Craig W. Nunez
Thank you, Tiffany, and good morning, everyone. NRP generated $46 million of free cash flow in the second quarter of 2025 and $203 million of free cash flow over the last 12 months. This was achieved while the prices for our 3 key commodities, metallurgical coal, thermal coal and soda ash traded at or near our estimates of operators' cost of production. With prices for coal and soda ash trading at cyclical lows and many operators struggling to remain profitable, we are quite pleased with the partnership's ability to generate robust levels of free cash flow. The goal of our deleveraging strategy established 10 years ago was to achieve a cost and capital structure that would allow us to generate substantial cash flow and earn competitive rates of profit throughout commodity price cycles. We believe the partnership's performance is evidence of success in that regard. While previous commodity price declines posed risks to NRP solvency, this newfound financial strength has allowed us to continue making steady progress on our deleveraging strategy through this downturn. Based on our current free cash flow run rate, we are on track to pay off substantially all debt by the middle of next year and be in a position to substantially increase unitholder distributions starting next August. Metallurgical and thermal coal markets remain under pressure due to soft demand for steel, cheap natural gas and relatively high coal inventories. We believe many operators are operating at razor-thin margins, selling coal at or near their cost of production, while some operators are likely underwater at these prices. We would not be surprised to see supply rationalization emerge across the industry in the coming quarters. NRP has been in the coal royalty business a long time, and we are veterans of commodity price cycles. The current environment has the classic hallmarks of a coal market downturn, excess supply, soft demand and lack of identifiable catalysts to turn the market around. But there is one aspect of the current environment that is different from what we have observed in the past, namely, we believe many operators across the U.S. are in better financial shape than in previous downturns. They tend to have more conservative capital structures, better cost structures and limited near-term reclamation and pension liabilities. We believe this fact bodes well for the industry in general, which should have better financial flexibility to manage through this downturn. NRP is generating more free cash flow than in previous cyclical troughs. This is one beneficial impact for us from the post- COVID inflationary surge. As the marginal cost of production for coal has risen, the breakeven coal sales prices for operators have also increased. As a royalty owner, we benefit from higher sales prices without having to bear the risk and burden of our operators' higher cost of production. The soda ash market also remains significantly oversupplied, which has driven sales prices below the cost of production for most producers. And in some regions, we believe prices are at or below even the variable cost of production. While we believe this price environment is unsustainable long term, we have not yet seen meaningful supply rationalizations necessary to rebalance the market. It is our view that it will likely take several years for demand to grow and/or supply to rationalize sufficiently for the market to reach a price equilibrium consistent with historical norms. We expect distributions from Sisecam Wyoming to remain at historically low levels, potentially [ 0 ] for the foreseeable future. We continue to hold an optimistic view of the long-term fundamentals of the soda ash market in general and about our investment in Sisecam Wyoming in particular, as it benefits from being one of the world's lowest-cost producers. We have no significant progress to report on our carbon-neutral initiatives over the last quarter. The general market for most C&I activities is stagnant as political, regulatory and market uncertainties pose significant hurdles for developers contemplating large capital investments for carbon-neutral projects. To summarize, the collective market for our 3 key commodities is as negative as it's ever been. Despite this, the partnership continues to generate robust levels of free cash flow that are being used to pay down debt. Based on free cash flow run rates currently, we expect to pay off substantially all of our debt in the coming months and be in a position to significantly increase unitholder distributions starting next August. With that, I will turn it over to Chris.