Thank you, Jim. Good afternoon and thank you everyone for joining us today. Let me start with the latest updates in our Water business. In desalination, we continue to be on track for this year. The Middle East remains the foundation of our desalination sales, but as water scarcity continues to increase, other regions are clearly emerging. We’ve previously spoken on the potential of Asia a number of times, which remains true. However, we have not spoken in much detail about North African countries, such as Morocco, Egypt, and Algeria, who are showing real promise as well. Morocco is increasingly turning to desalination to ease the impact of its multi‐year drought, which is the worst the country has seen in 40 years. Reservoir levels in Morocco have fallen by half from about 62% in 2013 to 32% in 2022. Water supplies in Morocco have fallen below 650 cubic meters per capita from 2,500 in 1960 and are expected to decline throughout this decade. Today, Morocco relies on its surface and underground water for nearly all its water needs, but these sources are quickly drying up. They have recently announced aggressive plans to invest in desalination in the coming years. We are already seeing growth in revenue from Morocco in 2023 and 2024 and expect to see that growth accelerate considerably by 2025 to 2026. We have previously discussed Egypt’s plan to invest in desalination as a response to the damming of the Blue Nile by Ethiopia. In December of last year, Egypt announced plans to award 21 additional desalination plants this year, to be commissioned in the coming four years, totaling 3.3 million cubic meters of daily production in the first phase of a program that could ultimately reach nearly 9 million cubic meters by 2050. Despite some of their recent macroeconomic difficulties, we see considerable potential in Egypt, starting in strength in 2024 and accelerating through 2026. In response to its own water crisis, Algeria has a goal of meeting 50% of their water demand with desalination by 2030. Five plants in the coming years could increase capacity by over 1.5 million cubic meters of production per day. We are currently bidding on each of these projects, and they could exceed $20 million in revenue this year. These three countries simply highlight the growing need for desalination to combat the increasing scarcity of water around the globe. Despite all their efforts building dams, working on water re‐use, reducing water usage, as well as other initiatives, desalination remains the single most reliable source of water that is decoupled by drought and unpredictable weather patterns. It is this types of decision being made, by countries all over the world that underpins our confidence in desalination in the coming years. As interest in desalination grows, we are actively seeking ways to serve potential new, or adjacent markets as we discussed last call, such as brackish desalination. But as we expand into a wider subset of smaller desalination and wastewater projects, the average size of each project will become smaller compared to our traditional mega project growth trajectory that we have ridden the past decade. Increasing volume across a larger number of smaller projects, and many new customers, means we must look at new ways to serve our customers more efficiently, as well as to expand our sales reach. As an example of our new focus, we recently launched our Power Model Pro platform, a powerful and easy‐to‐use cloud‐based configurator tool that enables the optimization of desalination and industrial wastewater hydraulic pumping systems. This platform allows customers to design and select the optimal Energy Recovery products, project equipment performance, and model energy consumption for specific projects. We believe this tool will prove very beneficial to our smaller OEM customers and will help enable continued revenue growth in this vertical channel. Now, let’s turn to wastewater. We are excited about the evolution of our pipeline in wastewater. We are currently tracking potential projects in over 20 different industries across multiple countries around the world, for potential shipments in 2023 and 2024. China and India remain the top two countries of focus. However, the experience and knowledge we gained in these two countries, combined with our new product offerings, is now allowing us to target other regions. We now have a growing pipeline in North America, Europe, the Middle East, and South America. Industries span from our growing lithium battery market to chemical manufacturing, textiles, mining, agriculture, and municipal wastewater. To respond to the volume of potential projects we are seeing, we are beginning to make significant additions to our sales teams in China and India, and we are beginning to look at expanding our team in the Americas. These increases should help to maintain the momentum we are seeing in this market. We must remain on our targeted growth curve in the coming years, and expand that curve, if possible, as we continue our aggressive push over the next three years. Now, let’s turn to CO2. The first quarter was a milestone one for our CO2 business. First, we signed and announced our first exclusive distribution agreement with the Belgium company Fieuw Koeltechniiek. Second, Epta Group, our initial European partner, and the Italian independent global leader in commercial refrigeration, introduced their XTE product line. The XTE line specifically incorporates our PX G1300 in order to cut energy consumption and enhance the performance of Epta’s systems. Epta introduced the XTE at EuroShop, one of the key industry trade shows that occurs every couple of years in Germany. According to the Spanish food distribution publication INDISA, the XTE was one of the great attractions for attendees and helped lead to a flood of activity from refrigeration manufacturers, contractors, and grocery stores at our booth. The validation by both OEMs of our technology is an important and key step as we evolve this business from an idea to a commercial success. Building on this momentum, we believe we are on-track to get deployments into additional supermarket chains this year, and in multiple countries throughout Europe and North America. As I said last quarter, these initial deployments are critical to further confirming our addressable market and drive to volume sales in 2024. As our PX becomes better known, we are finding new applications for our product within and outside of the supermarket chain. As an example, we have spoken on several occasions about how the PX will be applicable to many other cooling applications, such as in the industrial market. A new deployment in Europe of multiple PX G by our partner Fieuw should be commissioned this summer at a manufacturing facility in the food industry. This opens a new channel for us to grow our PX G sales in the coming years, and we are now beginning to evaluate the likely considerable potential of this market. We do not believe this is where the versatility of the PX G ends. Every such move into a new market will allow us to further build and collect data and accelerate market adoption of our technology. On our last call, I discussed the fact that last summer some supermarkets actually shutdown due to unexpected and historic high temperature spikes and the strain placed on their cooling systems. The unpredictability of weather, and the increasing chance of repeated high temperature spikes, means that supermarkets will have an increasingly difficult time building refrigeration systems that are future proof in our new climate reality. Our PX G provides one answer to this growing problem, helping to ensure that these systems can handle these new unpredictable temperature spikes. If a store can avoid closing, that provides immediate value on their purchase of a PX G, while also protecting their operating margin and allow them to sleep well at night. A Canadian supermarket chain who was forced to close some of their stores last year, showed interest in using the PX G as a backstop to protect them against their own system failures on the hottest days. Our PX G is scheduled to be installed at one of their locations early this summer. Interestingly, many of the locations in which we are installing our PX G’s are retrofits of existing systems. Some of you may remember that in 2021 we initially began talking about the PX G as a retrofit, or bolt‐on as we termed it then, to existing systems. For a period, we had to walk away from this concept as we were not able to incorporate our PX G at a low enough price point on our own. However, with the experience and relationships we have gained over the past 18 months, we may have now found a reasonable path to potentially turn a previously unreachable market into a low‐hanging fruit opportunity. We are seeing considerable interest by both OEMs and contractors in assisting us in tackling this market, which would potentially allow us to address the estimated more than 40,000 CO2 refrigeration systems already installed throughout Europe and North America. This retrofit market could be a critical one for us to drive up demand, and enter the market, quickly. Existing grocery store chains using those previously installed CO2 refrigeration racks, such as Vallarta here in California, have seen first‐hand how the combination of elevated ambient temperatures and high energy costs can significantly erode operating margins. This became an even more critical issue in 2022 following the onset of war in Ukraine and the subsequent spike in energy costs in Europe. We believe the time is right now to drive PX G deployment when grocery chains can realize the greatest benefit and fastest payback to their investment in our technology. However, volume deployment provides an additional challenge: product support. Any new technology introduced to a large mature industry is likely to face unexpected issues during the adaptation stage. Energy Recovery must ensure that the transition occurs as smoothly as possible. As such, we are hiring and training the field engineering and technician staff we need to support this roll-out. We are also focused on developing training for external service technicians on the PX G in order to bring our contractor and OEM partners up to speed on the PX G as quickly and painlessly as possible. The faster we can avoid any potential bumps in our road, the quicker we believe the PX G will be perceived to be the answer to the operating expense concern of the grocery store end‐users. In short, we continue to push hard into this new market, and remain confident in our ability to deliver. We look forward to providing new updates in our July call. With that, let me hand the call over to Josh.