Good afternoon and thank you for joining us today. Beginning on Slide 3, I will share some key highlights from Q1 2025. From a commercial perspective, since the previous earnings call, we have secured net bookings of 0.6 gigawatts at a base ASP of $0.305 per watt, excluding adjusters and Indian domestic sales. As a result, our contracted backlog today stands at 66.3 gigawatts. In Q1, we recorded 2.9 gigawatts of module sales, which is in line with what we forecasted on the previous earnings call. Our Q1 earnings per diluted share came in below the low end of our guidance range at $1.95 per share, primarily due to a greater portion of our Q1 sales being forecasted to be an international versus U.S. product. Alex will provide further details regarding our financial results later in the call. From a manufacturing perspective, we produced 4.0 gigawatts in Q1, comprised of 2 gigawatts of Series 6 and 2 gigawatts of Series 7 modules. We completed limited commercial production run of modules employing our CuRe technology from our lead line in Ohio during the quarter and continued to deploy these modules in both commercial and field test sites. Initial data indicates the enhanced energy profile expected from the superior temperature response and improved bifaciality of our CuRe technology is being realized. Furthermore, the laboratory accelerated life testing is confirming the industry's leading annual degradation rate. Our domestic capacity expansion has advanced during the quarter as we continue the ramp of our Alabama factory, at our Louisiana facility, construction of the building was completed and equipment installation and commissioning is fully underway. The facility remains on track to begin commercial operation in the second half of this year, and once ramped, it is expected to increase our U.S. nameplate manufacturing capacity to over 15 -- excuse me over 14 gigawatts by 2026. Turning to Slide 4. I would like to focus on recent policy and trade developments. We continue to experience significant near term uncertainty from the budget reconciliation process and its potential impact on the Inflation Reduction Act, clean energy, tax credits, and now from the evolving trade landscape as the administration implements its new tariff initiatives. However, despite these near term challenges, we believe on balance, the political and trade environment continues to be an overall long term favorable from a First Solar perspective. While the implementation of certain new trade policies was a possibility with the change in administration, the new tariff regime imposes -- earlier this month has introduced significant challenges to 2025 that were not known at the start of the year. I will focus on outlining the operational challenges that tariff poses for First Solar, while Alex will later discuss the detailed implications to our full year guidance. We have elected to update our guidance range with an upper end that assumes the current applicable 10% universal tariff structure remains in place throughout the year. The lower end it seems both a range of non-tariff related risks to our operations, as well as implications from the previously announced, but temporarily suspended country-specific reciprocal tariff structure. We currently operate international manufacturing in India to serve both the India and U.S. market and in Malaysia and Vietnam, which almost exclusively serve the U.S. market. The President's implementation of reciprocal tariffs earlier this month with rates of 26%, 24%, and 46% applicable to India, Malaysia, and Vietnam respectively creates a significant economic headwind for our manufacturing facilities in these countries selling into the U.S. market. While the subsequent 90-day pause to the effectiveness of these tariffs and the application of a 10% universal tariff partially mitigates the impact, the lower rate would still result in a meaningful adverse gross margin impact to sales into the United States, absent the duty being fully passed through to the module buyer. In addition, the uncertainty surrounding whether the reciprocal tariffs will be reinstituted at the 90 -- after this 90-day pause or whether the pause will be indefinite or whether a different tariff regime will be put in place has created a challenge to quantifying the precise tariff rate that would be applied to our module shipments into and beyond the second half of this year. Our sales contract for international volume shift to the United States typically includes provisions that are intended to mitigate the adverse gross margin impact from changes in law due to the implementation of tariffs on modules. These provisions, which may be invoked at First Solarโs discretion, come in a variety of types, including some where First Solar may terminate the contract if it chooses not to absorb the new tariffs. Others, either the customers required to absorb, or First Solar and the customers required to share up to a certain amount of the tariff before either party may terminate, and others which represent the majority of these contracts, where a negotiated period is contractually required for First Solar and the customer to discuss the allocation of tariff risk before either party may terminate. To the extent if the contract is terminated on the basis of these provisions, the agreement would effectively unwind with neither the customer nor First Solar being responsible for a termination payment, resulting in a corresponding reduction to our backlog, as well as a return to the customer of any related deposits. These provisions are intended to protect First Solar in the event of changes in law related to tariffs that pose significant economic risk to us and that could otherwise force First Solar to transact at a loss. With respect to our overall backlog of 66.1 gigawatts as of March 31, 2025, we have approximately 13.9 gigawatts of forward contracts for delivery of international product into the United States. After accounting for the remaining volume sold in 2025 at the low end of our revised guidance range that Alex will later discuss, there remains a forecasted year-end net 12 gigawatts of international product in the backlog that may be terminated based on these tariff-related provisions. With an ASP below the backlog average and after accounting for lower production costs, but significantly higher sales rate, including port-related costs, warehousing, and storage associated with the international product, the profitability of this portion of our backlog is below the overall backlog average. Note, if this -- First Solar elects to absorb the tariffs costs beyond its contractual obligation, no termination right exists, and the volume will remain in the backlog. Furthermore, with respect to our module contracts for delivery of product from our U.S. facilities, module tariffs are not applicable and therefore it is not impacted to our contracted backlog with respect to this volume. From an allocation standpoint, our ability to optimize our U.S. production with our international production to support our customers' qualifications of the domestic content ITC bonus may be constrained under the new tariff regime. As we may not be in a position to utilize our currently available international production capacity, absent customers' willingness to absorb or meaningfully share the increased tariff exposure. Our customers' willingness to bear some or all of the tariff costs beyond this module contracted obligation must be considered in the contents of the overall project-related cost increases from the new tariffs, including not just with respect to the modules but also tracker, inverters, transformers, and other imported equipment. Given the majority of the best components with some dependency on Chinese supply chain, Solar Plus storage projects in particular may face significantly increased costs. Given these headwinds, we expect to pivot our India facility away from exports to the U.S. and towards producing more product for the domestic India market. With regards to the impact of new tariffs on our Malaysia and Vietnam factories, we will continue to evaluate best options to optimize production across the sites in a potentially reduced U.S. demand environment for non-domestic product, but are mindful that we may need to further reduce or idle production at one or both of these locations, especially if the announced reciprocal tariffs are put in place. That said, despite these near-term challenges presented by the new tariff regime, we believe the long-term outlook for solar demand, particularly in our core U.S. market remains strong, and the First Solar remains well positioned to serve this demand. This belief is based on our unique profile of First Solar compared to its peers. We are the only US headquartered PV manufacturer of scale, and by the end of this year, we will be the only one with a fully vertically integrated U.S. solar manufacturing presence across 3 states, including a large domestic supply chain, not just in Ohio, Alabama, and Louisiana, but across states such as Wyoming, Utah, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Pennsylvania among others. As we've mentioned before, by year end, our U.S. presence alone is projected to support over 30,000 direct, indirect, [indiscernible] jobs across the country, representing almost 2.8 billion in annual payroll. Our powerful contribution to the U.S. economy is due to our differentiated proprietary thin film technology, but is also dependent in part on a level playing field given the unfair and illegal trading practices of so many in the Chinese crystal and silicon supply chain. As we've engaged with political leaders over the course of the year and as recent developments have demonstrated, we believe there is recognition among politicians, policy makers, and other authorities of the need to address these unfair practices, as well as the criticality of maintaining an industrial policy that allows high value solar manufacturing to grow and thrive in the United States and contributes to our energy and national security. One example of this recognition is the recent final determination results in the AD/CVD case known as Solar 3. Addressing illegal dumping and subsidization by the Chinese headquartered companies operating in Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam. Last week, the Commerce Department announced generally substantial AD/CVD duties across all 4 of these Southeast Asian countries, which are generally retroactive and stacked on top of the existing Section 201 tariff regime and the 10% universal tariff rate currently being applied. These results reflect what we have known that the unfair practice by Chinese headquartered solar companies put American manufacturers and American jobs at risk, and the enforcement of the rule of law is essential to securing our manufacturing base and our domestic energy security. That said, while we are pleased with the results of Solar 3 and applaud the professionalism and the tireless work of the Commerce Department. We're also well aware that the Chinese are shifting production to lower tariff regions in order to take advantage of our trade laws. Trade data published since our previous earnings call, further demonstrates a surge trend of imported sales and modules from certain countries, including Laos and Indonesia, when compared to the same period a year ago. We have no doubt that these Chinese manufacturers are also seeking to establish production and other regions around the world, such as Saudi Arabia, forcing us into a continued game of whack-a-mole. The American Alliance of Solar Manufacturing Trade Committee, of which we are a member, continues to monitor this data. And as noted on our previous earnings call, all trade remedy options remain on the table, including initiating a new anti-dumping and countervailing duty case directed towards those countries where the data is supportive. While it's time consuming and resource intensive, First Solar will continue to engage in trade actions as long as it's necessary to support a level playing field and ensure compliance with existing trade laws. And we will not hesitate to pursue a critical circumstances determination that if imposed, any new tariffs are retroactive. In addition, we, together with like-minded allies and advocates in Washington across numerous industries, not just solar, continue to encourage legislation such as the Leveling the Playing Field Act 2.0., which would combat repeat offenders by making it easier for petitioners to bring new cases where production moves to another country in an effort to evade tariffs, that the level playing field is a key aspect of the Chinese unfair practices playbook. This legislation, which was reintroduced at the end of February of this year and which was bipartisan would also go a long way towards strengthening and monetizing U.S. trade remedy laws and ensuring that remaining effective tools to fight against unfair trade practices and protect Americans. Turning to industrial policy, well ultimately the outcome of the budget reconciliation process will determine the fate of critical supply chain initiatives such as the 45X Advanced Manufacturing Tax Credit and demand side incentives such as the investment in production Tax Credit or ITC and PTC as we continue to engage with the administration and members of Congress on trade and industrial policies. We are encouraged by the response we are receiving on our message. Specifically, we continue to advocate for maintaining these key tax policies, particularly with modifications such as the foreign entity of concern or FEOC provision, which would prevent Chinese companies from receiving U.S. taxpayer dollars. We also continue to advocate for strengthening the domestic content provision to make ITC and PTC eligible contingent on the use of high-value domestic content product produced in America. We believe these modifications to clean energy tax credits would provide significant U.S. government budgetary savings, support the administration's efforts to make the tax cut and Jobs Act permanent, and would represent major steps forward towards mitigating the risk of America's energy supply chain being contracted, concentrated in adversarial foreign countries. We are pleased to see a growing number of Republican policymakers in both the House and the Senate recognize the value of preserving existing tax credits such as 45X and the ITC and PTC. We recognize that these incentives help, in their words, spur new manufacturing investment and ensure certainty for businesses that have already made meaningful U.S. investments. They also recognize that doing so would reduce utility bills for American consumers. The imperative of affordable, reliable electricity for American households and small businesses is top of mind, not just for politicians, but for leaders of American utilities as well. Recent analysis released by the National Electrical Manufacturing Association projected the U.S. electricity demand will grow 50% by 2050 or 2% annually, with data center energy consumption growing by 300% over the next 10 years. In our recent discussions with several CEOs of some of the nation's leading utilities, these leaders recognized the reality of the near term significant growth in the U.S. energy demand, and share our view that solar has a critical place in all of the above power generation strategy, where a diversified portfolio of natural gas, nuclear, hydro, solar, with energy storage, and other technologies work together to power our nation to prosperity. They have shared with us that they are lending their influential voice to continue to advocate for maintaining clean energy tax credits and the transferability provisions associated with them, and doing so will enable greater solar generation deployment more quickly and a lower cost than traditional forms of generation. To help address the immediate power generation need and help mitigate potentially rising ratepayer electricity costs. There's plenty of evidence supporting the case for solar as a prominent component of the electricity generation mix. Texas, Florida, North Carolina, and Nevada. Markets where some of the country's highest level of utility scale solar deployment have consumer electricity bills that were between 8% and 24%, lower than the national average in January of 2025. Well, the new tariff regime has introduced a new source of uncertainty in near term product development timelines, we believe that it is unlikely to significantly impact U.S. load growth fundamentals. As the country's top grid operators testified during a March hearing by the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Energy, there's still an urgent need to not just maintain, but to add capacity to meet significant demand growth. American leadership in AI, cryptocurrency, and reshoring manufacturing needs abundant cost competitive electricity generation. That's a new generation capacity coming online, their risks not being enough electricity to power the strategically important industries to their full potential before the current administration ends. With 92% of the U.S. interconnection queue being comprised of renewables, solar is the fastest form of new generation. The current ITC and PTC regime, which together with domestic content bonus, drives competitive solar PPA pricing and First Solar with its uniquely vertically integrated U.S. manufacturing process that critically features a domestically produced cell supported largely by domestic value chain remains in our view, the vendor of choice to enable development partners to qualify for domestic content bonus, especially with the annually escalating domestic content points requirement. Continued policy uncertainty, including with the new announced universal and reciprocal tariffs may result in delays to some announced domestic wafer and cell manufacturing. Given the multi-year lead time required to build and commission new factories, the uncertain environment gives First Solar the ability to leverage another one of our competitive [indiscernible] delivering on our commitments to our customers. This differentiation is particularly valued by sophisticated developers seeking to secure module pricing and delivery certainty early in their project timelines through long-dated module sale contract. We believe First Solar's established U.S. manufacturing presence provides greater certainty of delivery and pricing when compared to other prospects and speculative sources of supply. Furthermore, given First Solar's profile as a U.S. company, any future domestic capacity expansion would be unencumbered by the prospects of FEOC legislation, a concept based on discussions in Washington DC and elsewhere has been favorably received by certain members of the administration and Congress, and we believe must be factored into capital commitment decisions by the large majority of our prospective domestic competitors. This consideration is particularly predominant in the industry where these competitors are overwhelmingly Chinese owned or controlled. Another factor which may further prevent manufacturers and their financing parties from having the clarity necessary to make capital and investment decisions is the fact that public reporting indicates that the reconciliation process and therefore the fate of existing clean energy tax credits under the Inflation Reduction Act may not be known until late 2025 or perhaps not until some point in 2026, particularly if the scenario where addressing tax policy is delayed to a second reconciliation bill. The impact is compounded when you further consider the fact that the Section 45X manufacturing tax credit begin to phase out at the end of the decade, reducing the window of availability for these credits for factories that are not operating. Our industry leading established U.S. presence provides further competitive advantages under the current tariff environment. Over the past several years, we have invested heavily in a largely domestic supply chain, particularly as it relates to high value aspects of our bill material such as glass and steel, where we have entered into long-term contracts with domestic suppliers. It is our estimation that any new crystal and silicon competition would likely have to import significant aspects of their bill of material to support U.S. production, particularly with respect to pattern glass, which currently does not have any domestic source of supply, and aluminum, which is domestically supply constrained and priced at a significant premium to imports. In a rational market, these [bomb] [ph] cost increases would be expected to drive higher pricing for domestically produced competitive products. In summary, while we are facing unanticipated near term challenges following the imposition of the April tariff regime, we remain confident in the long term prospects for First Solar in terms of the U.S. solar energy demand and First Solar's ability to leverage its unique profile and competitive differentiation to serve this demand. Through this confidence, we must be tethered to the continued enforcement and strengthening of the U.S. trade laws and supportive of industrial policy given the irrational and illegal Chinese trade practices. This confidence is based on our profile as America's largest and most established domestic solar module manufacturer. It's only fully vertically integrated producer. Our significant network of domestic supply chain vendors, our proprietary Cad-Tel-based semiconductor that is not beholden to the Chinese crystal and silicon industry, and our ability to enable prospects -- aspects of the administration's platform of reshoring American manufacturing and supporting the powering of the next generation of critical industries. I now turn the call over to Alex, who will discuss shipments, bookings, Q1 financials and guidance.