Thank you, Bob. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. Well, for the first quarter, the good news is that our underlying growth and fundamentals were strong. Bad news is our first quarter results were impacted by an anomaly and hopefully, a onetime occurrence, which was a historic spike in natural gas prices in California, resulting in a $10 million compression in our profits. A confluence of events, including unusually cold weather in California, the lack of natural gas storage capacity by the gas utilities and the El Paso pipeline that supplies 20% of the natural gas to California being out of commission. All contributed to cause the price of natural gas to spike as high as $50 an MMBtu here in California in January. The move from $7 an MMBtu in November to January was a 600% increase, translating into an increase in our costs at the pump from approximately $1 a diesel equivalent to $7.50. We did everything we could to mitigate this unprecedented chain of events that impacted the cost of our commodity. But California continues to be our biggest market by far, with the largest agencies in the state, dozens of refuse, truck fleets, airport vehicles and a growing number of heavy-duty trucks, all fueling at our network of 150 stations across the state. We passed along some of the increase in fuel cost to these customers, but we felt we can only do so much. Good news is that they understood in large part, because every household and business in California was also seeing their gas bills at least tripled, if not quadrupled during January. The other important point of this historic increase is that the price began to moderate in February, although there were still some balancing effects that we were feeling. The El Paso pipeline is back online and gas utilities have filed plans for additional storage. And as of March, the price of natural gas at the SoCal Citygate was back closer to $7 in MMBtu. Something else that has been impacting our bottom line and that we discussed in the last quarter's call is the price of the environmental credits. I know these are followed closely by many on this call. And as you know, there has been a nice turnaround in the California low carbon fuel credit price recently, about a 35% increase. But for the majority of Q1, prices were on the low end and had an impact on our adjusted EBITDA when compared to a year ago. By March, credit prices were in line with our plan, if not exceeding. In the first quarter, we sold over 53 million gallons of renewable natural gas, which was 34% more than we sold in the same quarter of last year. We won several large transit contracts, converted existing customers from traditional CNG more profitable RNG and opened additional RNG stations where Amazon heavy-duty trucks are the anchor customer. Our revenue for the quarter was $132 million, $48 million more than Q1 2022, but this was heavily impacted on the plus side by the commodity price in California that I just spoke about. By the time we got to March, we saw our overall business begin to right itself and track the plan that we had at the beginning of the year. Our balance sheet remains in very good shape with $220 million in cash and investments, addition to $132 million cash off balance sheet at our RNG supply joint ventures. As I spoke about last quarter, our first RNG supply project, Del Rio Dairy in Texas is now online. We now have 3 dairies in commissioning and 2 others in final construction. By summertime, we should have 6 projects producing RNG. Many of you have read about the tragic fire in South Fork Dairy in Texas, where we had plans to build an RNG digester. While we have funded some design, engineering and early equipment purchases for that project, we had not started on-site construction. And we are now working with the dairy owner as he plans to rebuild the barn and repopulate the herd. We will keep you updated on his progress. We've added expertise in construction, project management and origination to our RNG team that are keeping our projects moving along at a good pace. Not only clean energy and our customers remain bullish on this ultra-clean [indiscernible], Washington knows the benefits of RNG as well. I hope you saw the announcement that a bill was introduced last month in the U.S. House representatives provide $1 per gallon tax credit for vehicles that use RNG. It's interesting to note that the bipartisan bill is being cosponsored by a Republican member from a rural district, Brian Fitzpatrick. and a Democrat from our urban Southern California District [indiscernible] Linda Sanchez. So members understand both the environmental benefits of RNG, which reduces air pollution and carbon emissions. And that the investment of tens of millions of dollars per new RNG digester benefits their agricultural communities. We believe a companion bill will soon be introduced in the Senate by another bipartisan coalition. 70% of all on-road fuel used in natural gas vehicles in 2022 in the U.S. was RNG, which is a great testament to its acceptance and the ease to transition it to existing fueling infrastructure and fleets. I think a tax credit will be a big boost to the adoption of RNG if it passes. We're also very excited about the rollout of the new Cummins 15-liter natural gas engine. It seems like a week doesn't go by that we don't hear some good -- some of the country's largest fleets like Wal-mart, Werner, NICE we are taking delivery of these preproduction 15-liter engines. I've spoken multiple times on these calls about the importance of this 15-liter engine to the heavy-duty truck market because it delivers the power, torque and economics the industry needs. And it's incredibly gratifying to see the early response. A few weeks ago, I was with the CEO of the largest trucking company in Canada and a customer of ours, . And he is anxiously waiting the delivery of 2 test 15-liter engines in a few months. I've gone on a little long, and my goal is to keep my remarks shorter, giving us more time to get to your questions. But I do want to end by highlighting why I was in Canada, which was for a significant announcement with the largest natural gas company in Canada and 1 of the most successful energy companies in North America over the last couple of decades, Tourmaline. Mike Rose, Tourmaline's Founder and CEO, and I announced that the 2 companies are partnering to build a network of natural gas stations across Western Canada primarily targeting the heavy-duty truck market. We've identified locations for the first 4 with 1 already operating in Edmonton and have plans to eventually add 15 or so stations that will be co-owned by the 2 companies. Clean Energy will build and operate in the stations. We are very bullish about this new partnership with Tourmaline as well as our overall business. As I detailed at the top of my remarks, we experienced some headwinds at the beginning of the year, but the momentum has already shifted back. RNG continues to be a breakthrough fueling solution, allowing fleets to decarbonize quickly and affordably. No other company is better positioned for the RNG future with our expanding low-carbon supply and our growing fueling infrastructure. Thank you for your time today. And now I'll hand the call over to Bob.