Thanks, Julian. Good morning, everyone and welcome to TETRA's second quarter 2024 earnings call. I'll summarize some highlights from our second quarter results and provide an update on our strategic initiatives before turning the call over to Elijio to discuss second quarter financials and additional perspectives on our third quarter. Our second quarter results can be characterized as mostly consistent with the overall trending oil and gas markets during the second quarter, which was lower U.S. completion activity with increasing activity in the international offshore market. This combined with our seasonal second quarter peak for our European industrial chemicals business and lower deepwater project activity in the Gulf of Mexico contributed to our results of 14% sequential revenue growth and 32% increased adjusted EBITDA. Our Completion Fluids & Products and Water & Flowback segments achieved adjusted EBITDA margins of 28.9% and 15.2%, respectively. Water & Flowback adjusted EBITDA margins of 15.2% was an anticipated rebound from 9.6% in the first quarter, a sequential improvement of 560 basis points. Year-over-year, revenue was down 2% compared to U.S. onshore rig activity down approximately 16%. Adjusted EBITDA of $30.2 million was 17.6% of total revenue and inclusive of $1.1 million of foreign exchange losses. During the second quarter, we secured a three-well deepwater Gulf of Mexico CS Neptune fluids project for a super major oil and gas operator. This is an important milestone as this is the second super major operator in the Gulf of Mexico to select CS Neptune for their completions program and the first Gulf of Mexico deepwater CS Neptune fluids project since the fourth quarter of 2019. Following a dramatic impact to the timing of potential CS Neptune deepwater projects due to the COVID pandemic in 2020 and 2021, we have since seen our pipeline of projects move forward and are pleased we have been successful, awarded this project. The first well is not expected to begin the completion phase until the fourth quarter of this year and the timing of the entire project is expected to be between Q4 2024 and the second quarter of 2025. Unlike our prior CS Neptune fluid Gulf of Mexico projects, which were single wells spread out across several years, this program is a three-well batch, drill, and complete program with the completion phase expected to start in the fourth quarter. As a result, it is likely that the three wells will be completed between a six to nine month period, assuming things go as planned. As demonstrated from the past, CS Neptune Gulf of Mexico projects, these wells represent a material revenue increase over our typical deepwater completions. Because of the back-to-back efficient - back-to-batch, sorry, excuse me, back-to-back batch completion program, there is some efficiency on the inventory side planned for the project, but the overall project revenue numbers will also be very dependent on the fluid losses from each well. Obviously, we are excited for this award and we continue to have productive discussions with other operators for CS Neptune programs in the Gulf of Mexico. For Water & Flowback, we previously announced that we expected second quarter margins to recover in the mid-teens, and despite lower operator completion activity levels in the second quarter, we are pleased we achieved adjusted EBITDA margins of 15.2%, a 560 basis points sequential improvement. Our strategy for Water & Flowback continues to be a two-pronged approach. Automation of every service aspect from BlueLinx Automated movement and transfer of water to the Automated SandStorm, automated and Automated Drillout systems. And secondly, the treatment of operator-produced water for frack reuse and desalination for beneficial reuse. Collectively, these strategies will reduce HSE exposure for our employees and our customers, lower labor costs per job, and provide an environmental benefit of less freshwater usage while reducing seismicity risk and providing a valuable water resource for agriculture and industrial applications. While this strategy is well underway with BlueLinx and water transfer, the number of automated systems deployed for SandStorm and auto Drillout is only just beginning, but so far with exceptional results and customer acceptance. We're also deploying our first SandStorm to the Middle East market for a major national oil customer. If a successful trial is completed as anticipated, this could be a major new market opportunity for the company. With regards to water desalination and beneficial reuse, I would like to provide some color on where we are. We previously communicated that a South Texas commercial production facility was imminent. Unexpectedly, our customer was told that the permitting would be on hold and linked to results from a West Texas pilot program where urgency for a solution is a bigger priority. This is highlighted by the most recent earthquakes to hit West Texas, the largest of which hit 5.1 on the Richter scale and prompted the Texas Railroad Commission to open investigation. Accordingly, we are working closely with our customer on the commercial terms for a beneficial reuse pilot project in the Permian Basin. In addition, we have ongoing discussions with three other major customers for pilot projects that in addition to West Texas and South Texas, include Mid-Continent and Appalachia regions. We currently have non-disclosure agreements with seven customers and have had many of them visiting our functioning pilot units at our research facility in Conroe, Texas. While the delay of the launch of our first commercial project was unexpected, we realize our customers have to work with the regulatory bodies and focus on areas with the biggest impact to the environmental challenges the industry faces. We have demonstrated that our technology is able to treat oil and gas well produced water to the regulatory environmental specifications required and oftentimes to be of higher quality than what is found in rivers and in water wells with the ability to scale for commercial applications. Since utilizing operator oil and gas well produced water for agricultural purposes has been occurring in California for several years, we are optimistic that Texas and New Mexico will soon follow suit. Moving on to our strategic initiatives, following our very recent visit with the Eos Executive Management to their plant in Turtle Creek, Pittsburgh, we are confident Eos is on the verge of materially higher production volumes requiring materially higher volumes for their electrolyte. Elijio and I were very encouraged with what we saw firsthand with their automated line and the excitement of their employees working to automate the line from start to finish. Eos recently completed a recapitalization that allowed them to source the capital to complete the first line and have the working capital required. Seeing the automated line working at Eos facility is a vast improvement from what we have seen in our prior visits. As Eos ramps and brings the automated line up, the volumes of pure flow and electrolyte they require will increase materially over the minimal volumes that we have shipped them so far this year. We have increased our capacity in West Memphis to meet the expected Eos demand. We also continue to advance discussions with a second zinc bromide customer using pure flow for their electrolyte technology. On the Arkansas bromine side, we are in the final review of an SK-1300 Definitive Feasibility Report or DFS. The economic analysis is prepared based on the assumption that the bromine project is completed independent of the planned lithium project. As a reminder, the bromine project will allow us to achieve the following benefits. First, vertical integration for supply of elemental bromine at a lower cost than buying it from third parties, making this a margin enhancement project. Second, it gives us more volumes to meet the continued growth in oil and gas demand for high end, high value completion fluids and the growing zinc bromide long duration battery market requirements. And third, positions us for the long term, utilizing our Arkansas bromine leases estimated to be over 80 years of resource supply as our current long term elemental supply agreement comes to an end at the end of 2029. On the lithium side, we're continuing the feed engineering effort and are targeting a major milestone for the plus minus 10% project cost and economics by the fourth quarter of this year. At that time, we will also be able to quantify the cost synergies for having both lithium and bromine production from the same plant and upstream brine unit. Summarizing on the strategic initiative side of things, the desalination of produced water for beneficial reuse, pure flow electrolyte for long duration energy storage, Arkansas bromine and future lithium supply are all material financial benefit to the company that we will quantify as we complete key milestones for each throughout the year. Collectively, they are transformational for the company. It's also important to understand that the desalination of produced water, zinc bromide based electrolyte for energy storage and direct lithium extraction are not only new businesses for TETRA, but for the most part, are new and emerging markets for the United States. So predicting accurate timing on key events is more challenging than for existing and established businesses. Our processes have been very methodical and our focus is to get it right and not get it out before we're highly confident with our work and our analysis. With that, I'll turn it over to Elijio to provide some additional commentary on our financial results and then we'll take some time for questions.