Thank you Liz and good morning, everyone. Welcome to Brookfield Infrastructure Partners Second Quarter 2024 earnings conference call. As introduced, my name is David Krant, and I'm the Chief Financial Officer of Brookfield Infrastructure. I'm joined today by our Chief Executive Officer, Sam Pollock, and our Chief Operating Officer, Ben Vaughn. I'll begin the call today with a summary of our second quarter 2024 financial and operating results, followed by a discussion of our recent capital markets activities. I'll then turn the call over to Sam, who will provide an update on our strategic initiatives before concluding with our outlook for the business. At this time, I would like to remind you that in our remarks today, we may make forward-looking statements. These statements are subject to known and unknown risks and future results may differ materially. For further information on known and unknown risk factors. I would encourage you to review our annual report on Form 20-F, which is available on our website. During the second quarter, Brookfield Infrastructure generated strong financial and operating results while also advancing our strategic initiatives. For the three months ended June 30, 2024, we generated funds from operations or FFO of $608 million, an increase of 10% over the prior year period. The current quarter benefited from organic growth that was at the midpoint of our target range as well as recent acquisitions that significantly contributed to results. This included a continuation of a strong performance at our global intermodal logistics operation, higher contributions from our increased stake in a Brazilian integrated rail and logistics provider and three data center platform investments. These positive drivers were partially offset by the impact of capital recycling, higher interest costs and the impact of foreign exchange. Looking at results by operating segments. Starting with utilities, we generated FFO of $180 million compared to $224 million in the same period last year. The decline is due to capital recycling activity, including the sale of our interest in an Australian regulated utility business and additional interest costs associated with the financing completed at our Brazilian regulated gas transmission business during the first quarter. After removing these impacts, the base business grew organically as a result of inflation indexation and the contribution associated with $450 million of capital commissioned into the rate base over the last 12 months. Moving to our transport segment, FFO was $319 million, representing a 60% increase over the same period in the prior year. The increase was primarily attributable to our acquisition of a global intermodal logistics operation, which continues to perform ahead of expectations, as well as the incremental stake in our Brazilian integrated rail and logistics operation that delivered strong performance this quarter at tariffs increased by more than 15%. The remaining businesses also performed well, achieving organic growth of 9%, which is primarily driven by inflationary tariff increases across the portfolio. Our midstream segment generated FFO of $143 million, which is ahead of the prior year after excluding the impact of capital recycling. Strong demand and customer activity levels continued to benefit results most prevalent at our North American gas storage business, where we continue to add contract duration at higher rates compared to prior years. The unprecedented growth in North American power demand has created further opportunities for our critical midstream assets. During the quarter, our businesses capitalize on this favorable market environment by securing several accretive commercial agreements and bolt on capital projects to meet growing customer demand. Lastly, FFO from our data segment was $78 million, representing an 8% increase over the same period last year. This result reflects the contribution from recently completed acquisitions, including the purchase of 40 retail co-location sites and two marquee hyperscale data center platform. Across our global data center platform overall, we continue to see strong momentum in leasing activity on the tail of artificial intelligent investment and our customers' need for more processing and storage capacity. Moving on from our financial and operating performance, I would now like to highlight some of our recent capital markets activity. In addition to replenishing our investment pipeline and progressing our asset sale plans, which Sam will speak to soon. Our primary focus this quarter was capitalizing on very attractive debt capital markets to further derisk our asset level balance sheets. Within our businesses, we completed approximately $5 billion of non-recourse financings during the quarter, and our activity can be broadly bucketed into three categories. The first category is rightsizing capital structures. As our businesses grow their underlying cash flows, we can raise additional debt while preserving the existing capital structure. In the last nine months, we have generated approximately $1.4 billion of proceeds, of which $1.1 billion reflects capital recycling activity. This is in specific instances where we are within 24 months of an expected sale and the new capital structure allows us to reduce the equity required by a future buyer and pull forward future sale proceeds. The second category is maturity extensions. We have proactively refinanced $3.4 billion in maturities occurring over the next several years. Across these transactions, the combined average rate increase was only 50 basis points. The benefit of pushing out maturities greatly outweighs the modest increase in financing costs, which is also more than offset by the inflationary revenue increases we've experienced over the last several years. A great example of where we were able to achieve a term extension and attractive price was at our Western Canadian natural gas gathering and processing operations. In July, we completed a $720 million eight year bond issuance with proceeds used to repay a 2026 maturity. The newly issued bonds allowed us to fully derisk the maturity profile and extend the average duration of debt outstanding by two years. In addition, the new bonds are priced very competitively at a coupon in line with the debt being refinanced. The third and final category is opportunistic repricings. We took advantage of the strong spread environment and completed approximately $1 billion of loan repricings across three of our businesses during the second quarter. These activities reduced our cost of financing by over $7 million annually net to bid. These repricing transactions are a unique feature for floating rate loan market and allow the issuer to reduce the credit spread of a previously issued loans while keeping existing capital structure in place. Our balance sheet position was strong to begin the year and has been further bolstered by this activity. Over the next 12 months only 1% of our asset level debt has matured, and we have no corporate maturities until 2027. In addition, we maintain significant corporate liquidity of $1.9 billion and remain well positioned to support growth initiatives. That concludes my remarks for this morning. I will now turn the call over to Sam.