The USA grid crisis is spilling over into the UK and EU. This is not because our grids are physically connected, but because the same pressures are hitting all Western grids at the same time: explosive data‑centre demand, electrification, ageing infrastructure, and planning systems that cannot keep up.
For many people approaching retirement or already retired the most important economic question surrounding Scottish independence is not mortgages or trade. It is pensions.
Caithness is becoming a hotspot for battery‑storage proposals because developers want to sit close to wind generation and transmission lines. But the scale and clustering of these projects pose real risks to the local grid, landscape, planning system, and community confidence.
When governments make energy policy, they rarely have the luxury of doing so in calm and predictable times. As ministers consider whether the Jackdaw gas field in the North Sea should receive fresh environmental consent, events thousands of miles away are once again reminding the world how fragile global energy supplies can be.
A military strike in the Persian Gulf can raise heating oil prices in Caithness because the Strait of Hormuz carries 20–27% of the world’s crude oil and petroleum products. When that corridor is disrupted, global supply drops, prices spike, and rural areas like Caithness already paying a delivery premium feel the impact fastest and hardest.
Personal Independence Payment is no longer fit for purpose and is failing to keep pace with how disability, health and work have changed over the past decade, the Timms Review has found. Millions of disabled people are being failed by a benefit that is no longer working, the first ever full review into Personal Independence Payment has found.
Sizewell B nuclear power station to continue operating until 2055, powering millions of homes with clean, homegrown energy and cutting costs for consumers. Government agreed terms with EDF to support 20‑year life extension of Sizewell B.
Families and businesses will benefit from more solar power as the government has approved a major new solar power project. Marks the 30th nationally significant clean energy project approved by the government since July 2024 – enough clean energy to power the equivalent of more than 19 million homes.
The US military says it carried out strikes against more than 80 targets initially, followed by another wave reportedly involving around 90 targets. The stated aim was to reduce Iran’s ability to attack shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.
Heating‑oil prices in Caithness are likely to sit mostly between 95p and £1.10 per litre over the next year, with the lowest quotes appearing in July to September and the highest during January and February. UK averages are currently around 70–75p per litre, but Scotland typically runs higher at 85–90p, and Caithness adds a further rural premium of 10–20p because every tanker must travel long distances from Grangemouth or Inverness.
50 UK Government-funded 4G masts have been switched on to boost signal in some of Scotland's hardest-to-reach communities. Dozens of 4G mast upgrades have been activated thanks to UK Government funding through the Shared Rural Network, helping put an end to poor phone signal for rural communities across Scotland.
Life Sciences sector attracts over £3 billion in new public-private investment in 12 months, reflecting international confidence in UK science and innovation. Life Sciences sector attracts more than £3 billion in new public-private investment in just 12 months, reflecting international confidence in the UK’s world-class science, innovation and health ecosystem.
For a few days it looked as though the worst might be over. Oil prices had fallen back, hopes of diplomacy were growing, and motorists and households across Britain were beginning to wonder whether fuel costs might finally ease after months of uncertainty.
UK Export Finance provided over £11 billion in new financing last year, helping UK companies to export and grow. Up to 85,000 jobs and £6.4 billion to national GDP supported by UKEF financing as part of the government’s Growth Mission.
The UK Government has just approved the second‑largest solar farm in the country, but that announcement applies only to England, because large onshore energy planning is devolved. Scotland has its own planning system and its own renewable‑energy priorities — and that means big solar farms are far less common here.
Rachel Springall, Finance Expert at Moneyfactscompare.co.uk, comments on the latest UK Residential Market Survey from Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS). “The supply of homes coming onto the market is beginning to thin, with both new instructions and market appraisals moving deeper into negative territory.
Proposals for a new independent veterinary ombudsman to give pet owners stronger rights. Millions of pet owners will benefit from the most significant overhaul of veterinary regulation in six decades, as the government today (Thursday 9 July 2026) publishes its White Paper setting out its vision for a thriving and fairer veterinary sector.
The cost of keeping a pet in the UK has risen sharply over the last few years, and the reasons are now well‑documented across veterinary, welfare, and insurance data. The increases are real, significant, and driven by several structural pressures — not just general inflation.
Virgin Media has been fined by Ofcom for making it too difficult for customers to leave, giving misleading information about cancellation fees, and failing to handle complaints properly. For Caithness‑Business readers, the takeaway is straightforward: this ruling confirms long‑standing customer‑service problems that many households and small firms have already experienced.
With more than 80% of global trade by volume being transported by sea, maritime shipping lanes are indispensable to the world economy. That fact was starkly illustrated by the war in Iran, which saw Tehran effectively close the Strait of Hormuz to commercial traffic and Washington respond with a blockade of Iranian ports.