Thanks, Blake. Ladies and gentlemen, good morning, and thank you for participating in this conference call. Once again, I would like to thank our entire NESR team for delivering another stellar performance in the second quarter, and congratulate our field crews for flawless execution achieving consistent operation records with our key customers while maintaining the highest standard in safety and quality. The NESR growth story is progressing as we had envisioned, and is about to hit a higher gear. Our recently announced contract awards and the expected busy tender activities will serve as a foundational backlog to our journey toward $2 billion in company revenue and position us as a sizable player within the world's best region for upstream activity. On today's call, I will start with the macro and our outlook across the key anchor countries. Then I will discuss our countercyclical investment strategy, update on the recent contract awards and discuss how we see our progress for the coming quarters and years to come. First, on the macro. Coming into the year, we saw the softening upstream environment as a unique opportunity to lean into our countercyclical investment strategy, just as we have done successfully in 2020 and '21. As evidenced in our second quarter results, this strategy continues to deliver differentiated performance versus the market, not just on P&L growth but also cash generation and debt pay down, despite our sector-leading investment levels, which is consistent with our localized strategy as the national champion of the region. Over the past 10 quarters, we've generated almost $300 million in free cash flow, which is nearly half of our market cap today. Speaking of durability, despite sustained uncertainty in the global macro, oil prices and recent geopolitical events in the region, we see MENA as a bright spot with just a temporary flattish rig count this year. We said previously that oil markets would remain on edge and that activity trends would vary by country. And this continues to be the case with the exception of some countries like Kuwait and key basins like unconventional that will continue to see healthy growth. Market consensus is that oil price will remain challenged for the next 12 months. Despite the 35% decline in U.S. activity this year, crude production remains flat, with continued drilling and completion efficiency gains offsetting lower reservoir productivity. In the non-U.S. non-OPEC supply bucket, growth from Guyana, Brazil and Canada have more than offset stagnating or declining production elsewhere, but in total, this growth has been measured. Above all, caution in the oil market stems from the projected global inventory build through late '25 into early '26, driven primarily by OPEC supply. With this backdrop, it is important to reiterate that our customers, the national oil companies are taking a much longer view of oil fundamentals. Encouragingly, the outlook for overall energy demand remains robust, and there is a lot of discussion around the acceleration of data center build-out and AI chip power demand, particularly related to gas development. For crude, the key factor to consider is that oil demand per capita across much of the developing world and in massive countries like China and India lags significantly behind consumption per capita in many Western countries. The demographic shift with global south population increasing much faster than global north means that energy demand overall will be the main driver and will surely seek affordability before anything else. What this means is that the world still needs a lot more oil with some estimate pegging demand growth of 5 million to 7 million barrels per day by 2030. Where will this oil come from without the materially higher oil prices. In the Middle East, this dynamic is driving activity growth across the majority of our anchor countries. In Saudi, maximum sustainable capacity of 12 million barrels per day remains solid. And as stated publicly, the country can easily and quickly flex activity up or down in the coming years as this capacity is absorbed and incremental supply is needed. This is why we are seeing different activity trends across our countries. Right now, there is robust growth in Kuwait and North Africa, and these trends should continue for the foreseeable future. UAE, Oman and Iraq are largely stable for us, and we continue to build on our solid position in those countries as we introduce new technology and pull through other elements of our portfolio. In Saudi, activity is down year-over-year in oil, but this activity, we believe, is bottoming soon. With strong Saudi growth in gas and our favorable position in Jafurah, NESR should be able to bridge near-term softness in oil with absolute growth in Saudi in '25 and beyond. As we have said in the past and is now abundantly clear across MENA, unconventional resource are emerging as the main engine of upstream growth in the region, mainly around gas development and the overall need for more domestic energy and power. Today, Saudi is leading this charge with clear vision for the long term and busy rig activity deployed to unconventionals to support massive growth in frac stages for the next several years. As has been made clear publicly, Jafurah is the key project among several gas development across the Kingdom to grow gas production 60% from the 2021 baseline by 2030. The gas is needed for domestic consumption and is, therefore, a highly strategic focus of investment. Aramco has revolutionized the play with a deeply scientific approach to the reservoir and to operation with impressive efficiency gains in both drilling the wells and completing them. Back in 2019, NESR had no business in the hydraulic fracturing space. At that time, however, we saw a unique opportunity to leverage our local know-how and open technology platform by importing best-in-class frac capability from the Permian Basin. With the support of our deal client and a collaborative approach with our U.S. partner at the time, we disrupted the status quo by setting early operational records. Given our local footprint, we also maintained fully reliable operation through the pandemic. We are proud to have been and continue to be involved in innovation around frac design, simul-frac, fluid chemistry, dissolvable plugs and notably produced water treatment and mineral recovery within our NEDA segment. Aramco has set a world-class standard across all areas of unconventional resource development. Moving to Kuwait, where we have spent considerable time and focus given the vast growth opportunities over the past 6 quarters. Today, the rig count in Kuwait is at an all-time high, a record never seen before in becoming the second largest country in the Middle East in terms of rig count. Our successful entry to the country since our birth has been phenomenal. Our growth is on plan with multiple contract awards, several of which we recently announced for key drilling and evaluation product lines. We secured our first entry into slickline and cemented our position in the drilling portfolio. Much of the portfolio import into Kuwait has come from our differentiated drilling offerings into Oman. We have had the unique leadership position for more than a decade, training and developing the local workforce, establishing local manufacturing, building best-in-class drilling machine, and we are now taking this success to neighboring countries. I'm talking here about drilling segments such as tubular running services, downhole tools, fishing & remedials, advanced drilling technology that will form the base for our Roya platform. As we did in Saudi, we are now in Kuwait and have worked seamlessly to make this portfolio pull-through a reality. And we are still in the early stage of this evolution across other countries. We recently announced Ahmadi Innovation Valley, will also add a layer of research and development to our growing operations in Kuwait and establish a long-term collaboration with our cherished customer. Moving to North Africa, which is another area of growth, we did secure solid new contracts in both Algeria and Libya. These contracts span from 3 to 5 years and ensure that we have the runway to continue to invest in human capital and equipment. We have made strides in both countries in the past, and now we want to ensure we scale our position to mirror our size in the GCC countries. As a repetitive strategy, we rely on our local talent pool to execute flawlessly in the different segments. And our aim is to have the top leadership position in the production services. Here, I'm talking about cementing, coiled tubing, nitrogen and pumping, hydraulic fracturing and industrial services. North Africa proximity to European energy market is uniquely positioned to provide the much needed gas into the pipeline and meet increasing domestic power demand. In addition to increasing oil export capacity, the countries want to enhance their supply buffer in the coming years. Through this shift, we continue to be close to our customers and define the needed resources to fuel that supply growth. To summarize, the tender activities will remain very busy this year, and we are expecting much more to come in the second half. We are focused on building a solid pipeline and securing a robust backlog while maintaining profitable growth and free cash flow generation. And with that, I'll pass the call over to Stefan to discuss the financials in more details.