Thank you, John. Second quarter operating cash flow was $51.6 million or $57.6 million before changes in working capital declining very modestly by 1% quarter-over-quarter. Second quarter adjusted EBITDAX was $73 million higher by 3 million dollars quarter-over-quarter with the EBITDAX margin improving from 67% to 70% from the first to second quarter. Year-to-date total oil and gas hedge negative settlements improved by 77% or $6 million versus the six months of 2023 despite higher oil prices representing another driver of cash flow improvement year-over-year. Natural gas and NGL realized prices turned slightly negative for the quarter driven by weaker market fundamentals both domestically generally and more specifically in the West Texas region leading to wider differentials relative to the Henry Hub Index. Midstream counterparty fees are then allocated to this pre-fee revenue which is how we arrive at slightly negative revenue. While disappointing, here are a few ways we think about this and how we're working to manage the exposure. First, on an absolute basis the negative $1 million of combined gas and NGL revenue in the second quarter is dwarfed by $106 million of oil revenue which is up $9 million dollars quarter-over-quarter. Second, the negative gas revenue was more than offset by $1.2 million of positive gas hedge settlements during the quarter. And third, big picture, this is one of the reasons we're pursuing the natural gas power generation project. Low or negative cost feedstock gas can lead to very attractive power economics which can ultimately work as an additional hedge for us. Moving on, reinvestment rate of operating cash flow into upstream CapEx was 37% on an accrual basis and 34% on a cash CapEx basis. Hence, we converted 66% of operating cash flow to $38 million of free cash flow in the second quarter. That's a single quarter record for us and is very exciting. Year to date we've converted 53% of operating cash flow to $62 million of free cash flow or $126 million the last 12 months, reinforcing this excellent capital efficiency. In the second quarter, we allocated 20% of free cash flow to dividends and 52% to debt pay down with the balance allocated to partially fund the power JV and the asset acquisition. Beyond free cash flow, we've benefited from $25 million of net proceeds from the equity raise. So, the use of funds for the quarter included $4 million to build cash, $20 million to reduce debt, $7.5 million for the dividend, $18 million for the acquisition, $10 million in contributions to the power joint venture. The credit facility utilization is now at 43%, down from 66% a year ago, representing a significant increase in liquidity. We've paid down our senior notes by $25 million or 12.5% since issuance. Debt to TEV at quarter end was 39%, 1.2 times debt to LTM adjusted EBITDAX. We will continue to pay down debt, not because we believe we're over levered, but rather because we prefer the flexibility and optionality that the extra liquidity affords. Looking ahead, we updated guidance and the written materials provided. I'll offer just a few comments to provide a recap from the prior guidance. At the beginning of the year, we announced our annual plan, which called for 10% year-over-year oil volume growth while cutting spending by 10%. The current midpoint guidance calls for increasing oil production by 13% while reducing spending by more than 20% year-over-year. Admittedly, volumes benefit modestly from the small acquisition, which wasn't in the original plan. That will contribute to two-thirds of the year, which equates to only 200 to 300 barrels per day on average when viewed on an annual basis. And adjusting to exclude for that, we're still at about 11% annual oil growth. Meanwhile, the CapEx reduction continues to improve. So essentially, we're forecasting that we'll achieve the plan volumes with less activity and less spending. We believe this will continue to translate to meaningful free cash flow. At $75 WTI for the balance of the year, we currently forecast full year 2024 free cash flow in the area of approximately $115 million, corresponding to year-over-year growth of approximately 65%, and corresponding to about 22% yield on the market value of our equity as of yesterday. By comparison, median of E&Ps across all sizes, and excluding the gas year companies, has consensus free cash flow growth of approximately 10% year-over-year, and a current yield on equity value of approximately 12%, based on estimates using public data. The average across the S&P 500 companies is 5% year-over-year free cash flow growth, and 5% yield on equity value. We consider these some of the more distinguishing metrics for our company, as compared to the wider market. I'll turn it back to Bobby for closing. Thank you.