Thank you, Thomas. Slide 3 of the investor presentation provides a summary of our first quarter results. Adjusted EBITDA was $23.8 million, approximately $1 million lower compared to the same period last year, while EBITDA margins improved by 70 basis points. Airlaid Materials EBITDA was lower by $9 million versus a very strong quarter last year. The drop in earnings was mainly driven by weaker European demand leading to lower shipments and consequently lower production to manage inventory levels. Composite Fibers EBITDA improved by $2 million, mainly from favorable price-cost gap. Spunlace EBITDA was higher by $5 million compared to the same quarter last year, driven by favorable price-cost gap, headcount reduction and operational improvements. Slide 5 shows a summary of first quarter results for the Airlaid Materials segment. Revenues were down 18% on a constant currency basis versus the same period last year driven primarily by lower selling prices of approximately $20 million and 4% lower shipments. Selling prices were lower mainly due to cost pass-throughs, reflecting declines in raw material and energy costs in Europe and selective price concessions to nonfloating customers to regain volume. On a net basis, the price-cost gap was unfavorable to earnings by $2.4 million. Volume was lower year-over-year, primarily due to weaker shipments in categories like Hygiene, Home Care and Tabletop in Europe. The decline was largely driven by pricing actions taken in 2023 to protect margins and improve our price cost dynamic. However, ongoing market softness in Europe continue to put downward pressure further impacting volume. In addition, mix was unfavorable compared to last year when we had much stronger color tabletop shipments. These 2 factors combined unfavorably impacted results by approximately $1.8 million. Operations were unfavorable by $3.8 million versus the prior year, primarily due to lower production of approximately 2,800 tonnes to manage inventory levels. Also, wage and other general inflation were higher compared to the same period last year. Foreign exchange and related currency hedging negatively impacted earnings by $1 million, primarily due to hedging gains from the prior year. Slide 6 shows a summary of first quarter results for the Composite Fibers segment. Total revenues were down 13% on a constant currency basis, mainly due to lower selling prices of $11 million from floating contracts implemented with larger food and beverage customers and targeted pricing actions to preserve volume. And although shipments overall were nominally higher by 1% mainly from the composite laminates and metallized categories, mix also contributed to lower revenue for the quarter compared to the same period last year. Overall, the price-cost gap for Composite Fibers remains favorable with prices declining by $11.1 million versus lower prices for key raw materials, energy and freight, which improved earnings by $13.6 million versus the same quarter last year. Operations and other was unfavorable by $800,000, mainly due to lower production. And foreign exchange was unfavorable by $200,000. Slide 7 shows a summary of first quarter results for the Spunlace segment. Revenues were down 8% on a constant currency basis, driven by lower selling prices of approximately $4 million coming from raw material cost pass-throughs primarily in the Hygiene and Wipes categories. Volume was lower by 2%, driven by softer shipments in the Wipes, Healthcare and Hygiene categories, but partially offset by stronger shipments in Critical Cleaning. Raw material, energy and other inflation were favorable by $7.4 million, resulting in positive price-cost gap. Operations and other items were $2.4 million favorable through intense focus on manufacturing efficiencies, headcount reductions and lower operational spending. Slide 8 shows corporate costs and other financial items. Corporate costs were $700,000 lower versus the first quarter of last year, largely driven by lower professional services spending this year. However, strategic initiatives costs were higher this quarter, driven by our proposed transaction with Berry's HHNF business. Slide 9 shows our cash flow summary. For the first quarter of 2024, our adjusted free cash flow was $9 million lower versus the same period in 2023. Cash interest was elevated by approximately $5 million related to our refinancing in Q1 2023 and the higher interest rate environment. Working capital cash usage was higher by $2 million and cash taxes paid in 2024 were higher by $1 million. Slide 10 shows some balance sheet and liquidity metrics. Our leverage ratio, as calculated under the bank credit agreement was 3.7x as of March 31, and we had available liquidity of approximately $85 million at the end of Q1. This concludes my prepared remarks. I will now turn the call back to Thomas.