Thanks, Jeff and welcome everyone to our earnings call to review our first full quarter at T1 Energy. The 2 recurring themes for today's call are progress and policy. The progress refers to T1's ongoing rapid corporate transformation to realize our mission of building a domestic solar and battery supply chain to invigorate America with scalable, reliable and low-cost energy while we establish pathways to maximize domestic content. But of course, that progress isn't taking place in a vacuum and the lingering uncertainties around trade policy and the future state of the Inflation Reduction Act are creating some near-term complexity. So let's start on Slide 4 with an overview of the policy environment and the key considerations for T1. As you are most likely aware, the House Ways and Means Committee has advanced changes to key IRA energy tax provisions. Our preliminary assessment of the bill is that there are provisions that validate T1's strategy of investing in advanced manufacturing in the United States, including retention of the 45X Advanced Manufacturing Production Tax Credit and the domestic content bonus. However, we believe there are proposed elements of the bill that will stifle competition, growth, technology onshoring and choices for T1's developer customers. Given our commercial partnership with Trina, the stringent foreign entity of concern language passed by the Ways and Means Committee has our attention. But we have been neither surprised nor unprepared to consider modifying elements of our business plan, if necessary, to ensure compliance and preserve access to IRA incentives that are enabling T1 to build an integrated U.S. supply chain and to advance our domestic content strategy. We also have ongoing and productive dialogues with local, state and federal lawmakers to promote T1's interest and investments in the U.S. solar production industry. We believe that incentives under Section 45X, 48E and 45Y are fundamental to the U.S., building a vibrant, competitive and localized solar value chain and we will continue to tell that story on Capitol Hill and in Texas along with our domestic partners. In the interim, I'll remind our investors that this is the first step in a long legislative process that will very likely see the language changes as it advances through Congress. We are hopeful that practical modifications to minimize commercial disruption and to support domestic solar energy will be included in subsequent and final versions of the reconciliation bill. T1 expects to have a strong and influential voice in the discussion of U.S. solar industrial policy given the meaningful investments we have made in domestic manufacturing, American jobs and the initial phases of establishing a U.S. solar value chain. Spearheading this effort will be our new Chief Legal and Policy Officer, Mr. Andy Monroe. Andy brings more than 30 years of legal expertise and has spent the last decade in the U.S. solar sector. While he was at Qcells North America, he was instrumental in shaping the framework of what eventually became Section 45X of the Inflation Reduction Act. Andy, we're delighted to have you on Board and welcome to the team. Turning to Slide 5 and U.S. trade policy. As we indicated publicly during Q1, T1 is supportive of tariffs that level the competitive playing field for the U.S. solar industry, including anti-dumping and countervailing duties. These initiatives are intended to reward Tier 1 producers who invest in domestic supply chains like T1. As we have disclosed previously, we are already sourcing the majority of our polysilicon from here in the U.S. and we are executing our plan to build an integrated domestic solar manufacturing footprint. Although we generally support tariffs for the solar industry, like many of our peers, we are contending with some near-term headwinds due to tariff uncertainty. T1 and our developer customers require visibility into bill of materials costs to accurately bid offtake and PPA contracts. In the absence of that visibility to accurately risk assess our pricing, we cannot justify bidding into the current merchant sales market. Accordingly, as Evan will detail shortly, we are revising our 2025 sales production and EBITDA guidance to assume limited merchant sales for 2025 as we wait for market clarity. With 1.7 gigawatts of committed offtake volumes already in our G1 portfolio for 2025, revenues and operating cash flow will continue to ramp into the second half under these new guidance assumptions and we anticipate exiting 2025 with a robust cash and liquidity position. Near-term uncertainties aside, the fundamentals of the U.S. solar industry remain healthy and supportive of T1's strategy. Solar and battery storage have emerged as the fastest and most cost-effective technologies to add to U.S. generating capacity. With the emergence of energy-intensive technologies such as AI, the electrification of society and the potential for a U.S. advanced manufacturing renaissance, solar plus storage will remain critical to the all-of-the-above approach that is necessary to satisfy growing U.S. energy demand. I'll conclude our commentary on policy by underscoring that T1's strategy dovetails with several of President Trump's key priorities. We are focused on the strategic development of critical U.S. energy supply chains, we are at the forefront of bringing advanced manufacturing back to American shores and we are building an American job creation engine. We are resolute in our mission and we are determined to promote our shareholders' interests and we are making rapid progress to build T1 into U.S. energy powerhouse. With that, let's turn to Slide 6 for an overview of our key messages. Our rapid global corporate transformation gained momentum in the first quarter and in the weeks that have followed. We have continued to make progress on several fronts. This morning, we announced that we have signed our first new corporate customer sales agreement as T1 Energy with an emerging developer for 253 megawatts of 2025 module volumes out of G1 Dallas. We'll hear more about this contract and our commercial development from Rob later in the call. As I indicated previously, we have reduced our 2025 financial and operating guidance lower to account for some of the near-term uncertainties in the market and the elective conversion of 3 G1 production lines to TOPCon technology. Despite the revisions to guidance, T1 has a strong liquidity outlook and position. At the low end of the updated 2025 EBITDA guidance range, T1 is projected to have cash and liquidity of more than $100 million at year-end. Evan will walk you through the moving parts shortly. From an operational perspective, the ramp-up at G1 Dallas continues to progress smoothly. On April 30, we indicated that T1 had successfully converted the G1 Dallas construction loan to a $235 million term loan following third-party verification that construction, installation and commissioning activities were completed. The plant is fully operational and module deliveries to offtake customers have begun to ramp up. G1 Dallas is a world-class asset and we look forward to showcasing it to investors, customers and other key partners. For those of you who can't visit G1 in person, be on the lookout for the launch of our expanded website to give you a feel for our operations virtually. Following site selection of Sandow Lakes Ranch in Milam County, Texas in March, we are progressing through the initial stages of project development for G2 Austin, our planned U.S. solar cell facility. There is meaningful interest in this project and we are engaged in productive capital formation discussions with several potential partners. This morning, we announced the Heads of Agreement with a third-party partner aligned with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to explore a potential investment into the G2 project. To be clear, this is a non-binding agreement and we are still in the early stages of raising capital for G2. But so far, we are pleased with the receptivity to investing in T1's planned U.S. solar cell production manufacturing facility. With sales and deliveries beginning to ramp under our 1.7 gigawatt of combined 2025 customer offtake contracts and sales agreements at G1 Dallas, T1's cash and liquidity outlook for 2025 remains healthy despite the near-term merchant sales uncertainties. G1 operating cash flows combined with the wind down of our legacy European organization and reduction of associated costs into 2026 should support our significant liquidity position. As we indicated in our previous call in March, T1 and Trina filed a joint voluntary notice with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States and the CFIUS process is ongoing. And finally, we continue to make progress with our European wind-down and portfolio optimization initiatives. As European personnel-related costs roll off of our P&L, the cost savings from the wind-down should accelerate later this year. In conjunction with the wind-down, our Board of Directors is also overseeing the process of potentially harvesting value from our legacy portfolio, including Giga Arctic, the CQP and the Giga Vasa project. Securing access to additional power for these assets is a key value driver. And as the process develops, we will continue to provide updates to our investors. Moving to Slide 7, we'll turn our attention to G1 Dallas which has provided the launch pad for T1's operations and commercial development as a solar equipment manufacturer. Following the handovers to operations in late April, G1 is fully operational and sales are poised to continue ramping with deliveries under our 1.7 gigawatt of 2025 customer offtake contracts and sales agreements. Deliveries under the Trina U.S. offtake started in Q1. And with Q2 underway, we have begun delivering modules to RWE under the 500 megawatt per year sales agreement. We expect to begin shipping modules under the 2025 developer sales agreement that we announced this morning in Q3. To match production with the temporary lull in bidding activities we are experiencing, we are modifying the 2025 production plan to 2.6 to 3 gigawatts. This change in plans also relates to our decision to convert 3 production lines from PERC to TOPCon technology, demonstrating T1's responsiveness to customers and operational flexibility. Turning to Slide 8. I'm pleased to report that we are moving forward with initial development of G2 Austin, our planned U.S. solar cell manufacturing facility in Milam County, Texas. As we have documented previously, we believe that G2 Austin is a game changer for T1 competitively and financially. The plant addresses unmet customer demand for U.S. solar cells and modules using TOPCon technology. It represents a major step forward in our domestic content and vertical integration strategies and is expected to be a cash flow engine for T1. With initial project engineering underway, we have decided to pursue a 2-phase development in equivalent capacity tranches of 2.4 gigawatts each. This development plan should provide T1 with commercial, financial and operational flexibility as we advance our growth strategy. Our project development team led by our Chief Development Officer, Einar Kilde, is executing against this plan and recently launched the tender process with production line equipment vendors. And in parallel, Evan Calio and the finance organization are advancing several capital formation initiatives on parallel tracks. There are no changes to our plan to achieve the start of production at G2 Austin in Q4 2026. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Evan for a review of T1's financials.