Thank you, Dan. And thank you to everyone on the call today. This was another strong, productive and profitable quarter for Centrus, booking $12.7 million in net income and $98.4 million in revenue. This includes $39.5 million in uranium sales driven by the continued rise in natural uranium prices as global supply remains constrained. So far this year, we've delivered $146.4 million worth of enrichment and natural uranium in our LEU segment, while continuing to refill our pipeline with new orders, thus maintaining the value of our order book at $1 billion through 2030. We are building momentum to our pioneering the HALEU market and delivering a secure, reliable domestic source that will meet the needs of industry as well as the U.S. government. After completing construction of our demonstration cascade of center futures as well as our operational readiness reviews, in June, we secured final approval from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to begin receiving uranium at our site and loading it into the cascade. We are now finishing some final testing activities and expect to begin production and meet our contractual obligation to make 20 kilograms of high-assay, low-enriched uranium or HALEU, by the end of this year. This will be the first U.S. owned U.S. technology enrichment plant to begin production in 70 years. What a fitting way to commemorate the 70th anniversary of President Eisenhower and for speech before the United Nations which set the United States on the path towards global leadership and the responsible deployment of nuclear energy for the benefit of humanity, a path that the Piketon plant can help restore. Once we complete production of the first 20 kilograms of HALEU, we will progress to Phase 2 of our contract, a full year of production at the annual rate of 900 kilograms of HALEU per year. While Phase 1 of the contract requires a 50-50 cost share starting in Phase II, the Department of Energy will pay the full cost of production plus an incentive fee in exchange for the output of the cascade. So the U.S. government will become our first customer. Indeed, it is our hope and expectation that this will be the first of many customers for this powerful fuel, 3 tablespoons of which could support 1 person's electricity needs for life, all while emitting no carbon. Subject to the availability of appropriation, the contract also gives the department the option to purchase up to 9 additional production years from the cascade. While the output of the demonstration cascade will be modest, it is urgently needed. The Department of Energy has made a multibillion-dollar commitment to 9 different HALEU fuel reactor designs and critically need the HALEU to support reactor demonstrations and fuel qualification for those reactors. The overall need for HALEU, even for just the first round of demonstration reactors significantly exceeds what we can produce from the demonstration cascade. So a great deal, more capacity will be needed and soon. In June, the Department of Energy issued a draft request for proposals outlining a program to purchase up to 145,000 kilograms of HALEU over a 10-year period. Fully implementing this program would require significantly more money than Congress has thus far appropriated but the inflation reduction act signed last year included an important $700 million down payment on that effort. We look forward to applying whenever that RFP is issued, and we believe that we have a compelling case to make since we have the only site in the United States licensed for HALEU production and can expand HALEU production quickly. A commercial scale cascade with 120 centrifuges can produce about 6 metric tons per year. We can place the first online within 42 months of securing funding and can deploy an additional HALEU cascade every 6 months after that. We have not seen any faster timetable in the industry and speed is a crucial factor here since reactor developers need significant quantities of HALEU in the next few years. We have consistently said that establishing a domestic HALEU supply chain will require a public-private partnership, and we are doing our part. Just last month, we took an important step towards securing additional private sector support for a potential expansion of HALEU production. As many of you know, on July 17, and Centrus and TerraPower, a leading nuclear innovation company founded by Bill Gates announced that we have signed an MOU to accelerate joint efforts to create domestic commercial scale HALEU production. With support from the Department of Energy, TerraPower is building a commercial scale Natrium reactor in Kemmerer, Wyoming. Under this MOU, our two companies are evaluating how to expand our capacity in Piketon, so that we can deliver HALEU in the quantities and on the time line necessary to support the '23 operation date for the Natrium reactor. With that, let me turn things over to Philip who will go into more detail about our numbers for the quarter.