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16/7/2026 : Visitor Attractions

John O'Groats Distillery Wins International Success with Scottish Enterprise Support

One of Caithness's newest success stories is proving that location is no barrier to reaching customers around the world.   8 Doors Distillery in John O'Groats, Scotland's most northerly mainland whisky distillery, is expanding into international markets with support from Scottish Enterprise and Team Scotland, demonstrating how businesses from the far north can compete on the global stage.  

16/7/2026

Buy Now Pay Later Rules Change - What It Means for Shoppers and Retailers

From 15 July 2026, Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) finally becomes a regulated financial product in the UK.  After years of complaints about unclear terms, missed‑payment traps, and people accidentally building up hidden debts, the government and the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) have stepped in.  

16/7/2026

Air Departure Tax - Highlands and Islands exemptions set out

All flights between the Highlands and Islands and other Scottish airports will be exempt from Air Departure Tax (ADT) when the devolved levy comes into force next year.   Deputy First Minister and Finance Secretary Jenny Gilruth said extending the exemption to incoming flights to the Highlands and Islands from other locations in Scotland will improve national connectivity for people and businesses when ADT replaces the UK Government’s Air Passenger Duty on 1 April 2027.  

Today

Fertiliser Prices Are Rising - When Will Food Prices Rise - Possible Times

Fertiliser prices are rising again driven by Middle East gas disruption, higher oil prices.  Tightening global ammonia supply and the increases will begin showing up in UK and European food prices from late summer into autumn, with the full inflation impact landing in early 2027.  

Today

 
UK-India Trade Deal Begins Today – New Opportunities for Scottish Salmon and Highland Businesses

Today marks an important milestone for both Britain and India as the long-awaited UK-India Free Trade Agreement officially comes into force.  After years of negotiations, businesses on both sides can now begin taking advantage of lower tariffs, easier market access and simpler trading rules.  

Today

Gaelic Broadcasting at a Crossroads: The Long Term Pressures Reshaping Scotland’s Minority Language Media

Gaelic media in Scotland is entering a period of profound transition.  Declining BBC budgets, structural changes at STV, demographic shifts, and the rapid move toward digital platforms are combining to create sustained pressure on Gaelic broadcasting.  

Today

State Pension Reform: What the UK’s Proposed Changes Mean for Future Retirees

The UK’s State Pension system is entering a period of major change.  Rising costs, an ageing population, and the long‑term impact of the triple lock are forcing the Treasury to rethink how and when future generations will receive their pension.  

Today

Scotland’s Life Expectancy Crisis and the Future of UK Pension Policy

Scotland’s life expectancy has stalled — and in its poorest communities, it has fallen.  This trend has major implications for UK pension policy, especially as Westminster considers raising the State Pension age again.  

Today

If Trump Bombs Iran’s Power Stations: Energy Shock, Retaliation Risk, and a New Wave of Global Inflation

The threats to oil and gas prices continues not least by Donald Trumps latest threat to bomb electricity capacity in Iran.  This may then lead to even more retaliation against production facilities in the middle east countries.  

Today

BBC Licence Fee Crisis: What Happens When Half a Million More Households Stop Paying?

The BBC's latest annual report reveals that more than 539,000 households stopped paying the TV licence over the past year, leaving around 23.3 million licence holders – the lowest figure for many years.  The BBC says this is the sharpest annual fall since the Covid pandemic and warns that its current funding model is becoming increasingly difficult to sustain.  

Today

Heating Oil Households and Unfair Pricing: Why the UK Government Is Investigating COVID‑Era Contract Changes

Around 1.5 million UK households rely on heating oil rather than mains gas and roughly 400,000 of them are in Scotland, especially in rural and island communities.  These homes are uniquely exposed to global oil price swings, supply disruptions, and the behaviour of private fuel distributors.  

Today

The Treasury and DWP Are Looking To Bring Forward Changes To State Retirement Age

The UK is entering a new phase of pension reform.  People born in 1977–78 are at the centre of the next State Pension age rise, and the Treasury’s long‑term fiscal pressures.  

Today

Middle East Refinery Shutdowns: How Conflict Is Disrupting Global Energy Supply

The latest wave of U.S.–Israel strikes on Iran and Iran’s broad retaliation across the Gulf has triggered one of the most serious disruptions to Middle Eastern refining capacity in decades.  Multiple refineries, gas‑processing plants, and petrochemical hubs have been damaged or forced offline.  

Today

LNG Shortages and UK Inflation: Why Gas Market Stress Quickly Turns Into Higher Prices

The UK is unusually exposed to global LNG volatility.  When LNG markets tighten as they have due to Middle East conflict, Qatar’s export disruption, and intermittent closure of the Strait of Hormuz the UK experiences inflationary pressure faster than almost any other European economy.  

Today

Where Does the BBC Go From Here?

The steady decline in licence fee income has reignited a debate that is likely to dominate discussions ahead of the BBC's Royal Charter renewal in 2027.   Several options are now being discussed.  

Today

UK Winter Heating Risk: How an LNG Shortage Could Hit Bills, Supply, and Energy Security

The UK is entering a period of heightened vulnerability to global LNG (liquefied natural gas) disruption.  The Middle East conflict — including damage to Qatar’s Ras Laffan LNG facilities and shipping interruptions through the Strait of Hormuz — has already removed a significant share of global LNG supply.  

Today

Rising Oil Prices and Rural Scotland: Why Remote Communities Feel the Pain First

Rural Scotland is more exposed to rising oil prices than almost any other part of the UK.  From Caithness and Sutherland to Moray, Aberdeenshire, Argyll, the Borders, and the islands, hundreds of thousands of households depend on heating oil, diesel‑powered transport, and long‑distance supply chains.  

Today

A Breath of Fresh Air: Positive Business Stories You Might Have Missed This Week

It’s been a tough stretch for global headlines energy shocks, rising oil prices, geopolitical tension, and inflation worries.  But beneath all that noise, there are real, meaningful bright spots in the business world.  

Today

Deputy First Minister launches rollout of £50 million to prevent homelessness

Halfway through the first 100 days of the Scottish Government formed in May, the rollout of an expanded 10-year £50 million Homelessness Prevention Fund is underway.   £1 million is being made available for a second year to enable social landlords and third sector organisations to support tenants to stay in their homes.  

Today

LNG Markets on a Knife‑Edge: Why the Middle East Conflict Makes Global Gas Supplies Unusually Vulnerable

The latest escalation between the United States, Israel, and Iran has created one of the most dangerous environments for global LNG supply in decades.   Unlike oil, which has multiple export routes and large global reserves, LNG is highly concentrated, infrastructure‑dependent, and far less flexible.