Good morning everyone and thank you for joining us today. I want to take a moment to welcome Paul Dobson. Paul joined as our CFO at the beginning of October after a fulsome search. I've enjoyed partnering with him over the last six weeks at EVgo and I know investors and analysts alike will appreciate his knowledge, strategic perspective, and stewardship of capital. I also want to address the outcome of the elections last week. In summary, we see little to no impact on our business relative to the illustrative targets that we've previously communicated for $200 million in adjusted EBITDA in three to five years’ time. Our largest states outside California in terms of throughput and some of the fastest growing states of material size remain Texas, Florida, and Arizona. We now have operational stalls in 40 states, all of which are seeing strong growth in throughput, which suggests to us that EV adoption is occurring throughout the United States. The current administration has had two primary programs to provide funding for charging infrastructure, the $5 billion NEVI program focused on highways, funded by the bipartisan IIJA and the 30C tax credit from the IRA. Of the NEVI funds deployed to date, the majority of these funds have been deployed in states that supported President-elect Trump. On the IRA, as has been widely reported, red states have been major beneficiaries of the investments coming out of the IRA more broadly. 30C is a technology-neutral tax credit supporting a range of alternative fuel vehicle refueling properties including electric vehicles, hydrogen, natural gas, and biofuels and has historically enjoyed bipartisan support in Congress. The cost of the 30C tax credit is quite small and is estimated to represent between 0.1% and 0.2% of the total cost of the IRA energy provisions. Therefore, we believe it is unlikely 30C will be a priority issue for the incoming administration. Either way, we are focused on building a business that is not reliant on Federal incentives. Federal incentives include the 30C and NEVI represent approximately 10% of our full year 2024 gross CAPEX. The next generation charging architecture that we're co-developing with Delta Electronics that we announced in October and we've discussed in prior earnings calls is targeting at least a 30% reduction in gross CAPEX per stall. Finally, the EV market in the U.S. is at a tipping point moving from early adopters to the mass market driven by the introduction of more affordable vehicles. Therefore, any reduction in the size or availability of EV incentives for new or used buyers are likely mitigated by the fact that the EVs themselves are becoming more affordable. As you all know, after more than a year of joint effort, we were thrilled to have announced last month a conditional commitment for a loan guarantee of up to $1.05 billion from the U.S. Department of Energy Loan Programs Office under their Title 17 Clean Energy Financing Program. If finalized, this low-cost financing will enable EVgo to accelerate our fast charging stall deployment across the United States, bringing critical public charging infrastructure to more EV drivers. Specifically, drivers living in multifamily housing and others who rely on public charging stand to benefit the most from this build out, which in turn should accelerate the adoption of electric vehicles and reduce emissions from transportation. We expect to build approximately 7,500 high-powered charging stalls across 30 states over the next five years, which translates to an average of 1,500 stalls per year, although it will take a little time to get to that run rate. So by the end of the five-year period, we will be more than double our current rate of stall growth with the DOE loan. Over 40% of these new stalls are expected to be in marginalized areas that have been overburdened by environmental impacts, aligned with the administration's Justice 40 initiative. Given that over 50% of the stalls were deploying in 2024 are in rural or low-income communities eligible for 30C funding, I expect no change in the unit economics and growth in daily throughput per stall we've previously shared other than benefiting from even larger scale. Following receiving this condition commitment, we're now focused on fulfilling the conditions necessary to close the loan. We do not expect a lengthy process to close the loan. As we've said before, the company will not need to raise public equity. Additionally, this loan is not financing a single large, a mega site that may have lengthy environmental or permitting issues. A potential accelerated build-up bolstered by DOE financing would allow us to increase our current 200 million adjusted EBITDA target in three to five years because of a much higher growth rate and increased leverage of fixed costs over a higher number of stalls. We anticipate hosting a webinar update if we're successful in closing the loan, where I envision EVgo sharing further details about the loan, an updated build schedule, unit economics, and a long-term profitability target. This is a major strategic milestone towards our goal or providing the company with ongoing financing that eventually will more than double our annual rate of stall growth, does not delete existing shareholders, and lowers our cost of capital. Let's look at some of key operating highlights from this past quarter. The business model of owning and operating a DC fast charging network is proving to be the leader in the charging industry. Our results speak for themselves. We achieved another record quarter of revenues of $68 million in throughput or the energy dispensed to our network more than doubled year-over-year for the seventh consecutive quarter. There is a clear path to profitability and achieving our goal of adjusted EBITDA breakeven in 2025. Charging network revenue nearly doubled. We grew operational stalls by 34% and are on track to add over 800 new owned and operated stalls this year. And we opened an EVgo station in our 40th state. Customer accounts increased nearly 60%, and we now have over 1.2 million EVgo customer accounts. Adjusted EBITDA loss improved, demonstrated in the operating leverage and gross margin and adjusted G&A. Given our strong financial and operational performance and continued strength in our charging network revenues, we are raising the midpoint of guidance for both the revenue and adjusted EBITDA for 2024. There are many exciting new EV models for drivers to choose from in the U.S. including the Chevy Blazer EV and the Chevy Silverado EV. And sales of non-Tesla EVs continue to outpace Tesla sales in the quarter while both segments grew compared to the prior year. Non-Tesla sales were up 18% year-over-year and make up the majority of throughput on EVgo's network today. Uber recently shared that drivers on its network in the U.S., Canada, and Europe are adopting EVs five times faster than the average driver. And Uber Green, their electric and hybrid ride option is available in over 200 cities globally. Our partnerships with rideshare companies are really important because when rideshare drivers switch to electric, they're going to be charging at DCFC stations to get back on the road as quickly as possible. The growth in new vehicle sales drives ever higher electric vehicles on the road, through the growth rate that has and will continue to exceed the growth in supply of DC fast charging, benefiting owner operators of DC fast charging networks like EVgo. In 2020, there was one public fast charging stall for roughly every 60 EVs in operation. As the growth in EV VIO has exceeded the growth in the public fast charging network, this ratio was just under 90 at the end of last year and expected to grow to nearly 180 EVs to DC fast charging stalls by 2030. This assumes the build-up of over 135,000 stalls over the next six years, which itself seems aggressive given the current pace of deployments from all charging providers would have to triple to reach the 2030 estimates. Compared to other countries where EV adoption is further in the maturity curve, you see much lower ratios. Globally, the average is 30 and China was 17 at the end of 2023. Even if you did believe the charging sector was able to triple the number of deployments over the rest of the decade, you'd need to see the forecast for EV VIO to be around 40% lower and the 32 million number before the ratio falls below where we are today. If the charging industry were unable to grow the pace of deployments at all, VIO in 2030 would need to be around only 9 million vehicles before the ratio is less than today, which implies about a 40% reduction in the absolute annual growth of EVs than we are currently experiencing. In other words, if the charging industry continues to build the pace it is today, the annual growth in EV VIO would have to be less than 40% of what it currently is before we face any pressure on utilization levels we're seeing today. We are clearly already seeing the benefit of this supply demand dynamic through rising utilization rates on our owned and operated network, and that trend is set to continue for the foreseeable future in practically any conceivable scenario. Rideshare electrification, more affordable vehicles attracting more customers without at home charging and thus reliant on public charging, autonomous vehicles, and cable standardization that we've discussed at length in the past are trends that benefit owner operator networks on top of this core supply demand imbalance. Let's now turn to progress on our four key priorities in 2024. Improving the customer experience, operating in CAPEX efficiencies, capturing and retaining high value customers, and securing financing to get to free cash flow breakeven. As always, improving the customer experience remains our number one priority and we have great news to report this quarter. Customers want the charger to be available when they pull up to an EVgo station, and we are deploying larger sites where our standard configuration is now six to eight stalls per site. At the end of Q3, 18% of our sites have six stalls or more. With our deployments during the third quarter, 45% of EVgo stalls are our high power 350 kilowatt chargers, compared to 29% a year ago. Autocharge+ continues to gain traction. 21% of our sessions are initiated by the seamless plug and charge experience. In September, we began auto enrollment with all OEMs that have Autocharge+ enabled, and by further simplifying the signup process we are seeing great momentum with our customers. Our customer success metric or one and done increased five percentage points this quarter versus last year, with 95% of sessions resulting in a successful charge on the first try. In September, we announced that we had agreed to another amendment to our long standing partnership with GM to build what we're calling flagship sites that take the customer experience to the next level. These sites will feature up to 20 or more stalls and many of the amenities today's EV drivers want; fast, convenient, reliable stalls with a 350 kilowatt chargers, pull through access, canopies, lighting, and security cameras. Flagships are planned in metro areas coast to coast in states such as Arizona, California, Florida, Georgia, Michigan, New York, and Texas. Like other EVgo stations, flagship sites will be near a diverse set of amenities, creating critical charging hubs to serve the expanding number of EVs on the roads. This amendment reflects both of our company's focus on enhancing the customer experience, as well as our commitment to our partnership with each other. We've also made great progress on driving efficiencies, both in the short term and the long term this quarter. I've previously spoken about the next generation of charging equipment that EVgo is planning. In early October, we announced we signed a memorandum of understanding with Delta Electronics to co-develop state of the art 400 kilowatt fast chargers bringing together EVgo's extensive understanding of customer pain points from serving over 1 million customers with Delta's global leadership in power electronics. This new charging architecture is focused on improving the customer experience while also reducing CAPEX by approximately 30%. We expect to deploy this architecture in the second half of 2026. For our current charging equipment we've delivered a 6% improvement in gross CAPEX for our 2024 bills compared to the original $160,000 we estimated at the beginning of the year. The first sites built with our prefabricated skids are operational and yield saving and build cost and construction timelines. We expect around 40% of our 2025 deployments will utilize prefabricated skids. In operating expenses we've reduced our sustaining G&A per stall by 15% year-to-date. We also continue to make great progress on our growth priority. 56% of EV gross throughput is coming from Rideshare, OEM charging credit and subscription accounts in Q3. This provides EVgo with a relatively predictable baseload level of demand on our network. New customer accounts in the third quarter totaled over 147,000, a record number, and grew 39% compared to the third quarter of last year. We're driving customer acquisition through a variety of paid and organic channels, which is turbocharging our growth in retail throughput. And our dynamic pricing pilot that I've talked about in prior calls has now been rolled out to 20% of our network. We'll continue to iterate on our pricing models in the future as we gain insights into driver behavior and incentives. And on financing, as previously mentioned, EVgo announced we received a conditional commitment from the DOE LPO for a loan guarantee of up to 1.05 billion to build approximately 7500 stalls over five years. We are working closely with the DOE and if approved, we expect to be able to share further details on the loan after loan closing. EVgo completed the sale of our 30C income tax credits for our 2023 vintage stalls in the third quarter. We believe we were one of the few companies able to transact before the tax filing deadline. Gross proceeds from the sale were $11 million. Finally, we continue to evaluate additional non-dilutive financing opportunities that would help fund our growth further beyond the potential DOE loan. I'd like to now introduce you to Paul Dobson, EVgo’s CFO. And Paul will cover our strong financial performance in the third quarter and outlook for the remainder of 2024.