Thank you, Libby. The headline for the fourth quarter is a record $2.7 billion of EBITDA, surpassing the previous record at $2.6 billion set in 2024. We brought on a number of assets in 2025, like 14 in mid-October, Mendon West in Orion mid-year, several gathering and treating projects in the Permian, and Neches River terminal ethane export train mid-year. Mid-year startup of diluent exports to Canada and finally, the NGL pipeline in December. All these assets performed well, but they also filled holes created by decline in our commodity-sensitive businesses and marketing spreads. Market reality shaped the year. Crude oil prices averaged about $12 a barrel lower than in 2024. That reduced many of the price spreads we benefited from over the prior three years. Our paying margins were weaker in 2025. A large ten-year LPG export contract originally signed at double-digit fees, which we contracted at market rates. RGP, PGP spreads were 14¢ a pound in 2024, but only 3¢ a pound in 2025, which is an extension of a reflection of the weakness in the housing market. During 2025, we renegotiated our RTP purchase agreements to a fixed fee structure, which makes our splitter business largely spread agnostic. Spreaders are now essentially inert. We are fully contracted on our ethane export terminals and all 20 processing trains that we will have online in the Permian by year-end. For ethane exports, typically ships must be built and receiving terminals constructed to ultimately ramp the full unit utilization. In our docks, with that being said, however, the ships seem to be coming earlier than the receiving. For processing, while production growth goes over time, the two trains we brought on in mid-year 2025 are virtually full today. Our LPG exports are highly contracted through the end of the decade, and we continue to see strong interest for additional long-term commitments. We expect modest growth in 2026 as these assets and the assets we are bringing on in 2026 continue to ramp. We expect to see double-digit growth in 2027 once these assets reach full utilization. Naysayers doubted by him in the beginning, but that is to be expected on your first. But here in Shin Oak is an integrated system has 1.2 million barrels to capacity, and are running at 80%. And the next sign is a UJI partner. And agreeing to expand Bahia to 1 million barrels per day, it's a win for both Enterprise and Exxon. Associated with the UJI are a dozen downstream agreements. On the export front, Enterprise continues to expand its NGL export franchise. In 2025, we loaded between 350 and 360 million barrels across 744 ships. That will only grow as we complete phase two of the Neches River terminal, the LPG expansion the Houston Ship Channel. By next year, we expect to be quoting near 1.5 million barrels a day of NGLs, or 550 million on an annual basis. Little history lesson. Been doing international business since 1983. And we built our LPG import tunnel. 1999, we expanded the facility to include export capabilities. Many of our customers have been with us for more than twenty years. They know us. They know how we don't let behave. They like how we operate. They are more than just customers. Relationships like that tend to be very sticky. We look we spend a lot of time with our customers around the world and domestically. For example, over the holidays, I was in Thailand meeting with three large petrochemical companies. Christian Nelly was in Europe in the fourth quarter, and we did feedback in March. On the crude team, Kerry Weaver was in Asia in October, and James Bany will be in Europe later this month. And GL's god bless Tyler Cott, and his travels. Tyler was in Asia in November. With stops in Korea and India, and will be in Europe this month. And then back to Asia in March. Finally, Tug and I will be in Japan next month. To visit several export customers. We're equally focused on our domestic customers, be they producers, petrochemicals, refiners, traders, or wholesale. We deliver roughly 25 million barrels a month ethane to US crackers. That's around 300 million barrels of beer. In total, we move over 14 million barrels per day of oil equivalent to our 50,000-mile pipeline network. Additionally, Enterprise looks at its storage hubs as a critical part of its infrastructure to support its customers. Cushing, Midland, Houston, and Mont Belvieu. These are all open access systems where our customers can trade freely without any concern of being held hostage. We are proud of our record $2.7 billion of EBITDA in the fourth quarter. But as investors look to the future, I would encourage you to look beyond the numbers. Enterprise's long-term success is driven by our culture, our teamwork, our creativity, and our laser focus on customer relationships. Those intangibles would give rise to the numbers you see each quarter.