Thanks, Mike and good morning and thank you for joining GrafTech's second quarter earnings call. Let me start by saying that we operate in a cyclical industry and we find ourselves in a challenging part of the cycle for our business and more broadly for our industry. Graphite electrode demand remains weak, industry-wide capacity utilization rates remain low and consequently cost per ton are high. At the same time, pricing discipline in the inventory has been somewhat sacrificed to support volume. Against this backdrop, GrafTech, and we believe most others in our industry are operating their electrode business at losses or low margins. We think these dynamics are well understood. We also believe it's well understood that these dynamics are not sustainable. We don't control all of these underlying forces, particularly the macro or the actions taken by others, but we do control our response and our actions. We are engaging with our customers with a relentless focus on meeting their needs. We are adding to our customer value proposition. We are investing in technical capabilities and offerings. We are aggressively cutting costs without compromising quality, safety or the environment. We are managing our working capital and capital expenditure levels. We've reduced our production capacity. We are proactively managing production to balance supply and demand, and we are actively pursuing opportunities to diversify our business and support long-term growth. At the end of the day, we are focused on controlling the controllable. We set out a plan at the beginning of the year to do just that, and we are executing against that plan. I'm proud of our team's efforts and thank them for their continued dedication. All of this said, we don't recognize -- or we recognize that this won't translate into immediate recovery from a financial performance perspective. That wasn't our expectation, nor should it be yours, but they are the right actions to help us navigate the current challenges. Importantly we participate in an industry that has many long-term and sustainable tailwinds. And it is very easy to lose sight of that when you are on the downside of a cycle. But cyclical downturns eventually come to an end and the long-term growth opportunities in front of us are very real. During our comments today, we'll expand on all of these concepts and why we believe we are taking the right actions to manage the current environment and preserve our long-term flexibility. Let me begin with an update on some of our key initiatives, starting in the commercial area. As I mentioned on our last call, we are instilling a renewed focus on a customer-first mantra, as meeting the needs of our customers must be central to everything we do. We continue to execute our customer engagement strategy, reinforcing the importance of our relationship with our customer and the investments we are making on our customer value proposition to further differentiate GrafTech from our competitors. For example our initiative to expand our product offering by adding an 800 millimeter supersized electrode to our portfolio remains on track with initial customer trials expected to occur later this quarter. We've expanded the breadth of our architect system as part of building upon our best-in-class technical service capabilities. We also continue to expand our first principles understanding of graphite electrodes, building on more than a 135 year legacy of research and development of graphite and carbon-based solutions. We've invested in our pin production capabilities and are the only graphite electrode producer with the capability to produce connecting pins on two different continents. In addition, we're building up our connecting pin inventory levels, and we are on track to have 12 months of pin inventory on hand by the end of this year. All of these examples demonstrate the investments we are making to support our ability to meet the needs of our customers now and into the future. And as demonstrated by the feedback I'm receiving from our customers, including a number of interactions, which have taken place in recent weeks, our investments in these areas are resonating. Our customer engagement efforts, coupled with our compelling value proposition, contributed to a 6% sequential improvement in our sales volume for the second quarter. Further, we continue to expect sales volume growth for the full year compared to 2023, as we continue to regain lost market share. But more importantly, our customer centric mindset is all about the long term. It is about strengthening relationships with existing customers, while fostering new relationships with prospective customers that are mutually beneficial for years to come. To that point, as we mentioned on our last call, we are pleased to have our long-standing and our largest LTA arbitration behind us, removing a substantial risk to our financial position. And more importantly, it allows us to focus our energy on the commercial relationship with this customer. Beyond commercial, let me highlight a few accomplishments across other areas of our business. In operations, our facilities continue to run well as they execute our production plans, and we are doing this safely as our total reportable interest rate remains significantly low the prior year level. Ultimately, this is the most important thing we do, and I commend the team for their ongoing commitment to safety. Our initiatives to address key elements of our cost structure are also progressing well. During the second quarter, we safely and thoughtfully wound down the production activities at St. Marys. In addition, we have completed the activities related to the reduction in our overhead structure. Overall, we are on track to achieve the projected $25 million of annualized cost savings from these initiatives. In addition, the other actions we have taken to reduce our variable costs and control overall spending levels are already paying off. We saw a further sequential decline in our cash cost on a per metric ton basis in the second quarter and have seen an 18% reduction in this metric in the first half of 2024 compared to the first half of 2023. And we remain on track to achieve a mid-teen percentage point decline in our full-year cash cost on a per metric ton basis compared to 2023. In the EV space, we continue to progress our capabilities and to participate in the growing demand for petroleum needle coke and synthetic graphite for anodes for lithium-ion batteries. During the second quarter we received regulatory approval for the permit application we filed last year related to a potential expansion of Seadrift production capacity. And at the same time, we are making investments within our R&D function, including pilot scale assets in our technical center. This will advance our capabilities as it relates to anode material. This remains a dynamic and exciting opportunity with our assets and expertise positioning us well to participate in this demand growth. In the area of sustainability, we continue to make good progress on our initiatives. Earlier this month, we published our latest sustainability report, encourage everyone to take a look at it. We continue to be good stewards in the communities in which we operate, both from an environmental perspective, but also having a positive impact through our community engagement efforts. In summary, in light of the challenging near-term industry dynamics, we set out a plan, and we are executing against it. We believe these are the right steps to position GrafTech to benefit as the global steel market rebounds. Longer-term as decarbonization efforts further drive a shift to electric arc furnace steelmaking and higher graphite electrode demand we are poised to capitalize on this anticipated growth. I will explain later in our prepared remarks. Overall, we are proud of our recent accomplishments and remain confident and emerging from this period as a stronger GrafTech. Now let me turn it over to Jeremy to provide more color on the current state of the industry and our commercial performance.