In these next few slides, we're going to review some of the macro trends that are ongoing in the Offshore Energy Services industry. If you reference Slide 14, the chart on the top portion of the page represents the cycles that we've seen between 1980 and what's expected through 2025. What you'll see is that the decade or so leading up to 2014 represents the golden years or at least the previous golden years for the Offshore Energy industry, when the industry was pushing into deeper waters further from shore. The helicopter industry responded by adding capacity in new larger helicopter models to service those deepwater projects. When the downturn began in 2015, which was severe and resulted in a lot of the industry turmoil and reorganizations for a lot of the helicopter operators as well as a number of other oilfield services related companies, it was obviously a challenging time for the industry. We did see some recovery that started at the end of the last decade. But then, of course, as we know, the world was hit with the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent oil market crisis. But what we've seen now and what we've already referenced is that a new upcycle has clearly begun. Global demand has returned, and years of underinvestment have resulted in limited available supply. Offshore basins today offer a very competitive returns for the upstream companies. And we see them as having a renewed focus and investment from the upstream industry. You'll reference a couple of quotes also on this page from 2 of the leading offshore [indiscernible] services analyst which, site offshore CapEx of $200 billion this year increasing to over $230 billion in a few years' time, which is expected to be driven both by higher activity levels as well as higher pricing. 2015 summarizes one of the more important leading indicators for offshore activity. This is final investment decisions or FIDs for offshore projects. As you'll note, they are expected to surpass $100 billion in each of 2024, '25 and '26. This represents almost $500 billion in FIDs between 2023 and 2026. Slide 16 highlights another leading indicator for offshore helicopter demand. As you'll see here, right that energy projects that the global demand for floating rigs will grow by 32% between 2023 and 2028. As more drilling rigs come into the market, that will drive an increase in demand for helicopters for the portion of our business, which is servicing drilling and exploration activity. As you might recall, most of our business, though, was related to ongoing production. And if you looked at a similar chart for FPSOs, you would see a similar growth in demand for helicopter to service those offshore production facilities as well. So in summary, the fundamentals for our Offshore Energy Services business are very strong, I would say, more positive than any time that I can recall since entering the helicopter industry. So after several difficult years, we're now seeing some positive tailwinds and very strong fundamentals for our OES business. In this next section, we'll talk more about our global leading Government Services business. If you look at Slide 18, this is a summary of our current contracts. First, just a few things to note about the nature of these contracts. We are providing primarily search and rescue services. We do some other services, including personnel transportation, but most of the core of these contracts is providing search and rescue for countries, whether that be the whole of the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, the Dutch Caribbean properties from Curaçao in the South and Saint Martin in the North, the Falklands Islands where we're servicing the U.K. Ministry of Defense or the Irish Coast Guard contract, which we will be starting up later this year. These are long-term stable contracts generating cash flows from high credit quality government customers that provide attractive margins and capital returns for the company. Speaking a bit to the stability, if you look at the revenues that we generate from these contracts, approximately 85% of our total revenues are the monthly standing charge. So this is the standby charge that we get paid to be there at the ready to provide this critical service. Flight hour activity represents the balance of the other 15% of total revenues. If you were to look at this page at the time of the merger, the list would have only included our foundational U.K. SAR contract. Over the last couple of years, we've been successful in capturing opportunities, and we've been able to make investments to grow and diversify this leading Government Services business to include NLCR -- NLSAR, the Dutch Caribbean, Falklands, and as noted, now Ireland. Turning now to Slide 19. This provides some additional information on what represents Bristow's two largest customer contracts. In the summer of 2022, we were successfully awarded the GBP 1.6 billion UKSAR2G contract, we'll begin that transition process soon. And then last summer, we were successfully awarded the EUR 670 million Irish Coast Guard contract. And as noted, the fourth quarter of this year is when we'll commence the transition for both of those contracts. These are very large projects. The transition will take some time. The Irish Coast Guard contract will not be fully operational across all the bases really until just past the midpoint of 2025. And the UKSAR2G contract, we'll not finish that transition until the end of 2026. So as you look at the guidance we'll provide later in the presentation, '25 is really more of a transition year as we ramp up for Ireland in particular. In 2026 and beyond, we'll benefit from the full year impact of that. There is a meaningful investment amount required to ramp up on these significant new contracts. You'll see about $300 million between UKSAR2G and IRCG. This is mostly for the purchase of new aircraft, also modifications that we'll be making to some existing aircraft and the build-out of new bases, particularly in Ireland. The majority of that investment, as you'll note here on the page is concentrated this year in 2024 with a much smaller amount in '25. On Slide 20, we provide a graphical summary of the timeline for these key Government Services contracts. You'll see that the investments we're making now will result in attractive long-term cash flow yields for the company well into the middle of the next decade. Over the last couple of years, we have established Bristow as the clear global leader in providing these critical services to governments. When the next renewal processes and cycles come up in several years, we believe that we're very favorably positioned to win and continue this leadership status in Government Services. Transitioning to the next section, we provide a high-level view of the competitive landscape in offshore helicopters on Page 22. You'll note that Bristow is really the one truly global operator today. Again, with customers in 18 different countries. There are a couple of super regional players and some regional operators with whom we compete. Beyond that, it's a relatively fragmented country-by-country landscape in the industry. On Slide 23, we provide a high-level overview of the global offshore helicopter fleet. Just a note here on methodology, this top line where it's this market that is our understanding, leveraging some third-party resources for the current in service, so those aircraft that are currently in service today for the overall market. And then you'll see that we provide a Bristow set of columns as well for each of these models, which is our portion of the global fleet for each of these. Again, these are the same S-92, AW189 AW139 models we referenced earlier in discussing our fleet. It also captures the H175, which we do not currently operate but it's the other leading super medium model available in the global fleet today. You'll see here that beyond the total market in service, we also highlight a couple of the end markets, which are most relevant for Bristow. So these won't sum up to the total because there are other markets, namely government, military heads of states that make up the difference, but we focus on the next 2 rows on Offshore Energy Services and Government SAR. You'll see here that, again, we have a leading presence in 3 of the biggest models here, the 92, the 189, the 139, Bristow is the leading global operator of each of those model helicopters. If we turn now to Slide 24, this provides an overview of the supply picture and new deliveries over time. You'll note that this slide really looks a lot like the overall upstream spending slide that presented cycles, which we reviewed earlier in the presentation with a significant ramp up, new capacity coming into the market up until 2014. And then really a precipitous decline as the downturn occurred in 2015 and beyond. You'll see that there were really very few new deliveries over the last several years. And we now have very limited available capacity in the market at this time. If you look at the last few years, most of these recent deliveries have mostly gone to closed system markets such as China, certain markets in the Middle East that really do not impact the helicopter fleet of the markets that we're competing with. As we referenced earlier in the presentation, this has resulted in a very tight supply/demand, supply and demand balance, and that tight supply environment has resulted in significant net increases and leading edge rates throughout the industry, which we stand to benefit from increasingly at Bristow. On Slide 24 (sic) [ Slide 25 ] we provide a little more information on -- focused on the S-92 model specifically. So the S-92 heavy helicopter model, this is a 19-passenger plus the 2 pilots, traditional heavy aircraft. These S-92s were manufactured with a specific 30,000 flight hour lifespan, which is rather unique in the helicopter industry. You don't have typically this kind of specific formulaic life span, which has been designated here with 30,000 flight hours. As noted here, the earliest deliveries of S-92s began in 2004. So the oldest models are approximately 20 years of age now. The average age of our Bristow owned S-92 is about 14 years, and some of our oldest models are beginning over the next few years to approach this 30,000 flight hour limit. As S-92s age out of the market, there are going to be other aircraft such as the AW189 and the H175, which we've been talking about, that will serve as a competitive alternative in certain markets. If you look at Slide 26, this is a slide that we presented before. Again, this is third-party data from Air & Sea Analytics on the offshore helicopter fleet. You'll see here, for the relevant models that we've been discussing over the last several slides, effective utilization is at or near 100%. So again, a very tight supply dynamic, which is impacting the market today. On Slide 27, we have a summary of a recent order book that we announced with Leonardo for new AW189 helicopters to meet customer demand and boost versus profitability. We believe that this fleet expansion will help us drive EBITDA growth at attractive returns for our stakeholders. We announced 10 orders for Offshore Energy Services equipped or configured AW189 helicopters and also 10 options that we can bring in if we see the demand for those. I think it's important to note, just a little more information for those perhaps less familiar about the 189s and the super mediums as an asset class, these can really service most of the missions that the traditional heavy helicopters like the S-92 have serviced to date at a meaningfully lower operating cost. So that the lower [ ROA ] operating cost, it also is at lower CO2 emissions, which is an important consideration for a number of our large customers. So in summary, this is an efficient solution for most of the missions that the traditional heavy helicopters were performing. We'll transition now to a discussion about our guidance for 2024 and beyond.