Welcome, everyone, and thank you for joining us on today's call. I'll begin with highlights of our second quarter results and recent contract awards, then provide some perspectives on the market before turning the call over to Richard to discuss the financials. Lastly, before we go to Q&A, I'll wrap up with a brief update on our pending acquisition of Diamond, which we are incredibly excited about. Starting with the Q2 results. We had a solid quarter with adjusted EBITDA of $271 million, up nearly 50% compared to $183 million in Q1, with a sequential improvement driven by several key contract startups, including the Noble Regina Allen commencing its contract in Argentina in early May and the Noble Discoverer starting up in Colombia in mid-June. Subsequent to quarter end, the Noble Fay Kozak has commenced its contract in Brazil in mid-July. Each of these three rigs entailed significant contract preparation scopes, and I'd like to commend our projects teams on executing these crucial shipyard programs very well. In light of these derisked contract start-ups, we are narrowing our EBITDA guidance for this year to a tighter range of $950 million to $1 billion. In June, our Board of Directors announced a 25% dividend increase to $0.50 per share for the third quarter of 2024. This next distribution in September will bring cumulative total capital return to shareholders since our Q4 2022 merger to $470 million and also establishes Noble as the highest dividend payer across all U.S.-listed oilfield services. And while this is a good start, we are confident that the free cash flow potential of our business in the years ahead looks demonstrably higher, and we will remain committed to returning essentially all of our free cash flow via dividends and share buybacks as this cash flow inflection develops. As reflected in our updated fleet status report published last night adjacent to our earnings release, our total backlog stands at $4.2 billion compared to $4.4 billion last quarter. I would remind you that since our backlog does have a high concentration to the long-term contracts in Guyana and Norway that do not replenish regularly. This tends to create some noise in our backlog trend line. In the Gulf of Mexico, the Noble Stanley Lafosse was extended by Murphy for five additional wells spanning approximately one year from February 2025 through February 2026 for a total contract value of $177 million. On the jackup side, the Noble Resolve has picked up two additional contracts. First, a 45-day well with Central European Petroleum offshore Poland, followed by a 13-well P&A scope in Spain commencing in Q2 2025 with an estimated duration of about 6 months. Additionally, the Noble Resilient picked up a short-term intervention job with Harbor in the North Sea that has served as a helpful gap pillar this summer between the rig's other existing programs. And most recently, the Noble Innovator has been extended by BP in the U.K. North Sea from May through December 2025 via prices option of $155,000 per day. Collectively, these contract fixtures represent approximately $275 million in total contract value, including mobilization payments. Now, I'd like to turn to a broader outlook with our semiannual review of current and expected deepwater activity levels across the key geographic segments. The contracted rig count of UDW floaters with 7,500 feet or greater water depth ratings, currently stands at 105 rigs, up one from last quarter and representing 94% utilization of the marketed fleet, excluding sideline capacity. This level has been fairly constant over the past year as industry expectations for the next leg hire in activity have been constrained somewhat, both by tight rig capacity as well as by lengthening cycle times for certain long-term tenders to convert into contract awards. However, despite flatter activity recently, the forward indicators for further growth through the cycle remain firmly intact. This includes a strong pipeline of FIDs and extremely robust subsea orders as well as customer tenders and direct dialogue regarding future drilling plans. The historically high level of open demand that we've cited over the past couple of quarters has recently increased further to over 110 rig years now. That's not surprising at all given the relatively low proportion of tenders that have converted to contract fixtures recently. We recognize that there's a growing need in curiosity about what's causing the slower pace of awards of late. And while there's not a single uniform answer, we believe that there are a few contributing factors at play with various parts of the customer base, including, first, capital discipline and stakeholder alignment complexities that are causing contracts to take longer to execute, including partner approvals, permits, et cetera. Second, field development supply chain pinch points, resulting from the sharp rise in global project backlogs over the past few years; and third, short-term after effects resulting from upstream consolidation transactions, which has definitely been a factor at play in the Gulf of Mexico recently. Although there is generally no indication or expectation of drilling programs being structurally deferred, the recent slower cadence of rig contract awards does factor into the persisting utilization headwind confronting the sixth gen and lower-end segment of the market, which appears likely to drag into 2025, more than we would have assumed earlier this year. Another way to frame this dynamic is to look at how industry backlog has progressed over the past few years, whether measuring backlog by either contract length or in terms of absolute dollars, -- the industry UDW fleet witnessed a 40% to 50% backlog expansion between early 2022 and the first half of 2023. Since then, however, total backlog for the industry deepwater fleet has been generally flat, and this looks likely to continue into 2025. While this slowdown has lasted longer than we had expected, all of the leading indicators for increased activity remain highly compelling. And taking all of this into consideration, we expect the next move higher in industry backlog is likely to come into view sometime next year. With that, let me now turn to the bottoms-up market outlook. The Golden Triangle of South America, Gulf of Mexico, and West Africa comprises over 75% of global UDW market led foremost by Brazil, which has now increased to 34 rigs, up from 27 a year ago, with Petrobras comprising 30 of the 34 UDW rigs in Brazil. Elsewhere in South America, Guyana is at five rigs, Columbia one, and Suriname is currently at zero. Looking out to 2026, this region appears capable of expanding from 40 rigs currently to up to 45 based on visible customer needs. Next, in the Gulf of Mexico, UDW demand currently stands at 24% and has been fairly stable in the 23 to 25 unit range over the past year. The U.S. Gulf of Mexico has actually been steady to up slightly since early 2023, while the Mexican side has fallen off from three to four rigs of normalized demand to just one unit currently. The inconsistency of activity in Mexico has been one of the contributing downside factors to the region's market balances recently. The U.S. Gulf, despite digesting a short-term impact from E&P consolidation has been steady as predicted, with current activity of 23 deepwater rigs. There remains a relatively thin spot market over the next few months with the five or so units with near-term availability. However, customer demand indicates that the combined U.S. and Mexican and Gulf of Mexico should remain approximately flat compared to current levels. West Africa currently has 18 contracted UDW rigs, down slightly from 19 to 20 last year. Angola leads the region with seven rigs with other activities spread broadly across various other countries. Notably, Namibia is currently at a roll with just one active rig compared to three to four rigs last year. There is a clear line of sight to Namibia maturing into at least a three to five-rig market structurally by 2026 as development plans get underway. Coupled with the likely commencement of gas development in Mozambique, the combined West and East Africa market could drive incremental UDW rig demand of five or more units by 2026. The Mediterranean and Black Sea region currently support eight units of demand, which we expect to be flat to down one unit over the next one to two years. The Far East market, including India and Australia represents seven units of UDW demand currently. And Indonesia is expected to drive an incremental demand for a couple more rigs starting from late 2025 or 2026. And then finally, we expect the harsh environment markets of Norway, U.K. and Canada to remain steady, plus or minus. Tying all of this together, the market does feel more flat or up only slightly at least through the first half of 2025. So, we are maintaining a patient and disciplined approach in the meantime. We also continue to pursue intervention work with the Globetrotters, which we are hopeful will begin to show some initial wins fairly soon, albeit with minimal contribution before late 2024 or early 2025. Against this demand backdrop, we expect dayrates to remain in the high 400,000 to low 500,000 range for Tier 1 drillships over the near-term, excluding stacked rigs bidding into multiyear programs at customary discounts, and 6G rates will likely soften slightly until the swap comes out of the lower end of the market. However, assuming the next leg up in demand materializes as envisioned by 2026, a further increase in day rates is very probable. So, with that, I'll pause here and pass it to Richard to cover the financial highlights.