Thank you, Sascha. I'll spend the next few minutes discussing our Q1 2023 financial results, Please turn to Slide 10. And I will summarize the main line items from our Q1 P&L. First off, we recorded our highest ever Q1 revenue of $47 million, an increase of 28.1% from $36.7 million in Q1 2022. The year-over-year growth was primarily driven by increasing deliveries by European customer base, as Sascha just covered. Our gross margin rose to 10.3% in Q1 2023 compared to 0% in Q1 2022. After adjusting for noncash settled share based compensation expense in cost of sales, just a gross margin increase of 13.5% in Q1 2023 compared to 5.2% in Q1 2022 and 8.3 percentage point improvement. The increase in gross margin was largely due to production efficiencies and more favorable product mix and one of services these R&D. Operating expenses worth $36.2 million in Q1 2023 compared to $43.4 million in Q1 2022. Similar to previous quarters of the largest contributor to the decrease in operating expenses, with a decline in our share based compensation expense which totaled 16.4 million in the quarter compared to 26.2 million in Q1 2022. After adjusting for non-cash SBC expense in SG&A, our registered operating expense in Q1 2023 was $19.8 million compared to $31.1 million in Q1 2022. GAAP net loss was $29.6 million in Q1 2023 compared to net loss of $43.8 million in Q1 2022. After adjusting for non-cash SBC expense and changes in fair value of our warrant liability, adjusted net loss was $11.7 million in Q1 2023 compared to an adjusted net loss of $29.1 million in Q1 2022. You can see the impact of these adjustments in Slide 11 and reconciliations of these non-GAAP metrics to the most comparable GAAP metrics are included in the tables at the end of our earnings press release. Slide 12 shows a geographic breakdown of our revenue of Q1 2023 compared to the prior year period. As you can see, our European business showed a strong 270% year-over-year increase and accounted for 22% of our revenue up from just 7% a year ago, as our key customers began serial production of their vehicle. As we outlined last quarter, a large percentage of our commercial vehicle backlog is from European customers who are launching the electrified models for the first time. We continue to expect volume growth in our European segment, especially for the 53.5Ah cell as customers expand production. Our U.S. revenue increased 62% year-over-year. We continue to expect U.S. revenue to rise this year as we begin deliveries on our 1.2 gigawatt hour ESS project in the second half of the year. In 2024 and beyond, we expect the U.S. revenue growth to remain strong as we begin to meet opportunities in the U.S. markets from our Clarksville facility. Once online, we expect Clarksville to have high capacity utilization based on current and anticipated orders. We should be in a position sooner rather than later this year where we will need to start planning for additional capacity. As you know, our investment decisions to further expand capacity are always predicated on confirmed customer orders. Turning to Slide 13, we ended the quarter with cash, cash equivalents, restricted cash and short-term investments of children $285.8 million. Net cash using operating activities during the quarter was $11.2 million, which was primarily due to our operating loss. Negative free cash flow of $47.1 million was mostly as a result of our CapEx spend on Huzhou 3.1 and Clarksville 1.8 in Q1 2023, which totaled $31.4 million. We also had capital expenditures totaling $4.5 million for improvements to our existing facilities and ongoing R&D projects. With Huzhou 3.1 now completed, we will be drilling down on the remaining balance of around $67 million for our project finance facilities to meet final milestone payments, totals contractors and equipment suppliers. We believe that all remaining payments will be satisfied from that facility. We closed the quarter with record backlog of $486.7 million up from $410.5 million in the fourth quarter. The 19% sequential growth in our backlog was driven by commercial vehicle projects in Europe. This once again underpins our strong conviction in our full year guidance and our belief that 2023 is just the start of a number of high growth years for Microvast. This sales growth is already allowing us to access more financing options. In Q1, we added a $17 million credit line $9.5 million of which remains undrawn. Our sales continue to increase quarter-over-quarter. We expect to add additional working capital credit line and our current estimate is that we would add a further $20 million to $30 million by the end of Q2. Looking ahead, we estimate that full year capital expenditures will remain in the range of $180 million to $210 million and will primarily be used for ongoing construction in Clarksville. As we have mentioned before, we believe Clarksville can easily support some modest debt financing. The growth in backlog, the additional margin and cash flow applied from IRA and our proven experience and bring it online capacity will clearly resonate with lenders. With that, I'll turn it back over to Mr. Wu to review our outlook.