes as forecasters predict the dry spell is set to continue.
It has been the driest spring in north Scotland since 2018, according to the Met Office.
Scottish Water wants water to be used sparingly to ease pressure on the network, and said hosepipe use was a big concern.
The firm said that water usage had increased by about 150million litres over the last two weekends.
The BBC says much of it will have been used on parched gardens, dusty cars and filling up children's paddling pools.
Celtic’s Postecoglou to head south
Celtic boss Ange Postecoglou has agreed to become Tottenham's new manager on a two-year contract.
The Australian has just finished his second season at Celtic, leading the team to the Scottish title both years and the domestic treble this term.
The BBC says Spurs have been looking for a new manager since Antonio Conte's exit in March, with Cristian Stellini and then Ryan Mason taking interim charge.
Athens-born Postecoglou's only experience in Europe before joining Celtic in 2021 had been a spell in charge of Greek lower-league side Panachaiki in 2008.
He has won the Australian title with South Melbourne and Brisbane Roar, Japan's top flight with Yokohama F Marinos and also led the Australian national team to victory at the 2015 Asian Cup.
More vac packing of mince
Lidl is the latest supermarket to announce it will start vac-packing mince to use less plastic and double its shelf life.
Sainsbury's hit the headlines when it made the same switch, and some shoppers complained it turned the meat to mush.
The BBC says an anti-plastic group criticised the move from hard plastic trays to soft film, saying this would not go in most household recycling collections.
But Lidl said its new vac packs could be taken to recycling collection points.
It said the packaging would use 63% less plastic and extend the mince's shelf life from eight to 16 days.
Construction waste recycling plant
A Scottish firm is gearing up to open its second construction waste recycling plant.
Livingston-based Brewster Brothers said its new £6million wash plant in North Lanarkshire would be capable of recycling 300,000 tonnes of waste diverted from landfill each year.
The BBC says the facility will convert waste into quality aggregates for re-use in the building trade.
It will be based at the former Gartshore brickworks near Cumbernauld.
Pushing down inflation
Immigration that fills gaps in the domestic jobs market can help push down UK inflation, the deputy head of the International Monetary Fund has said.
The Prime Minister has said rates of legal immigration are "too high".
But the IMF's Gita Gopinath toldthe BBC that, "with inflation as high as it is, there are benefits to having workers come in."
Net migration (the difference between the number of people entering the country and those leaving on a long-term basis) is at a record level in the UK - at 606,000 in 2022, according to the Office for National Statistics.
Expensive new Apple headset
Apple has unveiled a much-anticipated augmented reality headset, Apple Vision Pro, in its first major hardware launch for almost a decade.
Apple CEO Tim Cook said the new headset "seamlessly blends the real world and the virtual world".
The tech firm also announced its latest iPhone operating system, as well as updates to MacBook Air.
The BBC says the headset has a two-hour battery life, costs $3,499 (£2,849) and will be released early next year in the US.
The cost is considerably more than virtual reality headsets currently on the market