Thanks, Kurt, and good morning, everyone. Welcome to TETRA Technologies, Inc.’s fourth quarter and full-year 2025 earnings call. Before we get into the quarterly results and outlook, I would like to begin the call by acknowledging and highlighting the exceptional efforts and the 2025 performance of our leadership team and all of the TETRA employees. 2025 was a challenging year for the U.S. oil and gas industry, marked by reduced levels of U.S. onshore activity and a volatile global economic environment. Despite these headwinds, there is a long list of TETRA’s record financial achievements, as well as overwhelming support for the company’s strategic developments. I will highlight some of the outstanding financial achievements and progress against our 2030 objectives, which we communicated as part of our ONE TETRA 2030 strategy at our investor conference at the New York Stock Exchange last September. I will turn it over to Matt Sanderson and Elijio Serrano to summarize our fourth quarter results and provide an update on our balance sheet. Headlining our exceptional 2025 performance is our Gulf of America Completion Fluids team. For the fifth consecutive year, TETRA was ranked the top supplier in the Gulf of America for product quality and overall performance for offshore completion fluid suppliers in the well-respected Kimberlite International Oilfield Research Report. As the market and technology advanced to 20K ultra-high-pressure and ultra-high-temperature wells, our innovation leadership is resulting in market share gains. TETRA’s Gulf of America revenue increased well over 50% in 2025 compared to 2024, driven by participation in deepwater projects, including three CS Neptune wells that we completed in the first half of the year for a super major. Our unique zinc-free, high-density completion fluid allowed them to complete their high-pressure wells on schedule without exposing their production facilities to zinc in the production flowback. The performance of our Gulf of America team drove our completion fluids and products EBITDA margins to improve 420 basis points from 28.9% in 2024 to 33% in 2025. The combination of our vertically integrated business model as the only service provider that manufactures our own fluids and our unique technology portfolio gives us a very strong market position. Supporting our global completion fluids business is our West Memphis manufacturing team, which is the heart of our bromine-based completion fluids and our PureFlow electrolyte production. Using elemental bromine sourced through a combination of open market purchases and our long-term supply agreement, we produce offshore completion fluids, including CS Neptune, and the PureFlow-based electrolyte. 2025 was a record production year for West Memphis, producing 40% more bromine end products than our long-term bromine supply agreement allows. The West Memphis team also expanded their production and distribution capacity to ship PureFlow electrolyte to Eos in tanker trucks rather than totes to keep up with their expanded production. Another 2025 record performance is our global calcium chloride business, which set both revenue and adjusted EBITDA records and again outperformed GDP in 2025. We hold a market-leading position in Europe and a strong second place in the U.S. market. In addition to our food-grade products, we are encouraged by the outlook for our tech-grade product lines, supporting the reintroduction of chip and other high-tech manufacturing operations in the U.S. Although still a small percentage of our U.S. calcium chloride revenue, our tech grade for chip manufacturing grew by 144% in 2025 over 2024. The combination of these three record-setting operations, Gulf of America, West Memphis plant production, and calcium chloride business, not surprisingly, resulted in record-level revenue and adjusted EBITDA for the completion fluid segment as a whole in 2025. This performance occurred despite an estimated 55% fewer floating deepwater rigs operating globally than the 2014 peak, and we believe we are still in the early days of anticipated Eos production ramp-up. This is one of the reasons we are still very well positioned to benefit from the multi-year deepwater activity recovery and the electrolyte growth highlighted in our ONE TETRA 2030 strategy. Moving on to the strategic milestones for 2025 in the fourth quarter. During the year, we made significant progress on our new bromine plant and reached a major milestone in December by erecting a 120-foot-tall titanium bromine tower and support structure at our Evergreen plant site in Southwest Arkansas. We completed phase 1 of the planned three phases on time and materially below budget. We have advanced the detailed engineering design for phases 2 and 3, placed orders for long-lead items, refined the plant’s total cost, and are finalizing the detailed schedule. By designing the plant around the bromine tower’s capacity of 75 million pounds of bromine annually, we will have 56% more low-cost bromine available to us than the 48 million pounds we published in our definitive feasibility study in August of 2024. Since that study was completed, we have increased our demand outlook for deepwater completion fluids and now expect total bromine product demand to reach the 75 million plant capacity by 2029. Once we have the final upstream wellfield schedule from Standard Lithium and Equinor’s Reynolds unit, from which we intend to receive the post-lithium extracted brine, with board approval, we intend to FID the project. For the reasons highlighted, we expect the Arkansas bromine project’s economics to be improved from what we previously published. Continuing on with our Arkansas brine resources, we are pleased with the progress towards finalizing JV terms with Magrathea for the production of magnesium metal, using the rich concentration of magnesium, also in the same Smackover brine on our 40,000 acres. Magnesium is classified as a critical mineral by the U.S. government and is used to produce a highly valued metal for the Department of War and other U.S. industries. For our planned partnership, we would combine Magrathea’s advanced process technology with TETRA’s deep operational expertise and a world-class magnesium resource base from our Southwest Arkansas brine acreage. Magrathea has already secured Defense Production Act Title III funding from the Department of War to support its commercial phase one, planned to be on-site at TETRA’s Evergreen plant. We are optimistic that further government support is possible for our future commercial plans. Finally, as it relates to our Arkansas brine resources, and as we highlighted in our 2030 strategy, lithium has been viewed as a future opportunity beyond our 2030 targets. With lithium prices increasing back to over $20,000 per metric ton, we are reengaging direct lithium extraction technology companies and evaluating technological and cost efficiency advantages to understand the current economic environment. As a reminder, TETRA is the designated operator of the Evergreen brine unit and owns 65% of the brine minerals, including lithium, while ExxonMobil owns the remaining 35%. Our final strategy update concerns desalination for beneficial reuse. We are very pleased with the results of our EOG commercial plant desalination operation in the Permian Basin. This phase two grassland study has been running with over 95% uptime for the past four months following completion of the greenhouse phase one study. This grassland study is evaluating oil and gas-produced water desalinated through TETRA’s OASIS technology. Of great significance is that TETRA was issued a patent for our TETRA OASIS TDS end-to-end desalination solution. We are pleased that our unique pretreatment, combined with exclusive membrane and post-treatment technologies, has been recognized as a unique and patentable solution for desalinating oil and gas-produced water for beneficial reuse. The biggest desalination update since our Investor Day in September is the growing attractiveness of West Texas for data centers, which has shifted our customers’ priorities and our focus. With data centers straining electric utility grids and driving price increases, behind-the-meter, cost-effective power has become a major driver for data centers. With West Texas’ low-cost, abundant natural gas, ample and affordable land, and a friendly regulatory environment, it is easy to understand why. The one challenge West Texas does have is a lack of fresh water for power and data center cooling. With over 20 million barrels of produced water per day, there is far more water available by desalinating produced water. This is an extremely attractive option since operators need to reduce the amount of water they reinject for disposal, and converting it into a viable resource for power and data center cooling is a double win, given they now have a revenue source instead of incurring disposal costs. Our customer plan for 25,000 barrels per day plants has been shifted to greater than 100,000 barrel per day desalination plants, as one data center could require as much as 200,000 barrels of desalinated water. This is a very dynamic environment that has not changed the fact that operators need a solution for disposal well pore space filling up. It has provided an exciting acceleration opportunity that has significant potential for TETRA. All these efforts are contributing towards the goals we laid out for 2030, including our future segments focused on specialty chemicals and with water desalination and treatment. Looking forward to 2026, we see continued momentum towards our 2030 objectives. We expect incremental revenue growth driven largely by a material increase in electrolyte business and major contract awards in Argentina. Argentina has been a real success story for us as our team has secured contracts to meaningfully expand our production testing business, anchored by our proprietary and highly efficient SandStorm technology. In addition, our team secured three early production facility contracts. The combination of winning more early production facility contracts and gaining market share with SandStorm is expected to double our revenue in 2026 compared to 2025. Argentina’s margins are accretive to our overall water management and flowback margins, and are more stable given the long-term nature of our contracts. On the completion fluid side, Gulf of America activity in 2025 was heavily weighted towards completion and less towards drilling. 2026 activity is forecasted to be higher in drilling, including more exploration, with less completion activity. We do not expect the Gulf of America to reach the same record levels as in 2025. This is projected to cycle into stronger 2027 completions activity, and our 2030 targets for this business are on track. Our onshore water and flowback services business continues to benefit from longer laterals, increased sand and water usage, and more production-related activities, including water treatment and recycling. We expect the net impact of all these to result in overall modest growth in 2026. We have secured third-party bromine supply for 2026 and 2027 to bridge our growing bromine demand and until our bromine processing plant is brought online. These third-party supplies will allow us to keep pace with expected material increase in electrolyte and robust deepwater market, but they do come at an incrementally higher cost relative to our current long-term bromine supply agreement, which is consistent with our expectations. Although it is possible for one or more CS Neptune jobs to materialize in 2026, without CS Neptune projects and somewhat higher short-term cost of bromine, we expect our completion fluids and products adjusted EBITDA margins to be in the 25%-30% range, which is consistent with the average margin range for this segment over the past seven years. The increased cost for additional bromine supply has been anticipated as a bridge until we have our bromine processing plant operational. It further supports the strong business case and significant EBITDA increase we expect for this segment starting in 2028, when the plant is operational. For water and flowbacks, flowback services, the continued focus on differentiated technology and our profitable international growth contribute to improved adjusted EBITDA margins from 12% in 2025 to the mid-teens in 2026. With that, I will ask Matt Sanderson, who is currently, and for the past two years, done a great job as our Chief Commercial Officer, to update us on the fourth quarter highlights, and then Elijio Serrano to close out with our balance sheet and update. Before turning the call over to Matt and Elijio, I would like to again express my and the board’s deep appreciation for Elijio’s contributions and efforts over the past 13 years. Last October, we announced that Elijio had notified TETRA of his intentions to retire at the end of March. Over the past six months, Elijio has worked with Matt to ensure a seamless and orderly transition of the CFO responsibilities. Matt has been with TETRA for over nine years, and as stated, most significantly as Chief Commercial Officer. The board and I spend a lot of time on succession planning to ensure we have the talent necessary for the organization to execute on the base business and deliver our longer-term goals. This transition will allow us to do so. Elijio has agreed to remain available to Matt, me, and the board as an advisor, so we can leverage his skills, knowledge, and relationships with our investors, the financial community, our lenders, and the financial team. While this might be Elijio’s last quarterly earnings call, we fully expect that in the background, he will continue to support the organization as we methodically march towards our 2030 goals. With that, Matt will provide some additional color on the fourth quarter results before handing over to Elijio.