Thanks. Dane, In summary, we were pleased with our third quarter results. We had another quarter of strong production from our facilities and we navigated the resetting of the nitrogen fertilizer market this summer. We believe market conditions are firming and we are well-positioned for the fourth quarter and 2024. With harvest nearly complete and weather conditions being favorable, fall ammonia application began last week, a little earlier than normal. Weather permitting over the next month, we expect a strong fall ammonia application season this year and have a good book of orders. Overall grain market conditions remained steady and bode well for nitrogen fertilizer demand for 2024. Current USDA estimates indicate 95 million acres of corn were planted in the spring of 2023, a 7% increase compared to 89 million acres in 2022. Planted soybean acres are estimated to be 84 million in 2023, down 5% from 2022 levels of 88 million. With the drought conditions during the spring in the Midwest, yield estimates were reduced to 173 bushels per acre for corn and 50 bushels per acre for soybeans. The USDA is now projecting grain inventory carryout levels to be approximately 15% for corn at 5% for soybeans, resulting in inventories near the 10-year average for corn and at the low end of the range for soybeans. Grain prices have remained steady with December corn at $4.80 per bushel and November soybeans at nearly $13 per bushel. These grain prices coupled with the lower reset fertilizer prices support attractive farmer economics, which should bode well for nitrogen fertilizer demand for 2024. We believe that the length of this upward cycle -- demand cycle will in large part be driven by grain prices staying at elevated levels, and we see fundamentals for grains remaining steady. Since July, production of nitrogen fertilizer has experienced a combination of unplanned production outages, a heavy plant turnaround schedule and natural gas availability issues in several geographies. These supply issues coupled with steady demand from customers to replenish inventories depleted in the spring have tightened supply-demand balances and have led to a significant firming of prices in the market. As I mentioned on the last earnings call, customer purchasing patterns have evolved to more ratable purchasing due to higher carrying cost over the past year from higher interest rates. We think this buying pattern matches well with our production schedule. Geopolitical risks continue to represent a wildcard for the nitrogen fertilizer industry with meaningful fertilizer production capacity residing in countries across the Middle East and North Africa. As we enter the fourth quarter, the current fourth quarter price for TTF Natural Gas has been in the range of $12 to $18 per MMBtu, which should drive Europe back to the high end of the global nitrogen production cost curve. Natural gas prices in the U.S. have been in the range of $3 to $3.50 per MMBtu in October, placing the U.S. at the low end of the global cost curve. Europe has been importing some ammonia and we expect this to continue in the coming months. We do not believe that the structural natural gas market issues in Europe have been resolved and will likely remain in effect over the next two to three years. On our decarbonization efforts, we continue to make progress on the installation of a nitrous oxide abatement unit, and the number one acid plant at the Coffeyville facility and expect that project to be completed by 2025. We also continue to explore various CO2 sequestration opportunities for the East Dubuque facility which if approved, could reduce its carbon footprint over the next several years. Two of the major CO2 pipeline projects in the Upper Midwest have faced opposition and one project sponsored by Navigator and Valero has been canceled. Ultimately, we believe these hurdles will lead to a longer development schedule. We've not made commitments to any projects at this point, but we will continue to monitor their progress. We also continue to pursue the certification of production at Coffeyville as blue ammonia and UAN and have received customer interest in low carbon nitrogen fertilizer. We continue to evaluate brownfield development projects at both of the production facilities that could be attractive targeted capacity increases to our existing footprint. The Board elected to continue reserving capital that we expect to spend over the next two to three years to progress these potential projects. The third quarter continued to demonstrate the benefits of focusing on reliability and performance. In the quarter, we executed on all the critical elements of our business plan, which include safely and reliably operating our plants with a keen focus on the health and safety of our employees, contractors, and communities, prudently managing cost, being judicious with capital but targeting select investments in reliability projects and incremental additions to production capacity, maximizing our marketing and logistics capabilities and targeting opportunities to reduce our carbon footprint. In closing, I'd like to thank our employees for their excellent execution, achieving 99% ammonia utilization and solid delivery on our marketing and logistics plants, resulting in a distribution of $1.55 per common unit for the third quarter and over $16 declared year-to-date. With that, we're ready to answer questions, Camilla.