Thank you for joining us today for our first quarter 2023 corporate update conference call. We appreciate your support and look forward to discussing our recent developments. Our flagship state-of-the-art purification facility in Ironton is certified mechanically complete and has completed the pre-startup safety management documentation required for solvent deliveries, which we started yesterday. We have the initial solvent charge delivery schedule over the next five days and then expect to circulate solvent early next week. All of our core operations have been commissioned and are ready for start-up. We are on track to begin commercial pellet production using the first post-industrial recycle and then post-consumer recycled feed in the second quarter. We still expect to be able to complete our start-up time line in order to meet the milestones as outlined in the recent bondholder agreement. Our goal is to produce between 45 million pounds and 75 million pounds of ultra pure recycled resin in 2023.We have continued to advance pre-construction activities for our Augusta project since our last call. Importantly, we are working toward a agreement with the AEDA for a plan to begin development activities. Additionally, preparation for module construction is in progress and equipment is beginning to arrive at Gulfspan's facilities in Beaumont, Texas. Our international projects are making progress. Our European team has initiated pre-construction engineering work for the permitting process at our site at the Port of Antwerp. Our joint venture with SK Geocentric continues to advance the collaborative engineering process for a multiline purification facility in South Korea. And we continue to make progress with detailed joint venture discussions and site selection efforts with Mitsui in Japan. Our joint venture team has started the feasibility study process on two locations that have the capacity for the development of two to four purification lines. We are frequently approached and also actively seek out opportunities to amplify what PureCycle's technology means to the global polypropylene recycling marketplace. As you can imagine, our primary focus has been on commercializing our first plant in Ironton. This is, quite frankly, where all employees have been spending most of their time. Having said that, we are beginning to spread our message globally through several recent events. I was invited to Davos to present on a Procter & Gamble panel, which highlighted PureCycle's technology. Several of our team members are active in national industry associations such as the Plastics Industry Association, the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries and the Association of Plastic Recyclers, where we are often provided speakership opportunities. And recently, PureCycle representatives traveled to Washington, D.C. to participate in Domestic Plastic Recycling Tabletop discussions as well as the U.S.-Korea Sustainability Summit discussions. While there, we also met with numerous members of Congress and other senior policy officials. We expect this participation to increase over the coming years as critical legislation is crafted to govern this emerging industry. We're proud to have secured an additional $62 million of non-dilutive debt financing and are working several other equipment financing packages that we intend to close in the next few months. The AEDA has received our financing plan for one line in Augusta, and we are working on closing the land bonds by June 30, 2023.Turning to Slide 4. This project has been a testament to grit, determination and a desire to finish. As you can imagine, there are a number of minor equipment issues when starting up the facility and our team has been managing through all of those challenges. This is normal. They are teething challenges for all new technologies. We've spoken several times about needing to work through the early start of headaches, and this is what we're doing. While we have encountered some delays over the last two months, we're now excited to move forward with startup. I can tell you personally that the plant just feels different now. There's a new energy building within our team, and we are ready to run this facility. OurPureCycle team and field contractors who have worked on this project have willed this facility to mechanical completion. And I'm very proud to say position the facility to receive solvent deliveries, three arrived on Monday. We are currently in the following position: completed key pre-startup and safety requirements, utility plant is operational and in service, PrEP is operational and in service, flare systems are operational and in service, extruders are commissioned and ready for start-up. As a result of all of this, solvent is being delivered to the site. The next step is to make every effort to ensure safe and smooth start-up that's focus on long-term operational success. We are not going to rush into the next steps. I hope you've had an opportunity to watch some of the videos that we posted on to our website, on the social media and in the YouTube that showcase our PrEP, purification and born-digital operations. We intend to continue showcasing our company with these videos all the way through initial pellet production. Turning to the next slide, I will walk through the next steps of Ironton's startup process. This is an updated slide from last quarter's call that shows our progress in achieving the operational milestones for the certification of the Ironton project. This is what we call our path to pellets. We closed the first bond milestone by achieving certification that Ironton is mechanically complete by June 30, 2023. PureCycle formally received third-party engineering certification just a few days later on April 28th with agreement that the plant was mechanically complete on the 24th of April. We're currently in the in-between stage and between mechanical completion and first pellets. During the last call, I underestimated the time it would take the transition of first pellets. Instead of dual tracking activities like we originally planned, we purposefully slowed down our process for solvent introduction in order to more effectively facilitate a path to mechanical completion. This ultimately slowed down our initial forward progress, but also helped us to build a better and long-term foundation for steady operations. Given this is our first facility, we took extra time preparing the plant through a process called PSSR, or pre-startup and safety review. This involves final operations checks, safety walk downs, final equipment commissionings. During this process, we spent a significant amount of time testing instrumentation, working valves to ensure we are ready to operate. This is all now complete. Yesterday, we cleared another major hurdle and accepted solvent to the site for the first time. This is a big step and paves the way for commercial operations. The next two weeks will involve the testing of solvent circulation systems, commissioning of the remaining equipment, primarily our filter media systems, while the solvent is circulating, and then we will introduce feed. Once feed is introduced, we will set levels, and then we will make our first pellets. We will notify the market of our success and start ramping up production rates from there. We remain committed to achieving these milestones in the time frames I've just described, given where we are today in ramping up the Ironton operations. Moving to Slide 6. I want to spend a few minutes to highlight the operational progress that we've made on executing the next phase of our growth strategy. In Augusta, our engineering teams have completed approximately 90% of the ISBL design and have begun work on the OSBL design. Gulfspan, our contracting partner, has started module preparation for the Augusta construction project at its site in Beaumont, Texas. We continue to make progress on our international projects. We have initiated engineering work at the Port of Antwerp in Belgium to support the permitting process. This activity will set this facility's critical path.Our joint venture engineering team in South Korea has advanced plant designs in accordance with the schedule and priorities identified in the JVA with SK Geocentric. Our core focus right now is to ensure that the final design measures seamlessly with the feedstock available to the site. And finally, our JVA discussions with Mitsui have progressed as anticipated, and we started feasibility studies on two preferred locations. All of this at PureCycle are fully committed to the Company's mission of providing a new solution to global plastic waste. Ironton is critically important today, but it's just the beginning of what PureCycle will become.I will now turn it over to our CFO, Larry Somma, for the financial update. Larry?