Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our third quarter 2025 conference call. Before we begin, we would like to remind you that a copy of our news release and investor supplement can be found on our website. We also want to remind you that we may make forward-looking statements on this call. These statements are subject to known and unknown risks, and our future results may differ materially. For more information, you are encouraged to review our regulatory filings available on SEDAR, EDGAR and on our website. On today's call, we will provide a review of our third quarter performance, then Jen Mazin, Co-President and General Counsel, will discuss the recently announced partnership between Westinghouse and the U.S. government and how we expect this partnership to benefit our business for years to come. And lastly, Patrick will conclude our remarks by discussing our operating results and financial position. Following our comments, we look forward to taking your questions. We had another strong quarter, delivering solid financial results and advancing our strategic initiatives across the business. We generated $302 million of FFO during the quarter or $0.46 per unit, up 10% year-over-year, and we continue to expect to deliver on our 10% plus FFO per unit growth target for 2025. We were successful advancing our commercial priorities, signing contracts to deliver another 4,000 gigawatt hours per year of generation and continue to deliver on our growth initiatives, commissioning 1,800 megawatts of new projects in the quarter. We also made strategic investments across our key markets in critical technologies to support both energy demand and grid reliability. We continue to see accelerating demand for power across nearly all the markets in which we operate. This growth is being driven by the same three key themes we have highlighted in recent quarters, ongoing electrification, reindustrialization across our operating regions and the extraordinary demand for energy from hyperscalers. The hyperscalers continue to ramp up their CapEx spend on data centers to support the rapid expansion of cloud computing and artificial intelligence. And what is clear to us is that the scale and pace of investment into AI is not slowing down. At the same time, offtakers are seeking long-term access to reliable and sustainable energy sources to power this growth. With this, it is becoming increasingly apparent that meeting the surging demand for electricity will require an any-and-all solution, leveraging solar, wind, hydro, gas, nuclear and other technologies to ensure sufficient load and consistent delivery of electrons. As a result of this demand and the required any-and-all solution, the opportunity to deploy capital has noticeably accelerated in the past few months and is reflected in the pipeline of opportunities we are executing on today. In particular, we are seeing growing opportunities in nuclear, where we are exceptionally well positioned to play a leading role in the sector's expansion in both the United States and globally, given our ownership of Westinghouse, the U.S. nuclear champion. In October, we announced a strategic partnership with the U.S. government with the intention of achieving the objectives of reinvigorating the nuclear power industrial base as set out in President Trump's executive orders. Under the partnership, the U.S. government will support Westinghouse by, among other things, arranging financing and ordering new Westinghouse nuclear power reactors to be built in the United States with an aggregate investment value of at least $80 billion. This transformational agreement, which Jen will speak to in more detail shortly, positions nuclear energy deployment as a cornerstone of America's strategy to sustain global leadership in both artificial intelligence and advanced nuclear power technology and will drive a step change in the growth of nuclear power generation, helping to kickstart scale deployment of new Westinghouse reactors in the U.S. and around the world. Separate from our partnership with the U.S. government, this past month, Brookfield signed a letter of intent to conduct 6 weeks of early-stage diligence on the potential development of two VC Summer nuclear reactors. The reactors are Westinghouse AP1000s that were partially constructed until development was paused in 2017. And while we are early in our diligence process, we are encouraged by our initial feedback from potential partners and hyperscaler offtakers. The development of these reactors represents another growth opportunity for Westinghouse as well as potentially for Brookfield Renewable to enhance its position as a leading supplier of scale electricity to utilities and hyperscalers to support accelerating energy demand via nuclear power. But we will only do so if the appropriate downside protections and risk-adjusted returns are available to us. Another example of how accelerating demand from the hyperscalers is impacting our business is that these players are increasingly looking to our hydro capacity as a source of power, given its scale, baseload and clean characteristics. While hyperscalers have traditionally focused on contracting our wind and solar generation and continue to do so for its low-cost additionality and speed-to-market benefits, the scale of current demand means we are also seeing a greater opportunity to contract our hydro fleet to these offtakers. And as the largest private owners and operators of hydro assets in the United States with approximately 5 terawatt hours of generation coming up for recontracting, we are well positioned to capture the increasing demand, which will both lift our cash flows in the form of higher pricing and also enable us to upfinance these assets, providing additional capital to deploy into growth. We have seen this play out with the hydro framework agreement we signed in July with Google and the immediate subsequent contracting of two facilities. And then more recently, we also signed a new 20-year contract with Microsoft at another one of our hydro assets in PJM as part of our renewable energy framework with that counterparty. We also continue to evaluate the opportunity to acquire hydros, which would fit well within our portfolio. And this quarter, we closed our previously announced incremental investment into Isagen, increasing our stake in a world-class hydro business with a strong growth outlook. Another area of growth for our business, driven by rising electricity demand, higher peak loads and greater renewables penetration is battery storage. Costs continue to come down, decreasing more than 50% in the past 12 months, and we are seeing a notable increase in counterparties willing to execute long-term capacity contracts, a key attribute of our de-risked approach to development. This past quarter, we advanced our global battery development strategy, highlighted by the delivery of a 340-megawatt battery in Australia, which combined with the first phase of this project is now the largest operating battery solution in the country. We continue to see scale opportunities for partnerships with governments and corporates to help deliver energy solutions utilizing battery storage. Now while we are deploying significant capital into batteries and hydro and evaluating further deployment into nuclear, our core wind and solar business also continues to grow at an accelerating pace as a result of its position as the lowest cost, fastest-to-market form of bulk power available in most major markets around the world. Today, we have a global operating fleet and scale pipeline of over 200 gigawatts, which complements our battery, hydro and nuclear capabilities and furthers our position as the partner of choice to the largest buyers of power who are prioritizing low-cost, readily available power solutions. In fact, we feel the ability to provide baseload power and energy storage solutions enhances the value of our wind and solar development pipeline as these technologies can be used to complement each other to meet the needs of customers. These combined capabilities across renewable technologies, including our baseload power capabilities, our relationships with the largest technology players and our access to scale capital enable us to act quickly in environments like these, positioning us well to accelerate our growth over the next several years. As a result, we have never felt stronger about the growth prospects of our business. And with that, we will now turn it over to Jen to speak in more detail to the recently announced partnership between Westinghouse and the U.S. government.