Thanks, Jamie. In the third quarter, we reported adjusted EBITDA of $243 million. We generated a distributable cash flow of $158 million, and free cash flow was $51 million. Looking at our segment results, our Midstream Logistics segment generated an adjusted EBITDA of $151 million in the quarter, down 13% year-over-year. The decrease was largely driven by lower commodity prices, lower Kinetik marketing contributions, higher cost of goods sold, and higher operating expenses, partially offset by increased volumes across both our Delaware North and South assets. Shifting to our Pipeline Transportation segment, we generated an adjusted EBITDA of $95 million. Total capital expenditures for the quarter were $154 million. As we disclosed in our earnings release yesterday, volume-related headwinds combined with producer-directed actions from commodity price volatility, the timing of the Kings Landing start-up, and the EPIC crude sale closing have led us to update our full-year adjusted EBITDA guidance range to $965 million to $1.005 billion. I will walk through several key factors behind our revised expectations. First, as Jamie discussed earlier, the timing to reach full commercial in service at Kings Landing was slower than anticipated in September. While we exited the quarter at our expected operational run rate, the timing and the pace of those volume contributions and the associated margin fell short of our initial expectations. The delay in bringing King's Landing fully online versus our original assumption of July 1 reduced full-year earnings by approximately $20 million. Second, we've continued to navigate sustained commodity price volatility and macroeconomic uncertainty throughout much of 2025. Our updated outlook now reflects market forward pricing as of October 31, which represents over a 2% decline from the commodity strip used to revise guidance in August and a 12% decline versus our original assumptions in February. Notably, Waha natural gas pricing, which is not included in the figures I just stated, has declined by over 50% since our February assumptions. Together, this has negatively impacted full-year adjusted EBITDA expectations by nearly $30 million versus our original guidance, excluding Gulf Coast marketing impacts. These lower average commodity prices have had both direct and indirect impacts on our business. Directly, they affect the pricing of our commodity contracts and change our plant's product mix, thereby potentially further impacting margin contributions. Indirectly, we have seen volatility impact producer decision-making with near-term development delays and broader existing production shut-ins due to lower prompt-month crude pricing and significantly negative Waha natural gas prices. It is a confluence of multiple factors that has led to this unexpected situation. In October, there were days when approximately 20% of volumes were curtailed, of which roughly half were from our oil-focused producers, a dynamic that we haven't seen since May of 2020, when the WTI crude oil futures contract final settlement price was negative $38 per barrel. We estimate that full-year earnings are negatively impacted by curtailments by approximately $20 million. While Waha prices are expected to remain an issue, takeaway constraints should begin to alleviate by this time next year. Specifically, the industry is set to bring online over 5 billion cubic feet per day of new takeaway capacity in 2026 and in early 2027 through the following projects: the GCX compression expansion, the Blackcomb pipeline, and the Hugh Brinson Pipeline. Kinetik's marketing entity reserved transportation capacity to the Gulf Coast in 2025 and 2026 to insulate itself from curtailment-related lost gross margin. However, the curtailments were more severe as we saw oil-focused producers shut in production. Turning back to commodity prices, indirect influence on our business, we estimate that lower crude and natural gas liquids pricing, as well as negative in-basin natural gas pricing, have deferred or changed our customers' development plans across our system, negatively impacting full-year 2025 EBITDA by approximately $30 million. While the Permian Basin continues to demonstrate resilience amid broader commodity price and macroeconomic pressures, it is not immune to the current headwinds. Since the beginning of the year, the Delaware Basin rig count has declined by nearly 20%, reflecting a more cautious stance from our producers. This shift in behavior is also being reflected in industry forecasts. For example, the EIA now projects Permian Basin natural gas volumes to be flat from 2025 to 2026 on an exit-to-exit basis compared to approximately 3% growth in 2025 exit to exit and approximately 9% growth in 2025 on a year-over-year basis. Lastly, our guidance assumed a full year of adjusted EBITDA contribution from EPIC Crude. However, with the divestiture closing in October, Kinetik won't receive the benefit for our pro rata EBITDA for the full fourth quarter. And of course, this will have some impact on our full-year results. We received over $500 million in cash proceeds from that sale and have used those proceeds to pay down debt, reducing our leverage ratio by approximately 1/4 of a ton. Over time, we will use some of those proceeds to redeploy into new opportunities such as the acid gas injection well that we FID-ed today. Taken together, these impacts led us to revise 2025 adjusted EBITDA guidance to $985 million at the midpoint versus our previous guidance in August. Despite the numerous factors impacting 2025 results and near-term estimates expectations, we remain confident in our long-term strategy and the value creation potential of our organic growth initiatives. Turning to capital guidance. We are tightening our full-year range to $485 million to $515 million, given our heightened visibility with 2 months of the year remaining and the FID of our Kings Landing acid gas injection project. Before we open the line for Q&A, let me briefly touch on our capital allocation priorities. Our strategy remains firmly anchored in creating long-term shareholder value while maintaining flexibility for disciplined capital deployment. Since Kinetik's inception in February 2022, we've delivered double-digit adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow growth, meaningfully delevered the balance sheet, and returned nearly $1.8 billion to shareholders since the merger. Today, we're building on that momentum with one of the largest processing footprints in the Delaware Basin and advancing strategic projects like the ECCC pipeline, sour gas treating, and capital-light reinvestment opportunities, all at attractive mid-single-digit setup multiples. These initiatives, combined with our current total shareholder yield of nearly 11%, underscore our commitment to delivering both near-term results and long-term value. Looking ahead, we see a clear path to long-term value creation through our short-cycle strategic project backlog, supported by a conservatively leveraged balance sheet and continued shareholder returns via dividend growth and share repurchases. This disciplined approach positions Kinetik for sustainable growth and a compelling long-term value proposition. And with that, we can now open up the line for Q&A.