Thank you, Heather and good afternoon, everyone. I'm so pleased with the continued strong performance of results the EVgo team has achieved in the second quarter. Before we get into the details, I want to address the CEO succession plan we announced today. As you've likely seen, I've decided to retire as CEO and from the Board effective following our next earnings call expected around November 9th. After thorough consideration and process, the Board has decided that Badar Khan will be the next CEO of EVgo. Badar joined the Board of EVgo shortly after we went public and served as our lead Independent Director since that past. I just want to say that it has been a highlight of my career leading EVgo from a 50 person private enterprise focused on a then nation EV sector in 2017 to what it is today, a market-leading public company serving nearly 700,000 customers across the trillion-dollar EV market. With EVgo’s talented team, we built a durable business yielding unprecedented growth of charger deployments, network utilization and company revenues. The company's next opportunity lies in scaling a business to meet the ever-increasing and evolving fast-charging demand. And I'm absolutely confident that EVgo will be in extremely capable hands with Badar as CEO. I've been fortunate to know and to work with Badar in his capacity as a member of EVgo’s Board and I've seen firsthand the breadth of his talent. For those of you who are unfamiliar with Badar, he's a 25-year veteran of the clean energy transformation and utility space. Badar has significant executive leadership experience overseeing large customer-facing energy organizations like National Grid USA and Direct Energy. This experience aligns, ideally with the opportunity ahead for EVgo. He has a understanding of the dynamics of our business and is the right person to build on our successes and work with our outstanding executive team to take EVgo to the next level. He embodies the energy and vision that will take this company far. I want to offer my sincerest congratulations to my friend, and colleague Badar on this appointment and express to all of you my enthusiasm for the opportunity to continue working closely with Badar and my fellow EVgo colleagues and management team to ensure a smooth transition. I will remain fully engaged in day-to-day CEO until Badar formally steps into the role in November. After which, I will serve in an active advisory capacity until the end of the year. I'm grateful that we are able to take these steps and put in place a transition plan that will set the company up for continued success. Let’s now move into the discussion of EVgo’s tremendous second quarter results. EVgo had a phenomenal second quarter. Our growth momentum continued across all key areas of the business. Stalls in operation, customers, utilization, network throughput and revenue EVgo achieved over $50 million in revenue, and incredible nearly five-fold year-over-year increase. And network throughput more than doubled versus Q2 last year. Results like this demonstrates the ability of EVgo’s DC fast-charging business model to scale rapidly alongside EV adoption. We expected an inflection point in our business that is coming faster than many anticipated. Currently, they're under 3 million EVs on US roads today. Just imagine the possibilities for EVgo, when electric vehicles are adopted at scale over the next 10 years and we're even better positioned to capitalize on our first mover advantage. Coupled with our rigorous underwriting criteria for asset deployment and multiple possible capital funding vehicles, the future of EVgo is brighter than ever. It is truly exciting to be accelerating the electrification of transportation in the United States through EV charging. EVgo’s network of over 2,500 operational DC stalls delivered an impressive 24.9 gigawatt hours in the second quarter with strength in all sectors. Retail throughput more than doubled and fleets throughput grew 4x. Total charging sessions on the network increase, 85% year-over-year. Throughput on the network grew faster than session growth and significantly higher than operational stall growth and EV sales to MOD, the growth in throughput accelerated from the impressive growth demonstrated in the first quarter. In the second quarter, we achieved double-digit utilization across the entire network for the first time. Utilization exceeded 15%, at 30% of EVgo’s charging cells in June and with only around 1% EV adoption in the US. EVgo is experiencing mid-teens utilization and above in California, as well as markets outside of California, including Las Vegas, San Antonio, Dallas, Houston and Hartford New Haven. 27 different metropolitan areas had utilization above 10% in June. This growth in - EVgo we've got over 10 years of experience in navigating the complexities of fast-charging, and the know-how and relationships to rapidly expand that network to meet the needs of EV drivers and shareholders alike. Our key strengths include, first, EVgo has built a growth engine. We identified great locations. We work collaboratively with OEM, utilities, suppliers, housing contractors to construct and operate charging and construction. Definitely, EVgo is a financially disciplined operator. We will only build sites when they are projected to meet our double-digit return requirements. Third, EVgo is a technology innovator. As a leader in a young and evolving sector, EVgo has developed best-in-class hardware IT for charging all EVs and proprietary software to create a seamless charging experience. This includes our mobile approximately, Autocharge+ EVgo Advantage, Rideshare EVgo Reservations and EVgo Inside. Our in-house technology developed under the direction of a world-class engineering team is a major differentiator in the industry. And fourth EVgo ReNew, our comprehensive network upgrading program is in full flight. After assessing our original equipment in the field, we've upgraded or replaced over 350 stalls at strategically important locations and will continue to update the network as technology evolves. As you know, EVgo currently operates one of the largest DCFC charging networks in the United States. This collection of nationally distributed assets will deliver more throughput and generate more cash as new EVs are sold, driving operating leverage, increasing cash yields and driving higher returns on invested capital. Through our portfolio partners EVgo currently has thousands of prospective locations in our pipeline that pass our internal hurdles for investments. This pipeline of locations provides ample opportunity for EVgo to capture more market share and create shareholder value by applying the same rigorous principles of financial discipline we've deployed over the past six years. We are in the very early innings for this sector with much, much more demand to come. Today, there are roughly 30,000 test charges in the US and by 2030, industry analysts estimates the country will need more than 300,000. No single company will meet that demand alone. But we believe our experience, flywheels and first mover advantages position us to remain a charging leader and we look forward to continuing to execute on our strategy of disciplined investments in the fast-charging space, while continuing to work closely with our OEM partners. Let's turn to an update on General Motors. Our partnership with GM remains strong and we will continue working with GM to expand our charging footprint and bring more fast charging to communities across the U.S. In fact, EVgo and GM announced yesterday that we have reached a milestone of 1,000 DCFC stalls deployed as part of our partnership to-date. The leadership from both EVgo and GM commemorated the occasion with a ribbon cutting in Metro Chicago on Tuesday with speakers from our Utility Partners and the state government joining us. We've added new GM Ultium signage to our chargers, we've identified locations where canopies make sense and we're working together on integrating NACS connected into the network in a timetable that will meet the needs of GM drivers. As you know, EVgo eXtend is our capital light business model where EVgo builds and operates charging stations on behalf of our eXtend partners and its success demonstrates EVgo’s agility to serve evolving market segments in an accretive manner. EVgo’s Seminole, eXtend contract with "Pilot Flying J" is going exceedingly well. We're making progress with the 2,000 cell PSJ program, which translated into considerable revenue for EVgo in this quarter. PSJ’s first sites are commissioned with more coming soon and we expect new locations to be operational in the third quarter. EVgo and Pilot also partners for NEVI Grant application and were recently awarded the majority of funds in the first - in the funding from Ohio. In fact, every PSJ EVgo extend application we jointly submitted has been awarded funds. In addition to eXtend wings for pilot, EVgo and Meijer also teamed up for several eXtend sites in Ohio that were selected for grant awards. Meijer is a great site post the EVgo owned locations and they're seeking to bring EV charging to more of their stores through the eXtended model. Even the national interest around NEVI Grant, EVgo’s business development team is in active commercial discussions with numerous others for eXtend deals. EVgo’s success with PSJ both in terms of network deployment and funding wins has put us in the pole position to partner with retailers who are keen to participate in the fast-charging game. On fleet, EVgo continues to scale our strong partnerships with Uber and Lyft, making electrification accessible for Rideshare drivers via partner-specific charging rates across the country. Growth in this segment will continue to climb as more electric vehicles become available to Ride share drivers. Our fleet hubs business also continued to grow with an exciting milestone crossed this quarter when the EVgo team operationalized a new dedicated 18 stall charging hub site in San Francisco with one of our autonomous vehicle partners. This take-or-pay contract didn't anchor in the hub's business, which we see as a significant area of growth in the medium-term as AV robo taxis and last mile delivery companies adapted all-electric fleets. And now let's talk a bit about charging technology. Following the European auto sector’s convergence to CCS conductors in 2014 and Tesla’s own switchover to CCS for its European vehicles in 2018 the presumption had been that the US will follow. But last quarter, a number of leading automakers announced plans to migrate to Tesla’s NACS connectors for model year 2025 or 2026 year is to be sold in North America. What does this mean for the EVindustry? Convergence to a standard connector will improve the customer experience and hence accelerate the march toward an all-electric future over the medium term. In the meantime, millions of CCS and CHAdeMO EVs will need to be supported on public fast-charging networks that use. And EVgo will serve them all. And our sustained support for electric for all EVgo currently charges over 50 different models of EVs with a variety of connector types including CCS, CHAdeMO and Tesla. So we already live in a world of multiple connectors and remain committed to serving all EVs. Tests will be integrating NACS connected into the EVgo network as soon as they're available and have gone through appropriate reliability and safety testing. Let me turn to financing. To deliver on charging infrastructure’s long-term value opportunity, EVgo is deploying a holistic diversified approach to funding our capital needs. Historically, we have complemented our own investments with OEM partner funding, public grants and regulatory incentive programs. EVgo raised over $123 million in net proceeds through a primary equity offering in Q2. While EVgo was already projected to be well-capitalized through most of 2024, prior to the base, the equity raise bolstered our balance sheet and created runway to pursue a rapidly expanding set of value creating charging investments well into 2025. For 2023, we expect that most EVgo owned stalls that will be energized are being constructed under our General Motors agreement. Under this $97 million program, GM K pays EVgo approximately $33,000 per stall shortly after the stall is operational. This additional source of capital to EVgo contributes roughly 25% of the capital build cost for GM stalls. We are expecting to build roughly 700 GM stalls this year, which would amount to $23 million in cash funding. And as we’ve outlined in previous calls, EVgo has a long history of applying for winning and building charging cells that receive a variety of public, private incentives. Recently, we've highlighted $10 million of Utility Make-Ready Funding and $7.3 million of CALeVIP funding awards, which are only a few examples of the many programs available to EVgo. Emblematic of the massive funding available, the federal government's NEVI program just getting underway is a larger version of the state and local programs EVgo has been successful in securing funds from over the last decades. As a reminder, NEVI funds will be distributed through 50 different state level programs and its passive precedent will take nine to 12 months to get from RFPs the selection of awardees. Following that, contracts are executed between State Department of Transportation and awardees, which too can be a multi-month process. And then, station construction can get underway. The fund is typically reimbursed to awardees after construction is complete and stations are energized. All this said, EVgo’s combination of market leadership, grant application experience and track record of being a good partner to government policymakers positions us well for securing NEVI Grant and we are off to a good start. EVgo and our eXtend partners were awarded $13.8 million for twenty sites under the Ohio NEVI program winning. 75% of the awards in that state’s first round. This was a tremendous success for our operations, grants, network planning and public policy teams. Several States, including Colorado, and Pennsylvania are reviewing NEVI applications right now and are expected to announce awardees in the coming months. Numerous others, including Virginia, Georgia, Oklahoma, Indiana and Michigan are earlier in the process with requests for proposals or qualifications currently open, suggesting projects could start sometime in the first half of 2024 after contracts are signed. In terms of government tax credits, Section 30C of the IRS code, officially the alternative refueling property tax credit can offset up to 30% or $100,000 per stall of charging infrastructure costs. And now has a provision allowing transferability of the credit to qualified and registered taxpaying entities. As such, 30C credits are considered when EVgo makes investment decisions on where to extend our network. We anticipate detailed guidance from the IRS before the end of 2023. Notably, diverse funding sources can be stacked, for example, assaulted as part of EVgo’s GM program received a $33,000 CapEx offset. In addition, some locations may be awarded NEVI Grants based on their corridor locations, as well as be eligible for a 30C credit. Availability of multiple funding sources extends the geographic footprint of stations that pass EVgo’s investment hurdles and makes those locations more profitable, a genuine accelerant to EVgo’s business. With billions of dollars of funding support becoming available from federal and state governments we're excited to put more capital to work to increase shareholder value. And now, I'd like to turn the call over to Dennis, EVgo’s world-class COO to highlight some of the key elements of the growth engine we’ve built at EVgo.