Thank you, Andrew, and good afternoon to everyone. For the fourth quarter of 2024, we reported a GAAP net loss of $29.8 million on revenues of $109.3 million. On an adjusted non-GAAP basis, we reported net income of $3.6 million for the fourth quarter of 2024. For the year 2024, we reported a GAAP net loss of $83.1 million, which is at the low end of our GAAP guidance range for 2024 of $81 million, and this is despite having a non-cash write-down of a couple of equity security investments for $8 million in the fourth quarter of 2024. Also, keep in mind that the 2024 results are non-cash stock-based Amazon warrant charges were approximately $61 million of that $83 million loss. Our adjusted EBITDA of $76.6 million for the year 2024 exceeded the top-end of our 2024 guidance range of $72 million which was a nice upside finish to the year. In the fourth quarter, we continued to experience strong results from our fueling operations plus we saw an increase in fuel volumes in the fourth quarter, so we got the double effect of continued good margins on higher-volume. The results of our RNG Upstream business for 2024 came in as expected, right in the middle of our guidance range from a GAAP and a non-GAAP EBITDA standpoint. From a cash standpoint, we finished 2024 with $217 million in unrestricted cash and investments, with $100 million available to draw on our debt facility plus there's $129 million of cash off-balance sheet in our RNG JVs with BP and Maas Energy. And our long-term debt was $303 million at the end of 2024. Our capital expenditures for 2024 were $57 million, that's net of grant money received and net of contributions that we received from our joint development partner Tourmaline for the build-out of CNG stations in Western Canada. In 2025, we expect CapEx spend to be about $30 million reflecting mainly the completion of Amazon dedicated stations in 2024. Capital expenditures for RNG Upstream projects that we own plus contributions that we made into RNG joint ventures was approximately $48 million for 2024. This is a little shy of previous estimates, purely due to the timing of when the projects needed funding. In 2025, we estimate RNG Upstream capital expenditures to be $104 million. We presented our 2025 earnings outlook in our press release that was filed on Form 8-K today, so you can see the GAAP guidance and the non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA guidance with a reconciliation between the two amounts. We also break our guidance down further between our fuel distribution business and our RNG upstream business, that RNG upstream business includes both our share of equity-method investments in RNG production and Clean Energy-owned RNG production projects. I'd like to make some important points for 2025; number one, and to repeat ourselves, our 2025 guidance does not include the alternative-fuel tax credit, which in 2024 was approximately $24 million of AFTC revenue. Both GAAP and non-GAAP included the $24 million of alternative-fuel tax credit revenue in 2024. So to be comparative, excluding the AFTC from 2024 would take the GAAP loss to $107 million and adjusted EBITDA to $53 million as starting points when comparing to our outlook for 2025. And then second, Andrew alluded to this that we're seeing about a 20% decline in average RIN prices for 2025 that results in approximate $10 million reduction in RIN revenue for 2025 versus 2024. And RIN price volatility, of course, is certainly part of our environment and we do quite well on RIN revenues, but just wanted to point out this dynamic for 2025. We are estimating RINs in the $2.40 range for 2025 versus the average that we saw in 2024 of around $3.10. For the California LCFS, we see a little upside, we hope, when we look at 2025, where we are estimating California LCFS prices in the low $70 for 2025 versus in 2024, where we saw an average of around $61. This could be a $2 million upside in LCFS revenue over 2024. Third, it's important to understand that we are not anticipating significant incremental volumes from the launch of the X15N Cummins engine for 2025 the most important milestones to observe will be the initial adoption by a wide breadth of fleets, indicating the adoption is taking hold, which should have significant implications down the road. For 2025, we are anticipating 3 million to 5 million fuel gallons being attributed to the X15N but importantly, we see this coming from over 25 fleets, this is a key indicator toward the future and we believe is very exciting and frankly something that was non-existent up until this year. RNG volumes are projected to be around 246 million gallons versus 2024 of 237 million gallons and like we have talked about last year, in our estimate for the 2025, the 246, we do not include an estimate for RNG gallons that we will fuel to customers outside our network and on occasion, that does happen, and in 2024, for example, we had about 9 million gallons of what I'll call kind of wholesale RNG gallons, but we're not budgeting that in 2025. So from a comparability standpoint, excluding the 9 million gallons from 2024, that would bring the growth rate for 2025 closer to 7.5%. We may get some of those gallons and we serve the market well that way because we're a big mover of RNG. We don't forecast it. So it can look not comparable sometimes. And then as we mentioned previously on our RNG upstream expectations for 2025, our volume expectations is that we would produce 4 million to 6 million gallons in 2025. That's the gross gallons being produced at principally the six operating projects. And as a reminder, we take all of those gallons into our fueling network. We're not estimating any revenues from - at our dairy projects for the production tax credit as Andrew indicated, and we will see how the guidance or the rules come down on that and as to whether we get to put any in 2025. And then lastly, on the RNG upstream, approximately 50% of the earnings and our guidance outlook for the upstream is coming from our large dairy in Idaho, where we are providing operating services while we construct, so that's a little bit of a drag on the GAAP and adjusted EBITDA amounts. Now that project is expected to come online at the end of 2025 and then we will begin the monetization process in '26, and of course, expect to curtail and exceed those operating costs that we're experiencing to date and in '25. Our consolidated revenues, we're looking at to be around $400 million for 2025 which our revenues, of course, are also impacted by not having any alternative-fuel tax credit in the 2025 guidance and also somewhat on the, kind of, net lower environmental credit revenue that has an impact on that revenue. So we're expecting around $400 million for 2025. And then lastly, you will note a larger depreciation expense that's estimated for 2025, and that is primarily associated with our possible exit from the pilot stations that Andrew mentioned and the accelerated depreciation that would occur for the sites that we exit. And with that, operator, let's turn the call over to questions.