Thank you, John. During the second quarter, we saw solid growth in our overall profitability, generated strong free cash flow and continued to execute on strategic acquisitions to support our water infrastructure growth strategy. Accordingly, our water infrastructure segment continued its steady growth trajectory, once again achieving record high quarterly revenue and gross profit results during the second quarter. While oil prices have generally held steady at levels that provide an attractive economic return for our customers, natural gas prices have been more challenging, pressuring overall activity levels in the first half of the year. Our water services and chemical technology segments have seen the impact of these activity levels, particularly on the completion side. However, with the support of our latest strategic initiatives and continued growth in water infrastructure, we generally remain on track towards achieving our key 2024 objectives. Furthermore, Select's ongoing transition to a more infrastructure-based, production-levered, full-lifecycle water company continues to align our future profitability and cash flow generation with critical secular growth drivers unique to our business, particularly as we continue to add more long-term contracts into the portfolio, such as the large 15-year acreage dedication agreement we entered into in the northern Delaware Basin during Q2, which significantly expanded our partnership with a core customer in the region. The industry continues to seek creative solutions for the challenges created by growing produced water volumes, including increasing induced seismicity. We believe Select is well positioned to be a leading driver of our industry's ability to solve these challenges through increasing produced water recycling, expanded infrastructure networks and strategic commercial water balancing. Additionally, as our EMP customers continue to extract value through industry consolidation, we believe there will be growing demand for high-quality partners with the size, scope and networks to serve the largest operators and consolidators, supporting continued growth opportunities for Select. During Q2, the water infrastructure segment benefited from these trends. Seeing increased utilization of existing assets, as well as the benefit of multiple strategic acquisitions. We increased both recycling and disposal volumes during the second quarter, generating revenue growth of approximately 8% to $69 million. Although revenue came in slightly lower than expected, gross margins significantly outperformed our expectations. Q2 still delivered strong sequential revenue growth and more importantly, the water infrastructure segment gross profit, which we customarily provide in terms of prior to depreciation, amortization and accretion, improved to $35 million. This represents an increase of 17% compared to Q1 and a tremendous 67% growth rate from where we were just one year ago. On a relative basis, gross margin before D&A increased to 51% during Q2. An increase of 4 percentage points compared to Q1 and a 13 percentage point increase from where we were a year ago. We are excited about the significant improvements we've made in the profitability of this segment in such a short period of time and reaching the 50% margin target ahead of plan was a terrific achievement for the team. We have also been able to efficiently integrate acquired assets into the portfolio, while reducing costs along the way and believe our ongoing projects under construction and under future development provide additional long-term opportunity to drive further margin improvement. In the immediate near term, we expect to see comparably steady mid to high single-digit percentage revenue growth during Q3, supported by our recent acquisitions and enhanced utilization of existing assets and steady gross margins of 50% to 52%. While we originally expected to see a small contribution from our new Thompson pipeline in the Bakken region during the third quarter. Certain permitting delays have impacted the construction timeline, though we still fully anticipate the pipeline coming online by the end of 2024. Looking out more medium term, we continue to believe that with a very strong project and deal backlog, water infrastructure remains on track to become the largest component of our profitability by the end of 2025, underpinned by repeatable, predictable, high margin and contracted revenue streams. Though we may see some seasonal impacts to margins in the fourth quarter, we otherwise expect to maintain and potentially improve upon this 50-plus percent margin profile for the segment moving forward into 2025. Our continued new project wins in the Northern Delaware demonstrate our ability to add value to our existing infrastructure networks through incremental networking and commercialization. These expanded systems will deliver enhanced utilization and water balancing capabilities that will make these projects highly accretive and we look forward to executing more contracts in the quarters to come. Switching to the water services segment, we were able to outperform both industry activity levels and our own internal expectations, modestly growing revenues by about 1%, while improving margins by 2 percentage points to 22.5%. Revenue gains during the quarter were driven in part by traditional water sourcing volumes. Notably, we were able to pull forward key water sourcing opportunities with both our future Thompson Pipeline, Anchor Tenant in the Bakken, as well as two key customers in the Northern Delaware. In the Northern Delaware, these are the same two customers we just signed new contracts with to develop additional infrastructure projects in the region and in the short term, we will supplement their ongoing activities with traditional water sourcing ahead of the new recycling facilities getting up and running in early 2025. Offsetting these gains is the continued trimming of revenues from other areas of the business, notably our legacy fluids hauling service line. This remains an area where we continue to focus on cost efficiency and consolidation opportunities as we continue to increase the amount of volume we transport via pipeline over time. These efforts also act as the primary driver for what is expected to be a mid-to-high single-digit revenue decline in Q3 for water services. Though we expect to maintain margins in the 22% to 23% range in spite of additional yard closure costs. We continue to believe that we can push margins further over time and remain vigilant in our search for efficiency in this segment. On the chemical technology side, we certainly had a more challenging second quarter. With the continued decrease in overall industry activity levels, we saw a roughly 9% decline in our manufacturing volumes during the quarter rather than the modest growth we anticipated. Accordingly, the decreased volumes resulted in a lower absorption rate through our manufacturing plants delivering slightly lower gross margins of 16.4%. Looking at the third quarter, while we expect to see steady overall volume demand from our direct-to-operator E&P customers, we are seeing continued activity reductions from some of our pressure-pumping customers. There are a number of additional completion crews that have been identified for idling during Q3 that had been utilizing our high-margin full chemical suite. In response, we believe we have a path towards recouping these recently retreated volumes. However, until we do, we likely will see a constrained ability to get margins back to our target of 20% in the near term. In the meantime, we are undertaking a number of cost-reduction initiatives that are expected to be completed by the end of the year. For the third quarter, we anticipate flat to modestly down low single-digit percentage revenues with margins in the 14% to 16% range. Looking at other cost reduction efforts, SG&A during the second quarter decreased by more than 11% or $5 million relative to the first quarter. While the transaction-related costs have slowed compared to earlier in the year, with acquisitions continuing throughout Q2, we will continue to incur a modest balance of transaction and integration-related costs during the third quarter. Looking forward, we expect SG&A to continue to train closer to 10% of revenue during the back half of the year. Altogether, for the second quarter of 2024, we generated a net income of $15 million and adjusted EBITDA of $69.5 million during the second quarter. A substantial increase of $10 million relative to the first quarter and ahead of our guidance of $64 to $68 million. For the third quarter, we expect consolidated, adjusted EBITDA of between $66 million and $70 million, relatively steady to Q2 as continued water infrastructure gains are offset by some of the ongoing consolidation and elimination efforts in the water services segment. Driven by the substantial growth in our water infrastructure segment over the course of 2024, we continue to believe we will see our water infrastructure and chemical technology segments reach 50% of consolidated gross profit by the end of the year as expected. And water infrastructure is on a great path for continued growth well into 2025. Now, looking at the balance sheet, we utilized our sustainability linked credit facility in addition to cash on hand to help fund an additional $41 million of acquisitions during Q2, ending the second quarter with $90 million of outstanding borrowings. With $83 million dollars of operating cash flow generated during Q2, we were able to materially limit our net debt increase during the quarter to a mere $12 million, even after the $41 million of acquisitions and $49 million of CapEx during the quarter. Operating cash flow actually exceeded adjusted EBITDA for the third time in the last four quarters, as we continued to make tremendous progress and further reducing our working capital. Pushing total working capital below 11% of revenue and decreasing accounts receivable days outstanding to 72 days for the period, a substantial decrease from a year ago. These efforts still leave us with ample liquidity and a very conservative balance sheet. We will remain disciplined in our use of leverage, but with the growing contribution of our higher margin production levered and contracted revenue streams, we have good visibility into our ability to repay these outstanding borrowings in a relatively short period of time, should we so choose, while still generating cash flow to fund the growth of the business organically. Additionally, we remain committed to returning capital to shareholders with our quarterly dividend of $0.06 per share, equating to $15 million of capital returned to shareholders so far, a year today. Quarterly depreciation, amortization and accretion remain fairly steady, though this could increase closer to $40 million per quarter by the end of the year with additional capital deployment. As expected, quarterly interest expense ticked up modestly during Q2 as we employed our sustainability-linked lending facility to execute our recent acquisitions. And our income tax expense moved up modestly alongside our growing pre-tax income as well at around a 21% effective rate as anticipated. Net CapEx of $46 million represented a decent step up during Q2 as our organic water infrastructure growth CapEx accelerates. Given the additional recent long-term contract wins that we mentioned earlier, growth CapEx will increase in the back half of the year. However, we also remain quite disciplined in our approach to maintenance spending and believe we will see a $10 to $20 million reduction in maintenance CapEx on the year. Put together, we now expect full-year net CapEx of $170 million to $190 million in 2024, an increase of $30 million net. With our reduced maintenance CapEx targets, we continue to expect each of our water services and chemical technology segments to provide strong cash flows at low capital intensity during 2024, returning a combined 70% to 80% of their profits and free cash flow after CapEx, helping to fund our latest contracted water infrastructure growth projects. Even with the increased net CapEx outlook, we still expect to modestly build on the $41 million of free cash flow we generated in the first half of the year with an updated target of pulling through 25% to 35% of our adjusted EBITDA in the free cash flow for the full year of 2024, after accounting for all maintenance and growth CapEx back. We have a tremendous amount of opportunity still ahead of us and I look forward to continuing to execute on our strategy. I'd like to wrap up by once again thanking all of our employees for their hard work and continued support, especially those that were impacted by the recent severe weather events around Texas, including Hurricane Beryl. With that, I'd like to open it up to questions. Operator?