Richard Creamer
Management
Thank you, Will. Refining and Logistics delivered 2024 annual system-wide throughput of 187,000 barrels per day. Each business unit contributed to excellent HSE and reliability performance. For the fourth quarter, Hawaii throughput was a strong 83,000 barrels per day, and production costs were $4.42 per barrel. We are developing a low-cost, high-return bottleneck project for execution during the 2026 turnaround. Washington throughput was 39,000 barrels per day, and production costs were $4.34 per barrel. Through 2024, the team delivered on cost management while maintaining safe operations, and we worked to be the low-cost producer in the challenging West Coast. Shifting to Wyoming, throughput was 14,000 barrels per day, and production costs were $11.49 per barrel. Scheduled routine maintenance during the seasonally weak period contributed to low throughput. Finally, in Billings, fourth-quarter throughput was 52,000 barrels per day, and production costs were $10.48 per barrel. Billings operational availability continues to improve, demonstrating the value of our reliability investments. Some of our early low-capital investments have had a material impact on the reliability of Billings, generating targeted results in 2024. As Will referenced, Billings will be executing the FCC and Alky unit turnaround beginning in early April. We will continue to operate the crude unit along with the balance of the processing units at reduced rates for the first half of the second quarter. Looking to the first quarter, let me begin by addressing the crude furnace incident that led to idling the Wyoming refinery on February. I am most pleased that there were no injuries during and following the event, and the refinery was secured in a safe condition. The team did an exceptional job responding to this event in the midst of extreme weather conditions. Based on our preliminary assessment, we believe that the refinery can restore partial operations, targeting 50% utilization by mid-April and full rates before Memorial Day and ahead of the summer driving season. On the broader operational front, we see incentives to increase throughput during the first quarter due to improving market conditions. We expect Hawaii throughput between 79,000 and 82,000 barrels per day while they conduct planned maintenance on the reformer. Washington will operate between 37,000 and 39,000 barrels per day, and Montana will operate between 48,000 and 52,000 barrels per day. Wyoming ran at approximately 13,000 barrels per day during the first six weeks of the year and will be down for the remainder of the first quarter. I'll now turn the call over to Shawn to cover the financial results.