Thank you, Jeff. I appreciate the opportunity to speak to you all at this important moment in the history of clean energy. While there is uncertainty related to the new administration, the fact remains that broader market forces are being driven by the growing certainty of accelerating US energy demand, the need for an all-of-the-above approach to supplying that demand and the fact that renewables are the lowest-cost and fastest to deploy at scale. Opening on Slide 8, the Trump administration's early executive orders had been well telegraphed and the clear impact included no major surprises related to energy. While the executive orders have led to some process uncertainty for new projects, thus far, federal agencies have continued to issue permits. The expected actions targeting wind, electric vehicles and DOE and EPA grants and loans have limited impact on HASI investment opportunities. The fact is the US will need renewables and storage to fulfill the new administration's commitment to economic growth, national security and lower electricity prices. And the near-term pipeline for new generating capacity remains dominated by solar and storage given their relative cost and speed to deploy in addition to strong corporate and state commitment to clean energy. With regard to potential revisions to the Inflation Reduction Act, we expect clarity on the outlook for energy tax credits to come with the forthcoming budget reconciliation bill. Although a final outcome may not occur until the December expiration of the 2017 tax cuts. Nevertheless, the clean energy industry continues to maintain bipartisan support in light of the large investment in new manufacturing and the corresponding increase in jobs, property taxes and economic growth. As Jeff indicated, the core tailwinds to our business are unchanged by policy and include first, underlying US power demand growth; and second, renewables advantage in both cost and speed to market. First, as highlighted on Slide 9, US power demand has entered a new era of growth that we haven't experienced in decades. On one hand is the well-publicized demand from data centers, which is forecast to increase by more than 400 terawatt hours in 10 years. But critically, it's not just about AI, data centers are just one of several forces driving power demand in the years ahead. It's also domestic manufacturing and the new prioritization of onshoring. On top of that, there is also the electrification of buildings, industrial processes and vehicles. All in, McKinsey forecasts US electricity demand will double over the next 25 years to more than 8,000 terawatt hours by 2050. Not driven by the IRA, but by underlying demand. If we aren't able to meet this demand with sufficient supply is going to drive energy prices higher, on top of inflationary pressures from rising supply chain, labor and tariff costs. As Slide 10 shows, we are already starting to see the signals across multiple markets that point to higher power prices. Forward price curves in ERCOT and PJM have essentially doubled over the last five years. Therefore, renewables are not about policy, but the basics of business. They will simply be less expensive and faster to market at scale than other sources. Including gas turbines, which due to supply constraints can take five years or more to deploy. As shown on Slide 11, solar and batteries currently account for 80% of the current interconnection queue. In FERC's high probability forecast from January 2025 for new generating capacity includes 92 gigawatts of solar, but only 15 gigawatts of natural gas. As you can see, renewables will be a central component and arguably the most important one for the rest of this decade Underscoring this dynamic, our clients remain bullish as they monitor the uncertainty in the policy landscape. The feedback from our clients has been remarkably consistent. They are staying the course and even accelerating projects to meet the surge in near term demand from their buyers, hyperscalers, corporates, utilities, municipalities, with growing demand and constraints in near-term supply, our clients are largely expecting to pass through any potential changes to tax credits or tariffs through higher PPA prices. Meanwhile, we are also seeing new innovative business models such as co-located data centers, and community solar partnership programs anchored by corporate off takers such as Microsoft and Google, which expand our clients' pipeline and in turn, our opportunities. All tailwinds for growth and innovation for our pipeline. So again, amid changes and uncertainty, we do have the fundamentals working in our favor for short and long-term growth. Now, I will pass it to Marc to discuss these new investment opportunities.