Thanks, Paul. At this time of year, the thing that takes up a lot of our attention in operations is corn harvest. At Gevo North Dakota, we're happy to have a great relationship with the farmers up there who supply us with the 23 million bushels per year corn we need to keep the plant running. This year, those farmers have done a great job turning out a record harvest in North Dakota in spite of the early frost that occurred in the western part of the state. This season is a good reminder that while weather can have a negative impact on some farmers, overall, the ag industry continues to get more crop out of the same amount of land which creates a need for new uses such as staff. Which I'll talk about in a minute. Farmers in North Dakota are nearing the end of harvest, and at Gevo, North Dakota, we're nearly full of our 3 million bushel capacity with our cash bids currently around 40 to 60¢ per bushel under the Chicago board price dependent upon delivery month. This is important for our investors to understand. The point is when thinking about making products like SAF from alcohol to jet, have a lot of low cost, low carbon, easy to handle feedstock at scale begins with our relationship with the farmers. Related to that, a few weeks ago, we had our second community event where we had nearly 100 farmers and community members spend a couple of hours with us at Gevo while we talked about our improvements at the North Dakota site and our vision for the future. The audience was very engaged and supportive, which makes our work up there much more meaningful. Moving beyond the farmers to our Gevo North Dakota operations, I'd like to acknowledge once again the great job our team is doing in maintaining, improving, and operating the assets. There. The improvements include fundamental things such as new truck scale critical for receiving corn and selling feed, improving roads to ensure safety for those farmers, and several energy efficiency improvements. The operations team successfully completed a safe turnaround of the plant in five days in September and came back online quickly. For Q3, they ground over 5 million bushels of corn, while producing and selling over 16 million gallons of fuel ethanol 46,000 tons of high protein animal feed, nearly 5 million pounds of corn oil, all while sequestering 42,000 tons of carbon dioxide which generates the carbon dioxide removal credits Paul mentioned. That brings us to over 550,000 metric tons of CO2 that's been sequestered at the site since the sequestration operation began in June 2022. That's proof that we can capture carbon reliably each and every day we operate. Which is well over 350 days a year. And remember that the captured CO2, it was it was originally pulled from the air through photosynthesis by plants. Then released during our fermentation process in nearly pure form us to sequester underground. Addition to the operations team, we have a team of engineers at Gevo engaged in engineering a number of improvements at the site along with engineering the 30 plant. Which is designed to make staff. Improvements include expanding the ethanol plant, both incremental and step change expansions, expanding corn storage and receiving, expanding our carbon sequestration and utilization, improving energy efficiency, We expect that incremental improvements to will lead to substantial increases in adjusted EBITDA at North Dakota. And the step change projects we have in mind could make it even bigger. The ATJ 30 project and expected adjusted EBITDA would be even more growth on top of it all. On the ATJ 30 project, design and engineering work are progressing well. We're leveraging our patents and know how from previous project design work to shorten our design time simplify construction, increase efficiencies, and and manage carbon. We currently estimate the installed capital cost to be around $500 million not including financing related costs. I'm happy to report that we've partnered with the state of North Dakota on a couple of our improvements, thanks to the North Dakota Department of Ag, for their generous grants of over $3 million to help us improve energy efficiency of the plant and expand infrastructure required for the ATJ 30 project. Our long term vision for the future of jet fuel plants is straightforward. Build ATJ 30 right here at Gevo North Dakota, prove it out, and then copy, edit, and paste that same blueprint across other strategic locations in The US and globally. Today, we want the site to showcase farming and carving management done right. In the future, we want ATJ 30 to showcase alcohol to jet done right. A model that can be replicated efficiently using abundant domestic feedstocks, proven carbon management systems. Behind all this progress is a talented team of operators, engineers, and community partners who make it happen every day. And, of course, we couldn't do it without the support of our farmer partners in the state of North Dakota which continues to be a terrific place to do business. Back to you, Pat.