Financial daily Kauppalehti runs a front page headline on the Russian energy company Rosatom and its vice chief Kirill Komarov, who says that funding for the Finnish Fennovoima power plant cannot run out.
The continuing woes of the Russian economy have previously been heralded as a threat to the nuclear project intended to be based in Hanhikivi, Northern Ostrobothnia. Komarov says in Kauppalehti, however, that there is no need to worry.
"We transferred 900 million euros into the project in the spring. We have promised 2.4 billion euros in total, and all installments will be paid," Komarov says in the magazine.
The money comes from Russia's squirreled away welfare funds, which are government savings meant for a rainy day. But a new American investor, turbine supplier General Electric Ahlstrom, won out the bidding war and is putting 300-400 million euros into Fennovoima.
The Fennovoima project has been under criticism for its poorly maintained run-up to the building permit it still needs to secure despite safety concerns.
Teeth and sleep
Meanwhile regional paper Aamulehti headlines its Monday edition with the claim that Finns go to the dentist less often than before; especially visits to private practitioners have gone down, leading to poorer mouth care.
The reason, the paper says, is a rise in pricing. Special researcher Jaakko Koivumäki says the hikes bode ill.
"Even with the cuts already implemented a large number of small to mid-range earners are slipping away from preventive and regular mouth care," Koivumäki says in the paper.
Public dental care is free for underage patients, but national pension institution Kela will only cover 15 percent of dental costs, compared to 31 percent in 2014.
Finns aren't doing much better in the sleep department either, according to daily Helsingin Sanomat. Sleeping badly all week and trying to catch up over the weekend doesn't work, the article says, and some 20 percent of Finns suffer from an hour's sleep deficiency chronically.
Every third adult has some sort of sleep trouble, and younger and younger people are reporting difficulties.
Sleepless people report symptoms of annoyance and depression, and lack of sleep heightens the risk of obesity and diseases such as diabetes.
Autumnal warmth
Tabloid Ilta-Sanomat runs a weather story without the usual weeks-long predictions; the five-day forecast shows over 15-degree conditions in most of the country. The coming fall is likely to be warmer than usual, a meteorologist says.
"It looks as though we're looking at a rainier autumn, with a one-degree rise in the median temperature," says meteorologist Juha Tuomola.
Eastern European weather conditions will be affecting Finland, too; warm air is on its way.