Thank you, Lisa. And good morning. Please turn to slide four. In the first quarter of our new fiscal year, we delivered EPS at the midpoint and revenue slightly below the low end of our guidance range. Our balanced business portfolio price stickiness and disciplined OpEx spending is helping to mitigate uneven demand across key end markets. Gross margin was 28% and adjusted operating earnings were slightly lower than the prior year due to net volumes and mix headwinds, which were largely offset by cost improvements and increased IRA benefits. The current macro environment has influenced several of our customers towards more cautious spending patterns, which has created pockets of order delays for us, but we are not experiencing cancellations. Although some of the first quarter's market headwinds are expected to persist into our second quarter. We see promising demand indicators and positive momentum across our business for the second half of the fiscal year. We remain focused on what we can control, driving price mix improvements, optimizing our cost structure to flex through cycles, improving productivity through automation and flexibility and advancing our transformative strategic priorities such as our planned domestic lithium plant, our new fast charge and storage business, and accretive bolt on acquisitions like Bren-Tronics. Positive demand signals and opportunities combined with focused execution gives us optimism in our ability to deliver our full year financial projections. While overall orders were down slightly year-over-year, order rates improved over the course of the quarter. The quality of our backlog is healthy with the first sequential increase in Energy Systems backlog in eight quarters offset by seasonal declines in Motive Power and specialty. Andy will give detail on our first quarter fiscal 2025 performance and outlook, but I will first provide a few more highlights and business drivers behind the results. In Energy Systems sales were down compared to prior Q1, driven by declines in communications partially offset by robust data center demand where we see ongoing opportunities with our high discharge energy storage data center solutions. We believe our communications customers have more than worked through their inventory surpluses, and the deferred spending that is occurring is unsustainable to maintain network resiliency. We believe this has created pent up demand that we expect will begin to materialize throughout this fiscal year, with a pickup in quarter end orders pointing to the beginning of a recovery now being underway. In the quarter, Energy Systems achieved $7 million of sequential cost savings as a result of the significant cost improvement actions we implemented over the past two quarters. However, these savings were masked by lower sales with a weaker product mix, particularly from delayed customer spending on high margin power electronics. As a result, we only saw a modest sequential improvement flow through to adjusted operating earnings in Q1. We expect full visibility of these actions in the second quarters as volumes begin to pick up. We also conducted another round of price increases across the business, reset contracts and adjusted tier pricing to contractors. Q1 book-to-bill in energy systems was favorable at greater than one driven by North America Communications at 1.09. We exited the quarter seeing encouraging order trends in Telco, but expect broadband recovery to be a second half fiscal 2025 story based on current backlog orders and project flows. Motive Power was a bright spot, with volumes and margins increasing versus the prior year, driven by consistent customer demand in logistics and warehousing, and continued customer enthusiasm over our higher margin, proprietary maintenance free offerings. Customers are adopting our higher energy dense solutions that provide them with longer term cost savings through operational efficiency, lower labor costs, and lower water and energy usage compared to traditional batteries and chargers. Our maintenance free solutions have grown to 24% of total Motive Power sales in Q1 versus 19% in the prior year. Industry data supports our expectations of mid and long-term expansion. For example, a leading industry association's confidence index shows current conditions during the second quarter of 2024 improved versus last quarter and the future conditions index grew well above the threshold indicative of expansionary conditions. Our backlog remains well above pre pandemic levels, although we saw a slight reduction in backlog with book-to-bill at 0.9 on summer month seasonality and some advanced orders in Q4 after an announced price increase. In Specialty, revenue and adjusted operating earnings in the quarter were down, with performance impacted by a dramatic softening of activity in the broader Class 8 truck OEM market not specific to EnerSys. Our customers, both OEM and fleets are indicating that volume should increase in the back half of our fiscal year as shipping tonnage rebounds in the California Air Resources Board CARB 27 deadline approaches. Aerospace and Defense demand remains strong with a solid order backlog and several aerospace and defense opportunities in the pipeline. Our A&D [ph] business will of course be further bolstered by our recently closed acquisition of Bren-Tronics. Adjusted operating earnings were impacted by the drop in Class 8 OEM volumes and increased costs related to under absorption in our plants, also resulting from the lower communications and transportation volumes. Despite the timing of the resumption of Class 8 orders, we have a significant opportunity in front of us with transportation through our trucking aftermarket channels in the premium automotive market with our retail and aftermarket partners. We are actively working with these customers and building the necessary inventory to achieve the required service levels with the appropriate product mixed, which will enable us to accept higher margin business. We expect this ramp to begin in the second half of our fiscal year. As discussed last quarter, our Missouri plant's output is improving and we will begin to install new lines that will afford us increased and more flexible production capacity in the fall. The incremental volume with better cost absorption will further drive earnings expansions on top of the accretive impact of Bren-Tronics. In our new ventures line of business, we are in the final testing phase of our first commercial ready, fast charging storage system, which we are prepping for delivery to our launch customer site in Canada in the coming weeks. Please turn to slide 5. The team is making exciting progress on our strategic priorities. Let me share some of the highlights from our first quarter, starting with Innovate. In our mode of power products, we are preparing to launch our NexSys 48 Volt heavy duty lithium batteries and we received our first order for two units. We also received our first orders for 22 NexSys outdoor chargers this quarter. This product has the opportunity to be a game changer as customers convert from internal combustion to electric lift trucks in outdoor applications. With regulations such as CARB, which aim to phase out gas powered forklifts in favor of zero emission technologies, the shift to electric forklifts is becoming increasingly significant. In Energy Systems, our DPX Outdoor Fault Managed Power Supply received a critical UL certification and we are leading the industry by being the first company to receive certification for a Class 4 Outside Plant Solution. We continue to focus on optimizing the business as well. As we mentioned last quarter, we have taken specific actions to improve performance and efficiency, particularly in Energy Systems. We have optimized our footprint and organization, conducted targeted restructuring, invested in high speed flexible production capacity, and streamlined our operations. We are continuing to advance on our TPPL manufacturing flexibility initiatives in Missouri, yielding further productivity improvements in the quarter, and are focused on scrap rates, assembly performance, and sign-up execution, driving a nearly $100 million reduction in inventory versus prior year on top of operational cost improvements. Our investments in production flexibility remain on track for completion in the second half of the fiscal year. And accelerating, we continue to advance on the development of our lithium-ion cell gigafactory. We are formalizing our collaborative relationship with Verkor, making investments to support their growth, and progressing on the key agreements which will support our factory operations. We recently met with the U.S. Department of Energy to review our application for additional funding for our plant. We look forward to learning the results of these funding allocations, which are expected to be announced in the coming weeks. At that point, we will share with you the full project budget and timeline. We've updated our model to include the recent tariff announcements, which has further solidified our make versus buy justification. Please turn to slide six. On July 26th, we were pleased to announce closing our acquisition of Bren-Tronics and to welcome the team into EnerSys. This acquisition, which expands our presence in critical defense applications, broads our lithium product offerings, strengthens our product development capabilities, provides incremental growth opportunities, and is immediately accretive to earnings. As previously disclosed in calendar year 2023, Bren-Tronics generated approximately 100 million of sales with EBITDA margins around 25%. We're implementing a detailed integration plan that has been developed over the past several months with a dedicated cross-functional team from both EnerSys and Bren-Tronics. Our priority is to ensure minimal disruption commercially and operationally while we rapidly execute corporate and back office integration. Please turn to slide seven. On the governance front, last week we held our annual shareholder meeting where our stockholders selected two new members of our board, Mr. David Habiger and Ms. Lauren Knausenberger. David is the CEO of J.D. Power, a provider of data analytics, software, and consumer intelligence. David has a demonstrated history of driving change within industry-led security protocols globally. Lauren is the Executive VP and Chief Innovation Officer at FAIC, a provider of engineering, digital, artificial intelligence, and mission solutions across the defense, space, civilian, and intelligence markets. Lauren is a globally recognized thought leader and change agent in technology, digital modernization, and cybersecurity. I am pleased to welcome David and Lauren to our board of directors whose expertise and skill sets are well matched to our industrial technology transformation. It is with sincere thanks and deep gratitude that we save farewell to long-standing board members Art Katsaros, our chairman for the past eight years, General Robert Magnus and Hwan Chung. We truly appreciate their commitment in 53 collective years of dedicated service. And we congratulate Paul Tufano, our new board chair. I will now turn it over to Andy to take you through our results and outlook in greater detail. Andy?