Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2024 Financial Review Call. Today, I will cover our 2024 accomplishments, the resiliency of our business, and our 2025 guidance and longer-term outlook. Steve Coughlin, our CFO, will provide more details on our financial performance and expectations after my remarks. To say that we are extremely disappointed with our stock price performance is an understatement. Steve and I will address what we believe to be investors' concerns, including policy uncertainties, renewable EBITDA growth, and balance sheet and funding constraints. We will review why renewables are critical to meeting growing demand for electricity, particularly among technology customers, and why our business model is relatively well insulated from and resilient to potential regulatory changes. Even with our resilient position, we are taking immediate steps to strengthen our financial position and outlook. These steps include reducing our parent investment in renewables by focusing on the highest risk-adjusted return projects, improving organizational efficiency, and continuing to operate some of our energy infrastructure assets. As a result of these actions, we expect to improve our credit metrics over time while eliminating the need for issuing new equity during the forecast period and maintaining our dividend. Turning to slide four, we signed 4.4 gigawatts of new power purchase agreements for renewables last year. Our performance in 2024 puts us on track to achieve our goal of signing 14 to 17 gigawatts of new PPAs through 2025. We are prioritizing signing those contracts with the best risk-adjusted returns rather than just maximizing growth in gigawatts. In 2024, we also completed the construction or acquisition of 3 gigawatts of renewables and a 670-megawatt combined cycle gas plant in Panama, greatly increasing the utilization of our existing LNG terminal in that country. Our best-in-class record of on-time and on-budget delivery of renewable projects is something that our customers value highly and is one of our competitive advantages. Lastly, I should note that in 2024, we received approval from the Indiana Regulatory Commission for new base rates and an ROE of 9.9%, supporting an investment program that will improve reliability for our customers and support local economic development. Now moving to our financial results. In 2024, we achieved adjusted EBITDA of $2.64 billion, which is in the lower half of our guidance range as a result of extreme one-time weather-related events in Colombia and Brazil, with both businesses down a combined $200 million year on year. Nonetheless, we generated parent free cash flow of $1.1 billion, which is at the midpoint of our guidance. We earned a record adjusted EPS of $2.14, which is materially above our guidance range and puts us well on track to achieve our annualized growth target of 7% to 9% from 2020 to 2025. Moving to our renewables business on slide five, 2025 will be an inflection point as we begin to realize the financial benefits from the maturing of our renewable business, including the addition of 6.6 gigawatts we inaugurated in 2023 and 2024. We are able to achieve increasing economies of scale that reduce our overhead per megawatt, as we now have 16.2 gigawatts of renewables online versus 5.9 gigawatts in 2018, excluding Brazil. At the same time, our development business is becoming more efficient. We are now harvesting the investments we made in creating our pipeline. Furthermore, as profitability of each megawatt of new PPA signed has substantially increased, we do not need to bring online as many new projects to achieve the same level of financial growth. This strategy allows us to focus on the most profitable new projects while reducing costs and capital requirements. As I will shortly discuss, there is a time lag between renewables development expenditures, which flow through the P&L, and growth in EBITDA. Creating a pipeline of potential projects requires expenditures on development activities such as scouting for prospects, negotiating land purchases or leases, measuring the wind or sun resource, and finally, obtaining permits. As our renewables are in a more mature state, our financials will start to reflect the true profitability of the business as new projects coming online cover the cost of early-stage projects. As the business grows, stewardship, including administrative and back-office activities, will get allocated over a larger operating base. This inflection in our life cycle starting in 2025 will strengthen our credit metrics as we achieve a higher ratio of projects online selling energy versus spending on pipeline and projects under construction. With this background, let me turn to our financial expectations for our renewables business. In 2025, we expect over 60% year-over-year growth in our renewables EBITDA, which Steve will discuss in more detail. Previous growth in our US renewables portfolio drives the majority of our expected EBITDA growth. In 2025, another 3.2 gigawatts of renewable capacity we expect to bring online will contribute to strong EBITDA growth in 2026 and beyond. These numbers also reflect the maturing of our US renewable business as we harvest the investments we made to create our 50-gigawatt US pipeline. Finally, I should note that our 2025 renewable segment guidance incorporates some changes in segment makeup, including the sale of 5.2 gigawatts in Brazil last year and the addition of 2.5 gigawatts in Chile. As the business has evolved, these Chilean renewable assets have now been moved from the energy infrastructure SBU to the renewables SBU. The sale of Brazil is an important de-risking of our portfolio as we have eliminated a significant portion of our hydrology, currency, spot price, and floating interest rate risk exposures. Turning to slide six and the renewables market and our business, last year, the US added 49 gigawatts of new capacity with renewables, battery storage, representing 92% of those additions. In 2025, the US is expected to add 63 gigawatts, 93% of which are solar, storage, and wind. While we will likely see a surge for new gas capacity over the next decade, delayed delivery of new gas turbine averages three to four years, without taking into account new permitting requirements or building new gas pipelines. While a few decommissioned nuclear units are expected to be brought online in the next five years, a material contribution in new capacity from small nuclear reactors or advanced design nuclear plants is unlikely to occur for at least another decade. Taking all this into consideration, renewables have the shortest time to power and much greater price certainty. Therefore, there is no doubt that the increased demand for electricity over the next decade, coming from data centers and advanced manufacturing, will continue to require vast amounts of renewable energy and batteries. Moving to slide seven, over the past five years, we have endeavored to make our business resilient to potential policy changes. First, we have taken a lead in onshoring our supply chain to the US, which limits our exposure to new tariffs. We now have essentially all of our solar panels, trackers, and batteries either in-country or contracted to be domestically produced for our US projects coming online through 2027. Second, of the 8.4 gigawatts of signed contracts we have in the US, more than half are under construction, and nearly all have significant safe harbor protections, which will grandfather them under the existing tax policy. Third, about 3 gigawatts, or 30% of our backlog of signed PPAs, are in US dollars but in international markets, primarily Chile, which are unaffected by US policy changes. I should note that in our international markets, renewables can be even more profitable and most often the cheapest form of dispatchable energy, even in a regime without meaningful subsidies. Lastly, the vast majority of AES' customer base are corporations whose demand for new renewables continues to increase at a rapid pace. In fact, in 2024, approximately 70% of the PPAs we signed were with large corporations. And notably, we have once again been designated by BNEF as the largest provider of clean energy to corporations in the world. Even in the very unlikely scenario where tax credits for renewables are eliminated prospectively in their entirety, we believe that there will be continued strong demand from our corporate clients, especially data centers, because there are no realistic alternatives for many years. Without timely access to power, there can be no AI revolution. Obviously, the price of new PPAs in a future without tax incentives would increase, and the profile of earnings and cash flow would change. This will look a lot like our projects in Chile. However, in any case, what ultimately matters to AES is our returns and cash flow per dollar invested. Now let me turn to our utilities business on slide eight. AES Indiana and AES Ohio are executing on a multiyear investment program to improve customer reliability and support economic development. In 2024, we invested $1.6 billion, leading to a rate base growth of 20%. This investment program includes growth and modernization programs at both of our utilities and a plan to transition our aging coal generation in Indiana. Our investment plans are driven by our customers, and our top priority is to support local communities with reliable, resilient, and affordable power. We have among the lowest residential rates in both states, which we expect to maintain even as we grow our rate base. Turning to slide nine, across our two utilities, we have growth riders or trackers, which shield near real-time returns on our investments. More than 70% of the investment program is recovered through formula rates or existing riders, such as the TDSIC program at AES Indiana, with the FERC formula rates that support transmission investment at AES Ohio. All of this, combined with signed agreements for over 2 gigawatts of new data center demand, make AES Indiana and AES Ohio among the fastest-growing and modernizing utilities in the nation. From 2023 to 2027, we expect annualized growth in a rate base of at least 11% across the two utilities. This plan will support credit improvement at DPL Inc., which we expect to achieve investment-grade metrics by 2026. Now turning to slide ten, our energy infrastructure business provides a substantial and steady base of earnings and cash flow that support our credit ratings and help fund our dividends and new growth. We remain committed to an all-of-the-above strategy, which includes an important role for gas in our businesses and customer offerings. During the fourth quarter, we completed the construction of a new 670-megawatt fully contracted in dollars CCGT in Panama, which will result in much greater utilization of our existing LNG regasification in the country. In addition, we are delaying the closure or sale of a few of our coal plants as a result of increased demand in those markets. These assets are largely depreciated yet contribute meaningful EBITDA and cash flow. We still remain committed, nonetheless, to a full exit from coal generation and will continue to rapidly lower our carbon intensity and minimize carbon emissions from our generation fleet. Now moving to our financial outlook on slide eleven. Today, we are initiating our 2025 guidance, including adjusted EBITDA of $2.65 to $2.85 billion, parent free cash flow of $1.15 to $1.25 billion, and adjusted EPS of $2.10 to $2.26. We are also reaffirming all of our long-term growth rates, including 5% to 7% adjusted EBITDA growth through 2027. As we grow, we are also improving our business mix as we see a significant increase in adjusted EBITDA from renewables and US utilities. Now turning to our balance sheet and plans to improve our credit ratios through and beyond our guidance period on slide twelve. We are firmly committed to maintaining our investment-grade credit ratings as well as our dividend. As a result, we are taking several actions to improve cash flow and reduce parent equity requirements while ensuring that our capital plan will be totally self-funded. I should note that these efforts are ongoing, and we will continue to evaluate measures to strengthen our financial position on top of what is already included in our guidance. First, we have resized our development program and organization to focus on executing on our backlog and pursuing fewer but larger projects to better serve our core customers. This strategy allows us to increase our returns on our available capital by selecting the most attractive projects. Given the strength of our 50-gigawatt US pipeline, we also expect to execute more development transfer agreements, enabling us to monetize a portion of our renewables pipeline without requiring significant AES equity. As a result of all of these actions, we have reduced our parent investments in the renewables business by $1.3 billion from now through 2027 and eliminated the need for equity. Second, we are streamlining our organization ahead of what was originally planned. Our business is significantly simpler today than it was ten years ago. As we now operate in fewer countries, our portfolio consists of more than 50% renewables, and our growth is primarily concentrated in the US. In 2025, after the execution of this restructuring, we will realize approximately $150 million in cost savings, ramping up to over $300 million in 2026 as we achieve a full-year run rate. Third, as I previously mentioned, we will retain a few of our coal assets beyond 2027 to support our financial metrics and fund new projects. Taken together, these actions enable an even stronger AES with a clear path to achieve our 2025 and long-term financial commitments and strengthen our credit metrics. In summary, we have a resilient strategy to deliver on our financial commitments regardless of regulatory outcomes. We have continued to de-risk our business by exiting Brazil, locking in and onshoring our equipment, and moving our supply chain to the US. As I mentioned earlier, 2025 is an inflection point for the financial results of our US renewable business as we begin to harvest many years of work and investment. Demand from our core corporate clients remains strong and growing, and we are taking all steps to increase our efficiency and profitability. We are confident in the underlying value of our business, and we are committed to strengthening our balance sheet while capitalizing on our unique competitive advantages. With that, I will turn the call over to Steve.