Thanks, Al. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our first quarter conference call for 2025. With me today are William Williford, our Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer; Sameer Parasnis, our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer; and Trey Hartman, our Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer. They're all available to answer questions later during the call. So with strong operational and financial results, we started 2025 on a positive note, meeting or exceeding guidance in multiple metrics. We built W&T using a proven and successful strategy that is committed to profitability, operational execution, returning value to our stakeholders and ensuring the safety of our employees and contractors. Our ability to deliver low-decline production, meaningful EBITDA and seamlessly integrate accretive producing property acquisitions has helped W&T grow during our 40 plus year history. Now before I talk about our first quarter highlights, I'd like to address an important regulatory development. In early April 2025, pursuant to directives from the Trump administration. The Department of Interior indicated that it will not seek supplemental financial assurance in the Gulf of America, except in the case of sole liability properties and certain non-sole liability properties that do not have a financially strong co-owner or predecessor in title and meet other conditions. This is a very positive development for W&T. Now we'll go into more details later in the call, but this should alleviate some of the uncertainty that has pushed down our stock price despite some positive results. Some of our first quarter highlights include the following. We delivered production of 30,500 barrels oil equivalent per day, near the top-end of our guidance range, despite freezing weather in January that temporarily drove some unplanned downtime. Also lease operating expenses came in below the low-end of guidance at $71 million. We generated $32.2 million in adjusted EBITDA, an increase of 2% compared to the fourth quarter 2024. We also produced $10.5 million in free cash flow. So we accomplished all of this while also returning value to our shareholders through our quarterly dividend. We have paid six quarterly cash dividends, since initiating the dividend policy in late 2023 and announced the second quarter 2025 payment that will occur later this month. Additionally, in the first quarter of this year, we had several transactions that strengthened and simplified our balance sheet, adding material cash to the bottom-line and improving our credit ratings from S&P and Moody's. So in January, we successfully closed an offering of $350 million in new second lien notes, due 2029 that decreased our interest rate on second lien notes by 100 basis points, and allowed us to redeem our outstanding $275 million of second lien notes and pay off the $114 million outstanding under the term loan provided by Munich Re. This transaction reduced our total debt by $39 million. Now this meaningfully enhanced 2025 and future years liquidity, by eliminating principal payments under the Munich Re loan of $28 million in 2025, $25 million in 2026, $23 million in 2027 and $38 million in 2028. We also entered into a new $50 million revolving credit facility, which matures in July 2028, that is undrawn and replaces the previous $50 million credit facility provided by Calculus Lending. Additionally, in January 2025, we sold a non-core interest in Garden Bank's Blocks 385 and 386, which was about 200 barrels oil equivalent per day for $12 million or over $60,000 per flowing barrel. Now in early 2025, we also received $58.5 million in cash for an insurance settlement related to the Munich Re well. All of these actions have allowed us to enhance liquidity and improve our financial flexibility. Lastly, to take advantage of the strengthening we saw in natural gas prices, we added costless collars for 50,000 MMBtu per day from March 2025 and 70,000 MMBtu per day from April to December of this year. This helps us lock in a favorable price range for our natural gas for the remainder of 2025. So our ability to execute our strategy has delivered very positive results to start off 2025, including an improved balance sheet, enhanced liquidity and has positioned us for success in 2025 and beyond. At year end 2024, the company had total debt of $393 million, and net debt of $284 million. At the end of the first quarter of 2025, our total debt and net debt were significantly reduced to $350 million and $244 million respectively. Our liquidity at March 31st was approximately $156 million. Capital expenditures in the first quarter of 2025 were $8.5 million and asset retirement costs totaled $3.8 million. We continue to expect our full year capital expenditures to be between $34 million and $42 million, which does not include potential acquisition opportunities. We will remain focused on accretive low-risk acquisitions of producing properties, rather than higher-risk drilling in the current uncertain commodity price environment. These acquisitions must meet our stringent criteria of generating free cash flow, providing a solid base of proved reserves with upside potential, and offer the ability for our experienced team to reduce costs. Now, over the years, we have consistently created significant value, by methodically integrating producing property acquisitions. The assets we acquired last year added meaningful reserves and an attractive price. We are now seeing additional production uplift from two fields that were previously shut in. The West Delta 73 and Main Pass 108 has 98 fields, were placed into production towards the March and into early April. We are ramping up production over the course of the second quarter 2025, and expect it to make a sizable impact to our production overall, which is indicated in our second quarter guidance. Yesterday, we provided our detailed guidance for second quarter 2025 and reiterated our full year guidance. In the second quarter of 2025, with the new fields ramping up, we are predicting the midpoint of Q2 2025 production to be around 34,500 barrels oil equivalent per day. This is an increase of 13% compared to the first quarter of 2025. So, turning to our costs. Our guidance for second quarter 2025 LOE, gathering, transportation and production taxes costs are slightly higher than the first quarter of 2025. We see some additions to LOE, due to the higher production, but believe that overall, we can offset some of those increases on a per BOE basis, we should see decreases. We also believe that there are more opportunities to reduce our operating costs and find synergies to drive costs lower in the long-term. We're always working hard to reduce costs without impacting safety or deferring asset integrity work. Now before closing, I'd like to discuss some regulatory updates in more detail. The change of presidential administration has provided promising developments in the oil and natural gas regulatory environment. Since his inauguration, President Trump has issued two energy-related executive orders, the first of which directed heads of agencies to review existing regulations to identify agency actions, that impose an undue burden on the identification, development or use of domestic energy resources. The second executive order stated that, The United States has insufficient energy production, transportation, refining and generation, constituted an unusual and extraordinary threat to the nation's economy, national security and foreign policy. In early February, Secretary Burgum issued a secretarial order that directed agency officials to prepare an action plan that will include steps to suspend, revise or rescind certain regulations. In addition, the Trump administration has issued a number of executive orders aimed at streamlining regulations and reducing the regulatory burden on oil and natural gas companies, increasing federal oil and natural gas leasing, including in The Gulf of Mexico, excuse me, America and expediting U.S. natural resource development. We are very pleased with these actions that we expect will positively impact W&T, and the offshore energy industry. So, in closing, I'd like to thank our team at W&T as we are well-positioned to add value in 2025. We have a solid cash position and good liquidity, that enables us to continue to evaluate growth opportunities both organically and inorganically. We have a long track record of successfully integrating assets into our portfolio, and we continue to believe that the Gulf of America is a world-class basin that supports value creation. We will maintain our focus on operational excellence and maximizing the cash flow potential of our asset base. With that operator, we can now open the lines for questions.