Thank you, Tom, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us on our call today. In the fourth fiscal quarter and the week since the close of the quarter, we've achieved solid performance and taken proactive steps that we believe better position our business for the future. Fourth quarter revenue more than doubled year-over-year, mainly driven by module sales to Gyeonggi Green Energy, or GGE, in South Korea. And while full fiscal year 2024 revenue was down compared to the prior year, we expect to deliver meaningful revenue growth in fiscal year 2025 and we will continue to exercise cost discipline in deploying capital for growth opportunities. As I do every quarter, I would like to start by underscoring our business and purpose. For those of you who are new to our story as well as for those who know us well, our purpose is to enable a world empowered by clean energy. So, what does this mean? It means leveraging our proprietary fuel cell technology platform, our considerable intellectual property portfolio, including hundreds of patents, our geographic footprint and our talented team to provide energy solutions for our customers. Next, on Slide 4, I'd like to provide an overview of our key messages for the quarter. First, subsequent to the end of the fourth fiscal quarter, FuelCell announced a global restructuring plan that aims to realign our team and capital to focus on our core technologies and target sales where we see the strongest demand in the near term; data centers, distributed power generation, grid resiliency and carbon recovery for utilization. We believe the actions we've taken will better position us from the perspective of focused product solutions and cost, helping us to start fiscal year 2025 building on our fourth quarter 2024 momentum. I will speak in more detail about the restructuring plan on the next slide. Second, we continued to make progress on the operations front. In the quarter, we delivered and installed six repowering fuel cell modules for our customer GGE, and we also made significant advancements on our biogas project with Ameresco in Sacramento, California. In addition, our solid oxide electrolysis unit, that is heading to Idaho National Laboratory, crossed a significant milestone; passing the INL's acceptance test, that unit is being prepared for shipment as we speak. In addition to delivering for our current customers, we are focused on winning new opportunities and our third theme underscores that there is plenty of opportunity with the global power demand remaining robust across utilities, commercial and industrial sectors. From mega trends like the growth of data centers driven by AI, blockchain and cryptocurrency, to the ongoing global drive to create a more reliable and resilient grid and the need to reduce dependency on permitting and building high-voltage transmissions across local landscapes, the world needs more clean baseload power and we believe we have the solutions. This leads into the fourth theme, which is the growing global adoption of fuel cell technology. Countries like South Korea are leading the way in adding clean fuel cell energy into their power mix and we expect others to follow their example. The large-scale utility and commercial deployments we have implemented globally allow us to demonstrate the reliability and functionality of our long running platforms, representing positive case studies as we work to win future orders. And finally, as we develop these energy solutions, we will continue our disciplined approach to capital allocation and cost control in order to maintain a strong balance sheet. We ended the fourth quarter with $318 million of cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments, putting us in a position to invest in growth platform development even as we bring added focus and reduce expenses as we execute our strategy. Now, looking more closely at our global restructuring plan, I want to underscore that we executed this plan in a way that is intended to put us in the best position possible to capitalize on the growth themes I just outlined. We are prioritizing our technologies that are proven, commercially available and operating since 2003, centered on our carbonate fuel cell technology, which has been the long-time backbone of our platform and is core to what we believe are significant growth opportunities for carbon recovery and carbon capture. We are expanding our manufacturing capabilities for our molten carbonate technology in an effort to capture the increasing opportunity in distributed power solutions and we aim to increase our fiscal year 2025 annualized production rate at our Torrington manufacturing facility relative to fiscal year 2024. Alongside our molten carbonate platform, we will continue to invest in the continued development and commercialization of our solid oxide platform. However, our strategy will focus on developing strategic partnerships and opportunities that would enable us to deploy this technology as part of a large-scale energy, emissions reduction and hydrogen generation projects. We believe that the upcoming demonstration of our solid oxide electrolyzer at the Idaho National Laboratory in 2025 will be demonstrative of our technology and ability to execute that strategy. We are actively seeking strategic options to develop and work with partners for our solid oxide technology large-scale enablement and we'll continue to do so in fiscal year 2025. The path to growth is not always direct or linear. We are proactively taking action to respond to what has been a challenging environment for our industry. We are reducing spending, hyper-focusing on tangible commercial opportunities and progressing toward profitability. While the restructuring was a difficult decision, we believe it is the right decision to protect our competitive position and put us in the best position to close market opportunities. Every decision we make feeds into our purpose, and we carry out this purpose through our Powerhouse business strategy, which we instituted in 2019. Those of you who know us well are familiar with our strategy, and we continue to believe in the Powerhouse framework. I would call your attention to an update we have made to the first pillar of our strategy, which we now call 'focus'. To grow in the current market environment, we narrowed our focus. We focused on streamlining our business operations, running our company as efficiently as possible, optimizing our platform and maintaining commercial excellence. This will enable us to uphold the second and third pillars of our strategy, 'scaling our platform' and 'innovating for the future'. I would now like to turn to the next section of our presentation to discuss all the ways we are working to improve our operations at FuelCell Energy and continuing to execute on our current slate of opportunities. On Page 8, we illuminate the solution applications, where and how we excel at building and operating large-scale distributed clean energy platforms and why our demonstrated path positions us well as a proven solution in meeting the time to power applications opportunity or, from a customer's perspective, shortening their time to revenue. We have a history of delivering distributed power solutions at scale with eight sites generating 10 megawatts or more for an aggregate nameplate capacity of approximately 180 megawatts. We are the only fuel cell manufacturer with demonstrated platforms of 10 megawatts, 20 megawatts and even almost 60 megawatts with seven or more years of operating time delivering reliable and efficient energy services. This strong historic performance, I believe, positions us well to take advantage of what we view as one of the biggest market opportunities for our company, microgrids in support of data center growth. Microgrids enable many of the world's fastest-growing power consumers, such as data centers, run more efficiently with higher availability, lower emissions compared to grid power, reduced customer dependency on utilities and accelerate their time to revenue by leveraging on-site generation as prime power. FuelCell Energy's technology can meet these customers' microgrid needs. We currently maintain five operating microgrids, which provide reliable baseload power that is critical in the event of utility outages. We do this against a range of applications from manufacturings, schools, communities and mission-critical nuclear submarine base. We've also exhibited our ability to integrate with other generation sources, including a ranking cycle asset at our Bridgeport Fuel Cell Park, and we can integrate seamlessly with other microgrid assets including battery, gas turbines, diesel generators and solar and wind power sources. To give you a sense of the scale of this market opportunity, I'd invite you to take a look at the data visualization on Slide 9, showing the sharp growth in interconnection queues generated by the massive strains on our current U.S. grid. Many of these areas are corridors where data center growth has been the highest, including the Mid-Atlantic region, the Great Lakes region, Texas, the Southwest and the Pacific Northwest. There is a clear need for distributed power solutions to help relieve these strains, the kind of solutions provided by FuelCell Energy. The same story is playing out worldwide across grids. Moving to Slide 10, as I mentioned earlier, our work to deliver and install modules for GGE continues apace. We have installed the first six modules and the remaining 36 modules will be manufactured and delivered over the next two years, paced by an intentional repowering schedule. We are pleased to have secured financing from the Export-Import Bank of the United States, which provided working capital funding for the initial module deliveries. We look forward to continuing our relationship with EXIM. Our generation operating portfolio remains strong and gives us line of sight into our potential revenue for the next fiscal year, which we expect to be significantly higher than our revenue for fiscal year 2024. The size of our portfolio has grown significantly in the past two years, totaling 62.8 megawatts at the end of Q4 compared with 36.3 megawatts at the same time in fiscal year 2022. We have added our service contract with GGE to our backlog, representing over $34 million in revenue over the term of the agreement with GGE. In other operational news, our Sacramento Sewer project with Ameresco is nearing completion. Additionally, module production for the carbon capture project at the Port of Rotterdam is ahead of schedule, with modules expected to ship in mid-calendar year 2025. These are positive building blocks as we begin fiscal year 2025. I'd like to conclude my portion of the call by reflecting on the 2024 U.S. election results and how they affect us as a company and as an industry. The conventional wisdom may say that one political party favors the fuel cell industry versus the other, but I'm here to tell you that we firmly believe that our solutions are bipartisan and deliver value to our customers no matter which party is in power. Support for our industry has historically been bipartisan and legislators of all affiliations are focused on developing a resilient and reliable U.S. power grid, which our industry helps provide. Our molten carbonate platform is able to utilize a number of fuels as feedstock, including natural gas, which we believe benefits from energy policies that promote this clean, domestically plentiful transition fuel. Above all, we're a global company and the global energy transition continues no matter what happens in domestic politics. Our platform is commercially proven and doesn't depend on one party or another to be economically viable. In short, regardless of the direction political winds are blowing, FuelCell Energy will be positioned to provide clean and reliable energy to the world. We wish the incoming administration success just as we did for the current administration. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to our CFO, Mike Bishop.