Thanks, Roger, and good morning. I'll start by sharing the key drivers of our financial performance for the year. As Roger mentioned, for fiscal 2023 UGI delivered adjusted diluted EPS of $2.84 in comparison to $2.90 in the prior year. The utility segment was up $0.06 as benefits from the weather normalization rider and higher gas base rates offset the impact of warmer weather and higher operating expenses. Next, Midstream & Marketing was up $0.13 with incremental earnings from the prior year acquisitions of UGI Moraine East and Pennant, as well as benefits from investment tax credits associated with the previously announced RNG facilities that were placed into service during the year. Turning to the global LPG businesses. UGI International was down a penny as the impact of lower LPG volumes was largely offset by higher LPG unit margins, higher margin from the non-core energy marketing business, and lower taxes due to the optimization of foreign tax credits which yielded the benefit of approximately $0.09. AmeriGas was down $0.19 as the business [felt] (ph) with lower volumes and higher operating and administrative expenses as it experienced inflationary pressures and made investments to improve driver capacity. With these investments, we believe that AmeriGas is positioned to meet our customer demand in the heating season. Lastly, Corporate & Other was down $0.05 due to higher interest expense. Turning to the next slide. For each reportable segment. I'll walk you through the key drivers of our results when compared to the prior year. Starting with the Utility segment. Our regulated utilities delivered record EBIT of $365 million, up $29 million or 9% over the prior year. Despite significantly warmer weather, the business benefited from the weather normalization rider that was implemented in the first quarter. Utilities also realized higher margins due to higher gas base rates in Pennsylvania, incremental benefits from the DISC and IREP programs as well as continued customer growth. Operating and administrative expenses were up $36 million, largely due to higher uncollectible account expenses, contract labor costs, and personnel-related expenses. Next, Midstream & Marketing reported a record EBIT of $291 million, an increase of $22 million or 8% over the prior year. While weather was warmer than normal and also the prior year, the company benefited from its fee based portfolio and the optimization of its peaking assets during a cold weather snap in December. These benefits helped to offset lower capacity management margins due to the settlement timing of certain multi-year commodity storage hedge contracts in fiscal 2022. In addition, the business realized incremental margin from UGI Moraine East acquired in January 2022 and from the full buy-in of Pennant that occurred in August 2022. These acquisitions have performed well, delivering robust returns for the fiscal year. At UGI International, LPG volumes were down 9% due to significantly warmer weather and the effects of energy conservation efforts in Europe as a result of the ongoing geopolitical situation. Total margin was down $15 million as the impact of lower volume and the translation effect of weaker foreign currencies were partially offset by higher LPG unit margins and a $29 million improvement in margin from the non-core energy marketing business. The segment also experienced increased operating and administrative expenses, largely due to the global inflationary cost environment. The effect of the reduced total margin and higher operating and administrative expenses were partially offset by an increase in other income, largely associated with the release of cylinder deposits. Lastly, at AmeriGas, LPG volumes were down 7% due to the effects of driver staffing shortages, which also limited growth, continuing customer attrition and structural conservation, largely in the residential sector. Total margin was up $1 million as a result of higher LPG unit margins that helped to offset increased operating and administrative expenses. The increase in cost was attributable to inflationary pressures, increased staff employed to meet customer demand during the winter season, higher overtime and employee related cost, as well as increased vehicle and advertising expenses. The business also benefited from higher gains from asset sales of approximately $21 million during the year. Turning to liquidity. At the end of the fiscal year, UGI had available liquidity of $1.6 billion, inclusive of cash and cash equivalents and available borrowing capacity on our revolving credit facilities. Over the past few months, we have emphasized our priority to strengthen the balance sheet, focused on AmeriGas. Additionally, in fiscal 2023 we completed over $2.6 billion of long-term debt financing to support our ongoing operations and improved liquidity. In November 2023, we also amended AmeriGas credit agreement, decreasing the minimum interest coverage ratio from 2.75 times to 2.5 times, while also rightsizing the revolver from $600 million to $400 million. The business did not utilize this revised threshold in Q4 and was in full compliance with its debt covenants. Going forward, these changes provide further support and financial flexibility as we continue to address the operational performance of the business and the balance sheet. Now before I pivot to fiscal 2024, I'd like to take a moment to summarize the year. As Roger noted, this was a challenging year due to both external and internal factors affecting certain parts of our business. Despite these circumstances, our natural gas businesses delivered record EBIT. We made key investments to strengthen operations in the global LPG businesses and we continue to make progress on several important priorities. With fiscal 2024 now underway, I’d like to address some important near-term priorities for the company as we strive to unlock and maximize shareholder value. First, we remain focused on continuing to reduce costs. We believe we have further opportunities to enhance efficiencies, while providing our customers with optimal service levels and maintaining a relentless focus on safety. That is more crucial than ever as we see continued inflationary pressures. As such, we are scrutinizing costs across the entire business, including the corporate functions and evaluating essential versus non-essential spend. We're also taking a hard look at our processes to identify inefficiencies and opportunities to reduce expenses. These efforts are currently underway with some actions already taken to help us with achieving 25% to 30% of the targeted cost savings in fiscal 2024. In totality, we are targeting permanent savings of approximately $70 million $100 million by the end of fiscal 2025. Secondly, we are focused on strengthening the balance sheet to reduce leverage and provide more flexibility and capacity to make attractive growth investments. As a result, we have realigned our capital allocation plan to align with our strategic priorities. Next, during Q4, we announced a strategic review of the LPG businesses with a focus on AmeriGas. We're running a thorough process with external advisors and we'll provide an update once we have more information that we are able to share. Lastly, we continue to execute our growth strategy with regards to the natural gas businesses. We will prioritize investments in the regulated utilities, as we continue to meet our commitments, promote pipeline safety, reliability, and improvement, and to take into consideration customer affordability. We will also leverage our midstream assets that are located in highly productive sections of the Marcellus and Utica production areas to drive reliable earnings growth. Yesterday, we announced our fiscal 2024 guidance range for adjusted diluted EPS of $2.70 to $3, which assumes normal weather based on a 10-year average, our existing portfolio and the current tax regime. Looking first at the natural gas businesses. We ended fiscal 2023 with strong momentum and we expect that trajectory to continue into fiscal 2024 as these assets proved the resiliency and stability in delivering robust earnings. At the Utilities, our margins are attractive as a substantial majority are underpinned by the weather normalization rider at the Pennsylvania gas utility. We also anticipated higher base rates in similar trends in customer growth. In Midstream & Marketing, our margins are approximately 86% fee-based with limited commodity exposure due to our hedging programs. In the natural gas businesses, the benefits are expected to offset modest inflationary pressures and higher interest expense. Moving to Global LPG. At UGI International for fiscal 2024, we've assumed normal weather, a similar level of energy conservation to fiscal 2023, higher margins from the non-core energy marketing business, partially offset by lower benefits from foreign tax credit optimization. Lastly, for AmeriGas, we are expecting a slight decline in volumes over the prior year as the business continues to execute on operational improvements. These operational improvements will enable us to more effectively serve our customers during the winter season with the goal to stabilize volumes and ultimately achieve growth in the future. Roger will also provide additional updates on the outlook for this business. Slide 14 walks you through our targeted cash deployment plan for fiscal 2024 and how it aligns with the priorities that we've shared with you. First, and of the utmost importance is meeting our commitment to the dividend as we return cash to shareholders. Similar to fiscal 2023, we expect to maintain an attractive payout ratio as we anticipate returning roughly $330 million of capital to shareholders. Next, as we look at the capital allocation plan, during 2023, we invested approximately $1.1 billion in capital expenditures with close to 75% of this amount attributable to our natural gas businesses. For fiscal 2024, we will employ strong working capital management and tighten our capital expenditures in order to strengthen our balance sheet. As a result, total capital spend is expected to decline to roughly $960 million. Of the total capital expenditure for fiscal 2024, we anticipate that approximately 80% will be allocated to natural gas businesses, predominantly to our regulated utilities where we have a long runway of opportunities to deploy capital at attractive returns. Included in this amount is also capital related to the previously committed renewables projects where we continue to target unlevered internal rate of returns of 10% or more. And with that, I'll hand back the call to Roger.