Thanks, Andy, and good morning, everyone. As we highlighted in our last quarterly call, the combination of economic uncertainty, high energy prices, and falling raw material prices triggered significant customer destocking throughout the third quarter. In addition, record energy prices in Europe resulted in reduced demand and lower margins due to the inability to fully recover input costs. We estimate that the sequential impact of higher gas costs on margins in Q3 was about $50 million. Asian demand remained consistent with Q2 levels, and there was no significant demand improvement as COVID restrictions continued. North American demand was steady in auto, but demand for building and construction applications and consumer discretionary items fell during the quarter as a result of rising interest rates and inflation. Against this economic backdrop, our volumes and margins in Europe showed considerable weakness during the quarter. Additionally, elevated energy costs placed the entire industry's more energy-intensive products on the high end of the global cost curve, and as a result, created opportunities for regional arbitrage. For more globally traded products like styrene and polycarbonate, the adverse impact on margins was significant with the oversupply leading to negative margins. In response to these market conditions, we've announced several potential actions, which we are considering to optimize our assets and improve our cost position with the largest area of focus on the more energy-intensive products in our portfolio, namely styrene and polycarbonate. We've begun the dialogue with the Works Council of Trinseo Deutschland regarding the potential closure of our styrene plant in Bohlen, Germany. The plant has been offline since August. First for planned maintenance and then idled in response to poor economic conditions. The Bohlen facility contributed approximately negative $30 million to EBITDA during the 12 months ending June 2022. We have also temporarily idled our styrene production at Terneuzen in the Netherlands. The startling needs for our downstream businesses beyond our production are expected to be met via external purchases. In polycarbonate, we're evaluating steps to optimize our production and supply chain for our downstream polycarbonate compounds. As a reminder, we consume about half of our polycarbonate production and our higher-margin downstream compounding business. But the remaining 50% is sold into the more cyclical merchant polycarbonate market. Part of our valuation relates to potentially closing one of the production lines at our Stade plants, and we have initiated discussions with the Works Council there. This potential production line closure would lower costs and would greatly reduce our exposure to the merchant polycarbonate market. In addition to these potential steps regarding our styrene and polycarbonate assets, we are reviewing ways to optimize our asset footprint in other segments, such as restructuring our PMMA sheet business in North America as well as reducing styrene butadiene latex capacity at our Hamina, Finland plant. Together, all of these initiatives, if approved, would lead to an improvement in annual profitability of about $60 million under current market conditions. I'm confident that in the medium to long term, we have a very competitive asset footprint. We are working on some very exciting energy efficiency initiatives that will both reduce our carbon intensity and decrease our utility costs. For example, heat recovery through mechanical vapor recompression. The financial benefits of these can be significant. And we estimate the annual savings of approximately $60 million for the initial set of projects assuming a natural gas price of $100 per megawatt hour. However, like the rest of the industry, in the short term, we are faced with a combination of historically high energy costs and low demand, particularly in Europe. Therefore, we're actively evaluating steps to improve our operating cost position and operating flexibility. And we've also enacted cost controls such as limiting discretionary spending, and reducing capital spending. The current challenges we face as an industry reinforce the importance of continuing to transform our portfolio into a specialty solutions provider that, as a consequence, has lower carbon intensity. We remain focused on the overarching priority of our transformation, and want to be clear that we will continue to prioritize the investments and initiatives that support this strategy. It's understandable that a significant amount of our current focus is on the headwinds we're facing from a macroenvironment. But I'm encouraged by the progress we're making on our transformation. Volumes of sustainable products, meaning products that contain recycled materials, grew 70% in the third quarter versus prior year, with the Q3 year-to-date increase of 65%. Margins for these products have been some of the most resilient in our portfolio, which is evidence of how highly valued they are by our customers. To expand our sustainable product offerings, we're creating and cultivating beneficial relationships to widen our range of sustainable products, including our recent announcement of a collaboration with Japan Steel Works to further develop recycled MMA, which will feed into circular PMMA solutions. We are also growing in material substitution applications that help our customers achieve their sustainability and cost reduction goals, such as replacing fiber glass with the co-lamination of PMMA and ABS for mobility and wellness applications. Co-laminated product volumes have grown 20% this year through Q3. And this is one of several material substitution offerings with significant and additional growth potential. There are additional growth opportunities through expanding our existing products into adjacent applications. For example, our PMMA capstock technology has been adopted for PVC decking and railings as it provides high durability and weatherability, as well as the environmental benefit of lower VOC emissions by eliminating the painting for the end consumers. We recently began supplying this technology into siding applications. And with the expansion of capstock in the siding, which has a total addressable market of approximately $200 million, we can deliver these benefits to a wider range of customers. We remain committed to developing our product portfolio as part of our transformation with organic and inorganic growth. This will place us in an advantaged position when the market conditions inevitably improve. Our recently appointed CTO, Han Hendriks, will lead this effort to expand our technology offering into higher-value applications. Now I'll turn the call over to Dave to walk through some of the additional financial points.