Thanks, Paul, and good morning. Starting on Slide 8 at our Skouries copper-gold project. At the end of Q2, overall project progress was 70% for Phase 2 of construction. We continue to expect first copper gold concentrate production in the first quarter of 2026 and commercial production in mid-2026. We continued seeing a steady ramp-up of skilled labor during the second quarter with a heavy emphasis on concrete and site-wide structural mechanical labor trades. Personnel through the gate each day grew from approximately 1,300 to 1,730, including 186 Skouries operational personnel recruited to date. The photo on the bottom of this slide is a good visual representation of the operations team we have at site already. Although we've surpassed our labor and personnel target, it's essential to ensure we are matching the skilled workforce to relevant work fronts to support our plan to deliver. This ongoing focus will help us plan appropriately and continue building an even more capable and dynamic team. From a productivity standpoint, we are seeing construction productivity at or slightly better than our assumptions across the site. On this slide, you can see on the top left photo, the process plant where work continues to progress with the SAG mill feed conveyor installed during the quarter. The top right photo shows the tank farm at filtered tailings plant with foundations complete and all five tanks underway with two at the final height. Moving on to Slide 9. During the second quarter, the project capital investment at Skouries was $117 million. The spend in the quarter was in line with our expectations. With elevated personnel on site, we are de-risking the schedule, achieving strong productivity and accelerating work across multiple work fronts to support optimization of commissioning activities. The critical path remains on track, and we expect to meet our project capital guidance of $400 million to $450 million for the full year. In addition, we spent $27 million in accelerated operational capital during the quarter bringing the spend to date to just over $40 million towards the $80 million to $100 million expected this year. Most of the open pit mining equipment is on site and commissioned. The majority of the open pit equipment operators' team has been onboarded with 26 operators on site and training on the open pit mining equipment is well underway. In addition, as mentioned earlier, we commenced open pit ore mining in July. The photos in this slide and the next few slides will show the advancement of work underway. As you can see on the large photo on the left of the slide, infrastructure around the process plant continues to advance. Work in the process plant continues to expand to additional work fronts for mechanical installations, piping, cable trays and cable. As of this week, all of the hydro testing in the processing plant as well as the fire and process water tanks at the pump house is now complete. In addition, mechanical installations are proceeding in the support infrastructure areas. Infrastructure surrounding the main process building is shown with the process plant substation, lime plant, flotation blowers building structurally complete. As you can see on the control building structure, the full floor concrete is complete, and we are now working on the final elevation. The installation of the equipment for the lime plant silos has been completed with cladding and roofing work having started in July. Moving to Slide 10. As you can see on the panoramic photo on the slide, the thickeners continue to advance to plan. Concrete works and mechanical installations for the first 2 thickeners have been completed. Work is advancing on the associated infrastructure with a pump house building with the structural and mechanical rough set complete and pipe rack construction advancing as planned. Water testing of the clarifier and water storage tank was also completed to plan during the quarter. Turning to Slide 11. At the filtered tailings building, which remains on the critical path, we have included a link to an updated time lapse video showcasing the structural steel installation, which is approximately 75% complete as of the end of July. During the quarter, mechanical work progressed with the installation of the six feeder conveyors and collector conveyor completed in June. Additionally, as shown in the photo on the right, assembly of the first filter press has commenced. On Slide 12, work continues on the construction of the crusher building structure. The concrete work has advanced to the second of 3 elevations above the foundation. Additionally, the apron feeder and associated chutes have been installed and the bottom shell of the primary crusher is preassembled as shown here on the far left side of the slide with installation expected in August. During the quarter, conveyor foundations between the primary crusher and coarse ore stockpile advanced to plan, along with the stockpile dome foundations. On the far right photo, the foundation work underway is shown. Additionally, the reclaim tunnel concrete and escape tunnel concrete are complete and preassembly of the first 3 reclaim feeders and associated shoot work has commenced for installation in Q3. Foundations for the process plant feed conveyors are also underway. Before moving to speak to Olympias, I want to take a moment to recognize the Skouries team for their tremendous efforts this quarter as they safely progress the construction at Skouries. Protecting the health and safety of our employees, the contractors, suppliers and communities is our first priority and a cornerstone of our operating philosophy. Moving to Olympias on Slide 13. Second quarter gold production was 15,978 ounces and total cash costs were $1,578 per ounce sold, a 35% improvement in gold production and a 34% decrease in cost over the first quarter. Following the flotation circuit upset conditions in Q1, the plant stabilized, and throughput and recoveries were at planned levels in Q2. Costs during the quarter were impacted by increased labor costs and the impact of the strengthening euro, partially offset by lower transport costs and higher byproduct credits as well as impacts of realized gains on the euro foreign currency collar hedges. We have commenced the mill expansion to 650,000 tonnes per annum. Beginning with earthworks, as a result of delays in permitting and engineering detail, we now anticipate the completion by mid-2026. We are excited for the potential that this expansion will unlock for the Olympias team over the long term. I'll stop there and hand it over to Simon to discuss the Turkish and Canadian operations.