Thank you, Mary. Today I will cover our operating and financial performance in the quarter along with an update on our Capital Markets, activities and outlook. Turning first to the results for the quarter on slide 11, we have now installed over 116,000 solar and storage systems, with storage attachment rates reaching 54% of installations nationally during the quarter. We expect storage attachment rates to remain at or above this level throughout the remainder of the year. This higher mix of storage continues to drive net subscriber values higher as backup storage offerings carry higher margins. During the quarter, we installed 265 megawatt hours of storage capacity. Well above the high end of our guidance and an increase of 152% compared to the same quarter last year. Our total network's storage capacity is now approximately 1.8 gigawatt hours. In the second quarter, solar energy capacity installed with approximately 192 megawatts within our guidance range of 190 to 200 megawatts. Customer additions were approximately 26,700, including approximately 25,000 subscriber additions. Our subscription mix reached 95% of deployment in the period, an increase from 93% last quarter and again the highest level in many years. We ended Q2 with 984,000 customers and approximately 828,000 subscribers, representing 7.1 gigawatts of network solar energy capacity of 14% increased year-over-year. Our subscribers generate significant recurring revenue with most under 20 or 25 year contracts for the clean energy we provide. At the end of Q2, our annual recurring revenue, or ARR, stood at almost 1.5 billion, up 27% over the same period last year. We had an average contract life remaining of nearly 18 years. Turning to slide 12, in Q2 subscriber value was approximately $49,600 and creation cost was approximately $37,200, delivering a net subscriber value of $12,394. This strong result was from higher battery attachment rates, efficiency, and sequential growth in volumes. Although subscriber value decreased slightly in Q2 due to a smaller average system size relative to Q1, we expect this trend to reverse in Q3 and Q4, with higher average system sizes. If measured on a per watt basis to normalize for system size, subscriber value per watt increased slightly from Q1. Our Q2 subscriber value and net subscriber value reflect the blended investment tax credit of approximately 35%, again reflecting the portion of our deployed systems qualifying for the energy communities and lowering ITC adders. Total value generated, which is the net subscriber value multiplied by the number of subscriber additions in the period, was $310 million in the second quarter. Our present value-based metrics are presented using a 6% discount rate, but our financial underwriting already accounts for our current cost of capital, which was approximately 7.5% in Q2. As a reminder, to enable ease of comparison across periods, we generally do not update the discount rate frequently. Instead, we provide advanced rate ranges that reflect current interest rates, enabling investors to calculate the obtainable net cash unit margins on our deployments. In addition, we provide a pro forma net subscriber value using the capital costs observed for the quarter. At a 7.5% discount rate, net subscriber value was $7,075 and total value generated was $177 million. We expect additional tailwinds to net subscriber value in future periods from the following variety of factors, more favorable business mix, increased realization of ITC adders, lower hardware prices, labor efficiency and operating leverage from strong sequential volume growth. On slide 13, we detail the tailwinds from ITC outers. In Q2 we recognized the weighted average ITC of approximately 35%, the equivalent of approximately half of our systems qualifying for the energy communities or low-income adder. Proceeds from domestic content adders are expected to be realized in the coming quarters, including a retroactive monetization of a portion of 2023 and year-to-date 2024 installations. We were encouraged to see the updated guidance in May, which should allow for a strong majority of our installations to qualify for this adder within a few quarters and increase our weighted average ITC level to around 45% in 2025. Turning now to gross and net earning assets and our balance sheet on slide 15. Gross earning assets were $15.7 billion at the end of the second quarter. Gross earning assets is the measure of cash flows we expect to receive from subscribers over time, net of operating and maintenance costs, distributions to tax equity partners, and distributions to project equity financing partners, all discounted at a 6% unlevered capital cost. Net earning assets were $5.7 billion at the end of the second quarter of approximately $430 million from the prior quarter. Net earning assets is gross earning assets plus cash let they'll debt. Net earning assets does not include inventory or other construction and progress assets or net derivative assets related to our interest rate swaps, all of which represent additional value. The value creation upside we expect from future grid services opportunities and selling additional products and services to our customer base are not reflected in these metrics. We programmatically enter into interest rate hedges to insulate our capital costs from adverse near-term fluctuations. The vast majority of our debt is either fixed coupon, long dated securities, or floating rate loans that have been hedged with interest rate swaps. As such, we do not adjust the discount rate used in net earning assets to match current capital costs for new installations. We ended the quarter with over $1 billion in total cash, an increase of $259 million compared to the prior quarter. Cash generation was $217 million in Q2, which included the recovery of timing related items, most notably the $181 million reduction in Q1 proceeds as a result of the transition from traditional tax equity to tax credit transfers. Turning to our Capital Markets activities, as we discussed last call, we were very active in Q1, arranging capital to support our growth and further optimizing our balance sheet by extending maturities to navigate potential and economic conditions and volatility. We have been prudent to extend facilities early and proactively. As of today, close transaction and executed term sheets provide us with expected tax equity capacity to fund over 313 megawatts of project per subscribers beyond what was deployed through the second quarter. We also have over $1 billion in unused commitments available in our non-recourse senior revolving warehouse loan. This unused amount would fund approximately 373 megawatts of projects for subscribers. Our strong debt capital runway allows us to be selective in time and turnout transactions. Since the start of the year, we have closed three ABS transactions. Sunrun's industry leading performance as an originator and servicer of residential solar assets continues to provide deep access to attractively priced capital. In June, we closed an $886 million ABS transaction representing the largest ever securitization for Sunrun and the residential solar industry. We also arranged a subordinated financing on the portfolio. The class A non-recourse debt, comprising both publicly and privately placed tranches, was rated A Plus by CRO. The class A notes had a higher rating than precedent ABS transactions with comparable advance rates, evidencing the higher quality of our portfolios. The spread of 205 basis points on the public tranche represented a 35 basis point improvement from our previous comparable ABS transaction in September 2023. The advance rates on the portfolio were 73% for the class A notes and 83% cumulatively when including the additional subordinated financing. As previously noted, in February, we issued $483 million in convertible notes due in 2030 and concurrently commenced repurchases of our 2026 convertible notes. To date, we have repurchased over $266 million, or two thirds of our 2026 convertible notes. This amount includes repurchases of $50 million in July. We will continue to be disciplined and selective with our repurchases. When we think about our balance sheet, we prioritize a strong cash position and use of asset level non-recourse debt financing. This strategy provides the lowest cost capital to finance cash flow producing assets backed by highly credit worthy consumers and to use parent recourse debt that is appropriately sized and balances maturity base cash interest costs and flexibility. Turning now to our outlook on Slide 18. The underpenetrated nature of our market gives us confidence we can sustain robust growth throughout this decade. In this strong long term demand backdrop, our priority is to generate cash by continuing to increase customer values through growing storage adoption and other higher value products and services, and by reducing our costs. Storage capacity installed is expected to be in a range of 275 megawatt to 300 megawatt hours in Q3, this represents approximately 64% growth year-over-year at the midpoint. For the full year, we are increasing our storage guidance to a range of 1030 megawatt to 1100 megawatt hours, representing 86% growth at the midpoint, an increase from our prior guidance range of 800 megawatt to 1000 megawatt hours. Solar energy capacity installed is expected to be in a range between 220 megawatt and 230 megawatts in Q3. At the midpoint, this represents 17% growth from Q2. For the full year, we expect solar energy capacity installed to decline approximately 15% in-line with the low end of our prior guidance range. We believe this guidance still represents market share gains underpinned by the strength of our subscription offering and our disciplined go to market approach. We also expect year-over-year growth to be positive starting in Q4. Given our focus on increasing net subscriber values through product mix, additional ITC adders and cost efficiencies, we expect our net subscriber values will be materially higher in the second half of the year relative to Q2 levels. Because we have been increasing unit economics, total value generated growth will be at least 15 percentage points higher than solar installation growth. We remain committed to driving meaningful cash generation as we execute our margin focus and disciplined growth strategy, we are reiterating our cash generation outlook for Q4. We expect cash generation will be positive in Q3, $50 million to $125 million in Q4 and now $350 million to $600 million in 2025. On slide 19, we have outlined sensitivities related to key variables that would affect our achievement. We now expect a large portion of our solar only systems in addition to our storage systems to qualify for the domestic content adder starting later this year and into 2025. We will provide more concrete expectations for amount and timing of initial receipt of domestic content adders during the coming quarters. Our 2025 cash generation guidance reflects an approximately 45% average ITC. With that, let me turn it back to Mary.