Thank you Jeremy. Building on Jeremy’s Giga America update, I would like to remind everyone of FREYR’s meaningful exposure to the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act, which is detailed on Slide 11. The most impactful section of this act for FREYR is 45X. It is quite simple and straightforward - raw material can come from anywhere, batteries and modules must be produced in the U.S., products can be sold anywhere, and [indiscernible] production tax credits. Based on Giga America’s planned nameplate capacity and operating plan after full ramp-up, FREYR will generate more $1.4 billion per year of incremental cash flow than it would without these tax credits. This is an important feature of Giga America that is attracting capital to the project as well as over $400 million of state and local support for the project in the form of tax abatements and grants in Georgia. We’ve received already $20 million of these grants in the first half of 2023. We provide more details around our announcement to re-domicile from Luxembourg to the United States. This move dramatically expands our opportunity for equity index inclusion. Today, only an estimated 3% of our shares are held by index funds compared with a peer group average of well over 20%. Re-domiciling has the potential to drive incremental volumes of up to 45% of our current market capitalization if we were held by all the index funds we would then qualify for, as well as associated actively managed funds who benchmark against those indices. Moving our domicile to the U.S. has also the added benefit of aligning FREYR with the country that has offered highest incentives for battery manufacturing in the world, as well as the world’s largest market for our products. The U.S. has well understood corporate governance and disclosure requirements and we will still be able to maintain our European strategies alongside our U.S. efforts. The transaction to move from Luxembourg to the U.S. will require an extraordinary shareholder meeting and a vote later this year. Since the majority of our assets are in Norway and the United States, with the U.S. expected to grow substantially, the tax position of FREYR should not be materially impacted. More information about the transaction will be provided with the documentation associated with the EGM at a later date. We expect to close the transaction by year end. Moving now to Slide 13, the financial updates slide of our earnings deck, I will review our recent financial results as well as provide an update on our financing initiatives. For the quarter ended June 30, 2023, FREYR recorded a net loss of $25 million or $0.18 per share compared with net income of $5 million for the same period last year. The net income from last year’s period was due to a $33 million non-cash gain on our warrant liability fair value adjustment due to changes in our stock price. This line item reflects a gain when our stock price declines during any reporting period and a loss when our stock price increases. For the six months ended June 30, 2023, the company reported a net loss of $38 million or $0.27 a share compared with a net loss of $30 million or $0.26 per share for the same period last year. More importantly, the company reported higher general and administrative expenses, as well as higher research and development costs for the second quarter and six months ended June 30, compared with the same periods last year. Logically, this is a function of our larger organization which is managing more projects around the world. Regarding our cash investment rate and liquidity, we spent net cash of $175 million during the first six months of 2023, which includes $128 million of capital expenditures. During the second quarter, FREYR spent $64 million on capital expenditures, of which $54 million was spent on Giga Arctic and $10 million was spent on the customer qualification plant and test center. We ended the first quarter of 2023 with $384 million of cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash and no debt. For the rest of the year, our capital expenditures will decline pending the Norwegian response to the IRA, but development spending on Giga Arctic will increase as the U.S. team is being built. Major additional capital expenditures will be dependent on project-level financing as we preserve ample burn rate runway for the company. Our near term priorities remain ramping up the CQP, continued progress at a measured pace of Giga Arctic, and an acceleration of Giga America. We will provide additional guidance on capital expenditures upon the success of Giga America’s initial capital raise and upon receiving more information regarding Norway’s response to the U.S. IRA. With that, I will now move onto Slide 14 for an update on our integrated financing strategy. I showed this slide at our capital markets day in late June, so I won’t spend too much time on it other than to highlight that while we have checked the box on nearly all of the activities shown, the CQP is integral to demonstrating commercial, industrial and technological readiness for our factories, which drives capital formation. With the progress to date and the expected near term milestone achievements, our financing processes have intensified. On my final slide, I note updates to our key financing activities. In terms of corporate financing, we have raised a billion dollars of equity over the last two years as our position as one of the only pure play investment opportunities listed in the United States for giga-scale battery manufacturing, which is at the very heart of one of the largest secular shifts in human history, the energy transition and electrification of the world, and this has resonated with investors. We have now transformed the company from a PowerPoint company to an operating company with the opening of the CQP and the assembly of our first batteries. We continue to make progress on the project financing for Giga Arctic by moving due diligence and documentation forward. As we announced recently, we were awarded €100 million grant for Giga Arctic by the European Union Innovation Fund, which is an outstanding validation of our project. The review by the EUIF was very intensive, covering hundreds of pages of documentation over the course of a year. We will be working with the EU to finalize the terms of the grant over the coming months, which will be tied to Giga Arctic construction progress and greenhouse gas emissions abatement over time. Once clarity is received from the Norwegian government regarding additional incentives for the project, we will update details of the overall capital plan. Certainly the CQP milestones [indiscernible] addressing many of the conditions present expected from the project base. As Jeremy described, we continue our efforts around the project-level equity funding of Giga America, Phase Ia, which is the two initial production lines. For the next phase, including the remaining production lines, we have already begun the process with the United States Department of Energy Loan Programs Office for the debt component of that process. We have provided our draft Part 1 application to the DOE earlier this week under the Title 17 program, which is appropriate for energy storage system providers. After Part 1, the process is very similar to a project financing process which we will anyway run in parallel to ensure timely access to funds. The DOE could in theory provide for all of our debt ambitions but will more likely be part of an intricate capital stack. We will keep investors informed over the next several quarters as we make progress on these efforts. Section 45X of the IRA with its annual production tax credits provides key underlying support to the financing of Giga America unlike anywhere else in the world. With that, I turn it back over to Tom for additional comments.