Thank you, John. Third quarter 2024 operating cash flow was $72.1 million or $60.5 million before changes in working capital, with the latter increasing by 5% quarter-over-quarter. The increase was driven by higher oil production volumes, lower total unit costs, improved hedge settlements and lower income tax payments, partially offset by a 12% decline in average realized prices, including higher gas sales volumes and negative realized prices. We reinvested 50% of operating cash flow before working capital changes into upstream CapEx on an accrual basis and 38% on a cash CapEx basis. Hence, we converted 62% of that cash flow to $38 million of free cash flow. That repeats approximately the record levels set last quarter despite the significantly lower prices this quarter. Year-to-date, we've converted 56% of operating cash flow before working capital changes to $99 million of free cash flow or $133 million of free cash flow for the last 12 months. So we're reinvesting less than half our after-tax cash flow and still growing production volumes, but more importantly, growing our free cash flow. We believe this combination of lower spending with higher volumes and free cash flow is a useful indicator of asset quality and capital efficiency. The $99 million of free cash flow this year is 2.7 times the amount -- the same metric, I mean, through the first 9 months of 2023. And the $133 million of last 12 months free cash flow corresponds with approximately 21% yield on our equity value as of the close yesterday even after the 8% 1-day increase in the stock price. Generating significant free cash flow while still investing for growth has been a key objective for our team and our company this year, and we're proud to be delivering on the objective. Operating income this quarter was impacted by the impairment related to the EOR project discontinuation, most of which was non-cash. On a go-forward basis, we'll save approximately $3 million per year on avoided CO2 cost, which I'll note was previously capitalized, not in OpEx, but it will increase free cash flow going forward. Net income was down by 24% or $8 million quarter-over-quarter as gains on commodity hedges, about $23 million unrealized and $1 million realized, absorbed some of the reduction from the impairment. Adjusted net income, which excludes the impact of the impairment and the hedging gains, was down by 5% quarter-over-quarter. We reduced the value of debt by $35 million this quarter to $300 million. Debt to total enterprise value at quarter end was 34% with 1.07 times debt-to-LTM adjusted EBITDAX. The credit facility utilization is now 35%, down from 65% a year ago, and total debt has been reduced by $100 million over the past year. We'll look to pursue a normal course extension on the credit facility by early in the new year. The book value of shareholders' equity increased to $507 million or $24 per share based on 21.5 million shares outstanding. Dividends in the third quarter accounted for $8 million or 22% of free cash flow. A final allocation of capital in the third quarter was $1.5 million contributed to the Power JV. Moving on to guidance. At the beginning of the year, we announced our annual plan, which called for 10% year-over-year oil volume growth while cutting capital spending by 10%. Our current full year guidance range based on 3 quarters of actuals plus 1 quarter of guidance for the fourth quarter calls for increasing full year 2024 oil production by 14% to 15% over full year 2023 production. Our guidance range for fourth quarter '24 exit rate is up by 14% to 19% over fourth quarter 2023 levels. Approximately 85% of annual oil volume growth can be attributed to organic development funded by CapEx with 15% attributed to the bolt-on acquisition earlier in the year, which is not in our original plan. Adjusting to exclude for the acquisition, for illustrative purposes, we'd still be at 12% to 13% annual oil growth, so still beating our original goal. Fourth quarter OpEx and overhead cost guidance ranges were both reduced from prior quarter levels, primarily owing to improvements experienced in the third quarter and to a lesser extent, to the benefit of the increased gas sales volumes, which has the effect of increasing the denominator on unit cost metrics. Our fourth quarter CapEx range implies a year-over-year reduction of 20% using the low end or 12% using the high end of spending. Our full year CapEx range did increase from last quarter on account of the gas compression project that John discussed, which will have longer-term benefits. Adjusting to exclude for that new compression project, for illustrative purposes, as we didn't contemplate it earlier in the year, then we'd be looking at a huge 21% to 29% annual CapEx reduction from last year, yet still achieving organic growth. Back to you, Bobby, for closing. Thank you.