Thanks, Dane. In summary, we are pleased with our second quarter results. We had another quarter of strong production from our facilities achieving 102% consolidated ammonia utilization. We saw strong demand for ammonia and UAN in the spring, and we are well positioned to meet the needs of our customers throughout the planting and sidedress season. Spring planting season went well and demand for nitrogen was strong despite difficult weather causing the planting process to be paused a couple of times. The USDA estimates 91.5 million acres of corn and 86.1 million acres of soybeans were planted in the spring of 2024, a 3% decrease for corn and a 3% increase for soybeans compared to 2023. Yield estimates from the USDA are 181 bushels per acre for corn and 52 bushels per acre for soybeans in 2024. Based on these planting and yield estimates, the USDA is projecting inventory carryout levels for 2025, approximately 14% for corn and 10% for soybeans, resulting in the inventories near the 10-year averages. Grain prices have softened some recently in part due to concerns of our global demand and potential large US crop production. December corn prices are approximately $4.10 per bushel and November soybeans are approximately $10.35 per bushel. In July we completed both summer UAN fill and fall prepay ammonia ordering from customers. And despite the recent softening in grain prices, we saw strong demand for both products at pricing that was above 2023 fill season pricing better than most were expecting. We currently have a solid order book heading into the fall and UAN pricing has risen from our achieved fill prices. Geopolitical risk continue to represent a wildcard for the nitrogen fertilizer industry given the significant fertilizer production capacity residing countries across the Middle East, North Africa and Russia. We continue to monitor developments in the Middle East that could impact energy and fertilizer markets and we expect the remainder of 2024 and 2025 will likely be periods of higher than historical volatility of the business. Natural gas prices in Europe have been steady since our last earnings call, trending in the $10 to $11 per MMBtu range for the fall and $1.02 higher for the winter. The inventory fill rate, which typically increases significantly in the summer has been lower this year reducing the potential for reaching storage limits for winter. Natural gas prices in the US have been hovering at $2 to $3 per MMBtu through the second quarter and into the third quarter with demand strong but production returning from the shut-ins in the spring. Although the cost to produce nitrogen fertilizer in Europe has remained lower than in 2023, it is still at the high-end of the global cost curve, particularly compared to the US. We continue to believe Europe faces structural natural gas market issues, and that will likely remain in effect over the next couple of years. At our Coffeyville facility, we are progressing on detailed engineering studies on the potential to utilize natural gas as an alternative feedstock to third-party pet coke, which we expect to have those studies completed later this year. If this project is approved by the Board and successfully implemented, it could give us the ability to choose the optimal feedstock mix and be the only nitrogen fertilizer plant in the US with that flexibility. We also began implementing certain debottlenecking projects at both plants that are expected to improve reliability and production rates. The Board elected to continue to reserving capital in the second quarter that we expect to spend over the next two years to three years, as we focus on improving reliability and redundancy of the two plants in efforts to provide better production rates and lower downtime in the future. We began spending capital on these projects in the third quarter of 2024 with funds coming from the reserves taken over the last six quarters. Second quarter continued to demonstrate the benefits of focusing on reliability and performance. In the quarter, we executed on all of the critical elements for our business plan, which includes safely and reliably operating our plants with a keen focus on the health and safety of our employees, contractors and communities prudently managing the cost, being judicious with capital maximizing our marketing and logistics capabilities and targeting opportunities to reduce our carbon footprint. In closing, I would like to thank our employees for their excellent execution achieving 102% ammonia utilization and solid delivery on our marketing logistics plants, resulting in a distribution of $1.90 per common unit for the second quarter. With that, we are ready to take any questions. Christine?