UNITED STATES
                      SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                            WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549


                                  SCHEDULE 14A
                                 (RULE 14a-101)

                    INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT

                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

          PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(a) OF THE SECURITIES
                    EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 (AMENDMENT NO.   )

Filed by the Registrant [X]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [ ]

Check the appropriate box:


[ ]  Preliminary Proxy Statement
[ ]  Confidential, for Use of the
     Commission Only (as permitted by
     Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
[X]  Definitive Proxy Statement
[ ]  Definitive Additional Materials
[ ]  Soliciting Material Pursuant to Sec. 240.14a-12


                                TRANSOCEAN INC.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

   [X]  No fee required.
   [ ]  Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.

   (1)  Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

        -----------------------------------------------------------------------

   (2)  Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

        -----------------------------------------------------------------------

   (3)  Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed
        pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the
        filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):

        -----------------------------------------------------------------------

   (4)  Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

        -----------------------------------------------------------------------

   (5)  Total fee paid:

        -----------------------------------------------------------------------

   [ ]  Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
   [ ]  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act
        Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was
        paid previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement
        number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

   (1)  Amount Previously Paid:

        -----------------------------------------------------------------------

   (2)  Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

        -----------------------------------------------------------------------

   (3)  Filing Party:

        -----------------------------------------------------------------------

   (4)  Date Filed:

        -----------------------------------------------------------------------



                         [LETTERHEAD OF TRANSOCEAN INC.]

                                 MARCH 28, 2003



Dear Shareholder:

          The  2003  annual  general meeting of Transocean Inc. will  be held on
Thursday,  May  8,  2003  at  9:00 a.m., at the Royal Pavilion Hotel, St. James,
Barbados.  The Secretary's notice of annual general meeting, the proxy statement
and  a  proxy card are enclosed and describe the matters to be acted upon at the
meeting.

          It  is  important  that  your  shares  be represented and voted at the
meeting.  Please  read  the  enclosed notice of annual general meeting and proxy
statement  and  date,  sign  and  promptly return the proxy card in the enclosed
self-addressed  envelope.

Sincerely,


/s/ J. Michael Talbert                      /s/ Robert L. Long
-------------------------------------       ------------------------------------
J. Michael Talbert                          Robert L. Long
Chairman of the Board                       President & Chief Executive Officer



          This  proxy  statement and the accompanying proxy card are dated March
28,  2003  and  are  first  being  mailed  on  or  about April 4, 2003 to record
shareholders  as  of  March  21,  2003.



               NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING OF TRANSOCEAN INC.
                             TO BE HELD MAY 8, 2003

     The  annual  general  meeting of Transocean Inc., a Cayman Islands exempted
company  limited by shares, will be held at the Royal Pavilion Hotel, St. James,
Barbados at 9:00 a.m., Barbados time, on Thursday, May 8, 2003 for the following
purposes:

     1.   To  re-elect  five  directors  as members of our board of directors to
          serve until the 2006 annual general meeting and until their respective
          successors  have  been  duly  elected.

     2.   To  approve  the  amendment  of  our Long-Term Incentive Plan to allow
          grants of incentive stock options for an additional ten year period to
          May  1,  2013,  and to allow a continuing right to grant stock options
          and  share  appreciation  rights  to  our  outside  directors.

     3.   To  approve  the  amendment  of  our  Employee  Stock Purchase Plan to
          increase the number of ordinary shares reserved for issuance under the
          plan  from  1,500,000  to  2,500,000.

     4.   To  approve  the  appointment  of  Ernst  &  Young  LLP as independent
          auditors  for  2003.

     5.   To  transact such other business as may properly be brought before the
          meeting.

     This  constitutes  notice  of the meeting as required by Cayman Islands law
and  our  articles  of  association.

     Only  record holders of ordinary shares at the close of business on Friday,
March  21,  2003  will  be  entitled  to notice of, and to vote at, the meeting.

     The  meeting  may  generally be adjourned from time to time without advance
notice  other  than announcement at the meeting, or any adjournment thereof, and
any  and  all business for which the meeting is hereby noticed may be transacted
at  any  such  adjournment.

                                          By order of the Board of Directors,



                                          /s/ Eric B. Brown
                                          --------------------------------------
                                          Eric B. Brown
                                          Secretary



Houston, Texas
March 28, 2003



================================================================================

                             YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT
    PLEASE COMPLETE, SIGN AND PROMPTLY RETURN YOUR PROXY CARD IN THE ENCLOSED
                                RETURN ENVELOPE.

================================================================================



                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                  FOR ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING OF TRANSOCEAN INC.
                                   MAY 8, 2003

     This  proxy  statement  is furnished in connection with the solicitation of
proxies  by Transocean Inc., on behalf of our board of directors, to be voted at
our  annual general meeting to be held on Thursday, May 8, 2003 at 9:00 a.m., at
the  Royal  Pavilion  Hotel,  St.  James,  Barbados.

PROPOSALS

     At  the annual general meeting, shareholders will be asked to vote upon the
following:

          -    A proposal to reelect each of five nominees as directors to serve
               three-year  terms.  These directors will be members of a class of
               directors  that  will serve until the 2006 annual general meeting
               and  until  their  respective  successors have been duly elected.

          -    A  proposal  to  approve the amendment of our Long-Term Incentive
               Plan to allow grants of incentive stock options for an additional
               ten  year  period to May 1, 2013, and to allow a continuing right
               to  grant  stock  options  and  share  appreciation rights to our
               outside  directors.

          -    A  proposal  to  approve  the  amendment  of  our  Employee Stock
               Purchase  Plan to increase the number of ordinary shares reserved
               for  issuance  under  the  plan  from  1,500,000  to  2,500,000.

          -    A  proposal  to  approve  the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as
               independent  auditors  for  2003.

          -    Any  other  matters  that  may  properly come before the meeting.

     We know of no other matters that are likely to be brought before the annual
general  meeting.

QUORUM

     The  presence, in person or by proxy, of shareholders holding a majority of
our  outstanding  ordinary  shares  will  constitute  a quorum.  Abstentions and
"broker  non-votes"  will  be  counted  as  present  for purposes of determining
whether  there  is  a  quorum  at  the  meeting.

RECORD DATE

     Only  shareholders  of record at the close of business on Friday, March 21,
2003  are entitled to notice of and to vote, or to grant proxies to vote, at the
meeting.

VOTES REQUIRED

     Approval  of  the  proposal  to  re-elect  the  five  nominees as directors
requires the affirmative vote of a plurality of the votes cast.  Abstentions and
"broker  non-votes"  will  not  be  counted  in  that  vote.

     Approval of the proposal to amend our Long-Term Incentive Plan requires the
affirmative  vote  of  the  holders  of at least a majority of votes cast on the
proposal,  provided  that  the  total  number  of  votes  cast  on  the proposal
represents a majority of the votes entitled to be cast.  Abstentions and "broker
non-votes"  on  this proposal will not affect the voting on the proposal as long
as  holders  of  a  majority  of  ordinary  shares  cast  votes on the proposal.
Otherwise,  the  effect  of an abstention or "broker non-vote" is a vote against
the  proposal.



     Approval  of  the  proposal  to  amend  our Employee Stock Purchase Plan to
increase the number of ordinary shares reserved for issuance under the plan from
1,500,000  to 2,500,000 requires the affirmative vote of the holders of at least
a  majority  of  votes  cast  on the proposal, provided that the total number of
votes  cast  on  the  proposal represents a majority of the votes entitled to be
cast.  Abstentions  and  "broker non-votes" on this proposal will not affect the
voting  on the proposal as long as holders of a majority of ordinary shares cast
votes  on  the  proposal.  Otherwise,  the  effect  of  an abstention or "broker
non-vote"  is  a  vote  against  the  proposal.

     Approval  of  the  proposal  to  appoint  Ernst  & Young LLP as independent
auditors  requires the affirmative vote of holders of at least a majority of the
ordinary  shares  present  in  person or by proxy at the meeting and entitled to
vote on the matter.  Abstentions and "broker non-votes" on the proposal have the
effect  of  a  vote  against  the  proposal.

     As  of  the  record  date  for the meeting, there were 319,767,820 ordinary
shares  outstanding  and  entitled  to  notice  of  and  to vote at the meeting.
Holders  of ordinary shares on the record date are entitled to one vote for each
share  held.

PROXIES

     A  proxy  card is being sent to each shareholder as of the record date.  If
you properly received a proxy card, you may grant a proxy to vote on each of the
four  proposals  by  marking  your proxy card appropriately, executing it in the
space  provided,  dating it and returning it to us.  We may accept your proxy by
any  form  of  communication permitted by Cayman Islands law and our articles of
association.  If  you  hold  your  shares in the name of a bank, broker or other
nominee,  you  should  follow  the instructions provided by your bank, broker or
nominee  when  voting  your  shares.

     If  you  have  timely  submitted a properly executed proxy card and clearly
indicated  your  votes,  your  shares  will  be voted as indicated.  If you have
timely  submitted  a properly executed proxy card and have not clearly indicated
your  votes,  your  shares  will  be  voted  "FOR"  the election of all director
nominees  and  "FOR"  each  of  the  other  three  proposals.

     If  any  other  matters  are  properly  presented  at  the  meeting  for
consideration,  the  persons named in the proxy card will have the discretion to
vote  on  these  matters  in accordance with their best judgment.  Proxies voted
against  any of the four proposals will not be voted in favor of any adjournment
of  the  meeting  for  the  purpose  of  soliciting  additional  proxies.

     You  may  revoke  your  proxy  card  at  any time prior to its exercise by:

          -    giving  written  notice  of  the  revocation  to  our  Secretary;

          -    appearing  at  the meeting, notifying our Secretary and voting in
               person;  or

          -    properly  completing  and  executing  a  later-dated  proxy  and
               delivering  it  to  our  Secretary  at  or  before  the  meeting.

     Your  presence  without voting at the meeting will not automatically revoke
your  proxy,  and  any  revocation  during  the  meeting  will  not affect votes
previously  taken.  If  you  hold  your  shares in the name of a bank, broker or
other  nominee, you should follow the instructions provided by your bank, broker
or  nominee  in  revoking  your  previously  granted  proxy.

SOLICITATION OF PROXIES

     The  accompanying  proxy  is  being  solicited  on  behalf  of the board of
directors.  The  expenses  of  preparing, printing and mailing the proxy and the
materials  used in the solicitation will be borne by us.  We have retained D. F.
King  & Co., Inc. for a fee of $6,000, plus expenses, to aid in the solicitation
of  proxies.  Proxies  may  be  solicited  by  personal interview, telephone and
telegram  by  our  directors,  officers  and  employees,  who  will  not


                                        2

receive  additional  compensation  for  those services. Arrangements also may be
made  with  brokerage  houses and other custodians, nominees and fiduciaries for
the  forwarding  of  solicitation materials to the beneficial owners of ordinary
shares held by those persons, and we will reimburse them for reasonable expenses
incurred  by  them  in connection with the forwarding of solicitation materials.

                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

     Our  articles  of  association  divide  our  board  of directors into three
classes:  Class  I,  Class  II  and Class III.  Five Class I directors are to be
elected  at  our  2003  annual  general  meeting  to  serve for three-year terms
expiring  at  the  annual  general  meeting  in  2006.

     The  board  has  nominated  for  re-election as Class I directors Victor E.
Grijalva, Arthur Lindenauer, Richard A. Pattarozzi, Kristian Siem and J. Michael
Talbert.  If  any of the nominees become unavailable for any reason, which we do
not  anticipate,  the  board  of  directors  in  its  discretion may designate a
substitute  nominee.  If  you  have  submitted an executed proxy card, your vote
will  be  cast for the substitute nominee unless contrary instructions are given
in  the  proxy.

     THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" THE RE-ELECTION OF VICTOR E.
GRIJALVA, ARTHUR LINDENAUER, RICHARD A. PATTAROZZI, KRISTIAN SIEM AND J. MICHAEL
TALBERT  AS  CLASS  I  DIRECTORS.

NOMINEES FOR DIRECTOR-CLASS I-TERMS EXPIRING 2006

     VICTOR  E. GRIJALVA, age 64, is Chairman of the Board of Hanover Compressor
     Company.  Mr.  Grijalva  has  been  a director since the Sedco Forex merger
     described  below  and  served  as  Chairman of our board of directors until
     October  2002.  He  is  the  retired Vice Chairman of Schlumberger Limited.
     Before  serving  as Vice Chairman, he served as Executive Vice President of
     Schlumberger's  Oilfield Services division from 1994 to January 1999 and as
     Executive  Vice  President  of  Schlumberger's Wireline, Testing & Anadrill
     division  from  1992  to  1994.

     ARTHUR  LINDENAUER,  age  65,  is  Chairman  of  the  Board of Schlumberger
     Technology  Corporation,  Schlumberger's  principal  U.S.  subsidiary.  He
     previously  served  as Executive Vice President-Finance and Chief Financial
     Officer  of Schlumberger from January 1980 to December 1998. Mr. Lindenauer
     was  a  partner  with  the accounting firm of Price Waterhouse from 1972 to
     1980.  Mr.  Lindenauer  has  served as one of our directors since the Sedco
     Forex  merger. Mr. Lindenauer is also a director of the New York Chapter of
     the  Cystic Fibrosis Foundation and a Trustee of the American University in
     Cairo.

     RICHARD A. PATTAROZZI, age 59, served at Shell Oil Company as President and
     CEO of Shell Deepwater Development Inc. and Shell Deepwater Production Inc.
     from  1996  to  1999.  In  early 1999, he was promoted to Vice President of
     Shell  Oil Company, responsible for Shell Deepwater Development Inc., Shell
     Deepwater  Production  Inc.  and the company's Shallow Water Gulf of Mexico
     exploration  and  production  business  and  retired  in  January 2000. Mr.
     Pattarozzi  joined  Shell  in 1966 in its offshore engineering organization
     and  has  more  than  33 years of experience in the petroleum industry. Mr.
     Pattarozzi  has  served  as  one of our directors since the merger with R&B
     Falcon  Corporation  described below. Before the merger, he had served as a
     director  of  R&B  Falcon  since  February  2000.  He is also a director of
     Superior  Energy Services, Inc., FMC Technologies, Inc., Global Industries,
     Ltd.,  Stone  Energy Company and Tidewater, Inc., all of which are publicly
     traded.

     KRISTIAN  SIEM,  age  54,  is  Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Siem
     Industries,  Inc., an industrial holding company that owns offshore oil and
     gas drilling and subsea construction services businesses, a fleet of reefer
     vessels  and  a  fleet  of  car  carrying  vessels  through subsidiaries in
     Bermuda,  the  U.K. and Norway. Mr. Siem has served as one of our directors
     since  September  1996  and  was  Chairman  of  Transocean ASA prior to its
     acquisition by us in 1996. Mr. Siem is also chairman of DSND Inc., Subsea 7
     Inc.,  Star Reefers Inc. and Four Seasons Capital A.B. During the past five
     years,  Mr.  Siem  has served as an executive officer with Siem Industries,
     Inc.  and  as  Chairman  of  Wilrig  AS, and on the boards of Kvaerner ASA,
     Norwegian


                                        3

     Cruise Line, Lambert Fenchurch Group Holdings plc and Oslo Reinsurance ASA.
     He  was also a member of the board of directors of Saga Petroleum ASA until
     its  merger  with  Norsk  Hydro  in  September  1999.

     J.  MICHAEL  TALBERT,  age  56,  has  served  as  Chairman  of our board of
     directors  since  October 2002 and a member of our board of directors since
     August 1994. Mr. Talbert also served as Chief Executive Officer from August
     1994  until  October  2002,  Chairman of our board of directors from August
     1994  until  December  1999,  and  as  President  from  December 1999 until
     December  2001.  Prior  to  assuming  his  duties  with us, Mr. Talbert was
     President  and  Chief Executive Officer of Lone Star Gas Company, a natural
     gas  distribution  company  and  a division of Ensearch Corporation. He has
     also  been  elected  as  a  director of El Paso Corporation to be effective
     April  1,  2003.

CONTINUING DIRECTORS-CLASS II-TERMS EXPIRING 2004

     ROBERT  L. LONG, age 57, is President, Chief Executive Officer and a member
     of  our board of directors. Mr. Long served as President from December 2001
     to  October 2002, at which time he assumed the additional position of Chief
     Executive  Officer.  Mr.  Long  also served as Chief Operating Officer from
     June  2002  until  October  2002,  Chief Financial Officer from August 1996
     until  December 2001, as Senior Vice President from May 1990 until the time
     of  the  Sedco  Forex  merger,  at  which  time  he assumed the position of
     Executive  Vice President, and as Treasurer from September 1997 until March
     2001.  Mr.  Long  has  been  an  employee  since  1976 and was elected Vice
     President  in  1987.

     MARTIN  B.  MCNAMARA,  age  55,  is Partner-in-Charge of the Dallas, Texas,
     office  of  the  law  firm  of  Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher and a member of the
     firm's  finance  and  compensation  committees. He has served as one of our
     directors since November 1994. During the past five years, Mr. McNamara has
     been  in  the  private  practice  of  law.

     ALAIN  ROGER,  age  72,  is a retired executive officer of Schlumberger. He
     served  as  Executive  Vice President of Health, Safety and Environment for
     Schlumberger  from  October  1993  to December 1995. He served as Executive
     Vice  President  of Drilling and Pumping for Schlumberger from July 1991 to
     September  1993, as President of Sedco Forex, which was the former offshore
     contract  drilling  business of Schlumberger Limited, from 1985 to 1991 and
     as  President  of  Forex Neptune from 1976 to 1984. Mr. Roger has served as
     one of our directors since the Sedco Forex merger. Mr. Roger also served as
     Chairman  of  the  International  Association  of  Drilling  Contractors
     (I.A.D.C.)  in  1991.  Mr.  Roger has informed us that he intends to retire
     from  the  Board  of  Directors  as  of  the  Annual  General  Meeting.

CONTINUING DIRECTORS-CLASS III-TERMS EXPIRING 2005

     RONALD  L. KUEHN, JR., age 67, is currently Chairman of the Board and Chief
     Executive  Officer  of  El  Paso  Corporation,  a  diversified  natural gas
     company.  He  has  served  as one of our directors since 1975. Mr. Kuehn is
     also a director of AmSouth Bancorporation, The Dun & Bradstreet Corporation
     and  Praxair,  Inc.,  and  is a member of the Board of Trustees of Tuskegee
     University.  From  1986  to  1999,  Mr.  Kuehn served as Chairman and Chief
     Executive  Officer  of  Sonat  Inc. prior to its merger with El Paso Energy
     Corporation  (now  known  as  El  Paso Corporation), and he has served as a
     director  of  El  Paso Corporation since 1999. He served as Chairman of the
     Board of El Paso Corporation from 1999 to 2000 and again became Chairman of
     the  Board  and  was named Chief Executive Officer in March 2003. Mr. Kuehn
     also  served  as  President  and Chief Executive Officer of Sonat Inc. from
     1984  to  1986.  Mr.  Kuehn has submitted his resignation from the Board of
     Directors  to  be  effective  as  of  March  31,  2003.

     PAUL B. LOYD, JR., age 56, has served as one of our directors since the R&B
     Falcon merger. Before the merger, he served as Chairman of the Board of R&B
     Falcon  since January 1998 and Chief Executive Officer since April 1999. He
     was  CEO  and Chairman of the Board of R&B Falcon Drilling (International &
     Deepwater)  Inc.  (formerly  Reading & Bates Corporation) from 1991 through
     1997.  Mr.  Loyd  has  over 30 years of experience in the offshore drilling
     industry,  having joined Reading & Bates in 1970 in its management-training
     program.  He is also a director of Carrizo Oil & Gas, Inc. and Frontier Oil
     Corporation  and  is  on  the  Board  of  Trustees  of  Southern  Methodist
     University.


                                        4

     ROBERTO  MONTI,  age  63,  is  the  retired  Executive  Vice  President  of
     Exploration  and  Production for Repsol YPF. He was the President and Chief
     Executive  Officer of YPF Sociedad Anonima from September 1995 to June 1999
     prior  to  its  acquisition  by  Repsol. From October 1993 to July 1995, he
     served  as  President  of  Dowell, a division of Schlumberger. He is also a
     director of Pecom Energia S.A. Mr. Monti has served as one of our directors
     since  the  Sedco  Forex  merger.

     IAN  C.  STRACHAN,  age  59,  is  Chairman  of  the Board of Instinet Group
     Incorporated  and  a  director of Reuters Group PLC, Harsco Corporation and
     Johnson Matthey plc. He served as Deputy Chairman of Invensys plc from 1999
     to  2000. He served as CEO of BTR plc from 1996 until its merger with Siebe
     plc  in  1999, when it changed its name to Invensys plc. From 1987 to 1995,
     Mr.  Strachan  was with Rio Tinto plc, serving as CFO from 1987 to 1991 and
     as  Deputy CEO from 1991 to 1995. He was employed by Exxon Corporation from
     1970  to  1986.  Mr.  Strachan has served as one of our directors since the
     Sedco  Forex  merger.

RETIREMENT  OF MR. ROGER, RESIGNATION OF MR. KUEHN AND RESTRUCTURING OF DIRECTOR
CLASSES

     Mr.  Roger  has  informed  us  that  he intends to retire from the Board of
Directors  as  of  the  Annual  General  Meeting.  On  March 27, 2003, Mr. Kuehn
submitted  his  resignation  from  the  Board of Directors to be effective as of
March  31,  2003.  In  order to more evenly distribute directors among the three
classes, Mr. Talbert intends to resign from his Class I directorship immediately
after  the  Annual  General Meeting (assuming he is reelected), and the Board of
Directors  intends to then concurrently fill with Mr. Talbert the vacancy in the
Class  II  directors created by Mr. Roger's retirement. We expect Mr. Talbert to
then  stand  for  re-election  again  in  2004  along  with  the  other Class II
directors.

MERGER WITH R&B FALCON AND DESIGNATION OF BOARD MEMBERS

     On  January  31, 2001, we completed a merger transaction with R&B Falcon in
which  common  shareholders  of  R&B  Falcon  received 0.5 newly issued ordinary
shares for each R&B Falcon share and R&B Falcon became our indirect wholly owned
subsidiary.  Pursuant  to  the  merger  agreement,  our  board elected three new
members  who  were  designated  by  R&B  Falcon  in consultation with us and had
previously  served on the R&B Falcon board of directors. Two of those directors,
Messrs.  Loyd  and  Pattarozzi, continue to serve on our board of directors.  On
December  12,  2002,  R&B  Falcon  changed  its  name  to  TODCO.

MERGER WITH SEDCO FOREX, DESIGNATION OF BOARD MEMBERS AND APPOINTMENT OF MR.
GRIJALVA

     On  December  31,  1999,  we  completed  a merger with Sedco Forex Holdings
Limited  following  the  spin-off of Sedco Forex to Schlumberger stockholders on
December  30,  1999.  As  a  result  of  the  merger,  Schlumberger stockholders
exchanged  all  of the Sedco Forex shares distributed to them by Schlumberger in
the  Sedco  Forex  spin-off  for our ordinary shares, and Sedco Forex became our
wholly  owned  subsidiary.  Pursuant to the merger agreement, Transocean's board
of  directors  designated  Messrs.  Kinder, Kuehn, McNamara, Siem and Talbert as
directors  and  Schlumberger's  board  of directors designated Messrs. Grijalva,
Lindenauer, Monti, Roger and Strachan as directors.  In the merger agreement, we
agreed  to  nominate Mr. Grijalva to our board of directors to serve as Chairman
until  his 65th birthday (in July 2003).  In October 2002, Mr. Grijalva resigned
his  position  as  Chairman  but  agreed  to  remain  as  a  director.

COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS

     Fees  and  Retainers.  Our  employees  receive  no extra pay for serving as
directors.  Other than Mr. Grijalva, who has a consulting agreement with us that
terminates  in  July  2003,  each  director  who  is  not one of our officers or
employees  receives an annual retainer of $34,000.  The audit committee chairman
receives an additional $20,000 annual retainer, and the other committee chairmen
receive  an  additional  $5,000  annual  retainer.  Non-employee  directors also
receive  a  fee  of  $2,000  for  each  board  meeting and $1,500 for each board
committee meeting attended, plus incurred expenses where appropriate.  Directors
are eligible to participate in our deferred compensation plan.  The director may
defer  any  fees  or  retainer by investing those amounts in Transocean ordinary
share  equivalents  or  in  other  investments  selected  by  the administrative
committee.


                                        5

     Stock  Options/Stock  Appreciation  Rights.  When  elected,  each  outside
director  is  granted  an  option  to purchase 4,000 ordinary shares at the fair
market value of those shares on the date of grant.  Following the initial grant,
if the outside director remains in office, the director is granted an additional
option  to  purchase  6,000 ordinary shares after each annual general meeting at
the  fair market value of those shares on the date of grant.  Directors residing
in certain countries may receive share appreciation rights, commonly referred to
as  SARs,  instead  of  options.

     Each  stock  option  and  SAR granted to a director has a ten-year term and
becomes  exercisable in equal annual installments on the first, second and third
anniversaries  of the date of grant assuming continued service on the board.  In
the  event  of  an  outside director's retirement in accordance with the board's
retirement  policy  or  his  earlier  death  or disability, or in the event of a
change  of  control of our company as described under "Compensation of Executive
Officers-Compensation  Upon  Change  of  Control,"  options and SARs will become
immediately  exercisable  and will remain exercisable for the remainder of their
ten-year  term.  Options  and  SARs  will  terminate  60  days  after an outside
director  leaves the board for any other reason.  However, if that person ceases
to  be a director for our convenience, as determined by the board, the board may
at  its discretion accelerate the exercisability and retain the original term of
those  options  and SARs.  This treatment was afforded the options of Richard D.
Kinder in connection with his resignation from the Board of Directors in 2002.

     We  have  reserved  an aggregate of 600,000 ordinary shares for issuance to
outside  directors under our Long-Term Incentive Plan, of which 255,032 remained
available  for  grant  as  of  March  1,  2003.  The provisions of the Long-Term
Incentive  Plan relating to grants to outside directors will terminate on May 1,
2003.  However,  we are proposing to amend our Long-Term Incentive Plan to allow
for  continuing  grants to be made to our directors as described under "Proposal
to  Amend  Our  Long-Term  Incentive  Plan".

BOARD MEETINGS AND COMMITTEES

     During  2002,  the board of directors held 5 regular meetings and 1 special
meeting.  Each of our directors attended at least 75% of the meetings during the
year,  including  committee  meetings.

     The  board  has  standing  executive  compensation,  finance  and benefits,
corporate governance and audit committees.  In addition, the board may from time
to  time  form  special  committees  to  consider particular matters that arise.

     Executive  Compensation  Committee.  The  executive  compensation committee
reviews and approves the compensation of our officers, administers our executive
compensation  programs  and  makes awards under the Long-Term Incentive Plan and
the Performance Award and Cash Bonus Plan.  The current members of the executive
compensation  committee  are Mr. Kuehn, Chairman, and Messrs. Monti, Pattarozzi,
Roger  and Siem, although Mr. Kuehn has submitted his resignation from the Board
of Directors to be effective as of March 31, 2003. Mr. Siem was appointed to the
executive  compensation  committee in February 2003.  The executive compensation
committee  met  4  times  during  2002.

     Finance  and  Benefits  Committee.  The  finance  and  benefits  committee
approves  our  long-term  financial  policies  and  annual  financial  plans,
significant  capital  expenditures,  insurance programs and investment policies.
It  also  makes  recommendations  to  the  board concerning dividend policy, the
issuance  and  terms of debt and equity securities and the establishment of bank
lines  of  credit.  In addition, the finance and benefits committee approves the
creation,  termination  and  amendment  of  our  employee  benefit  programs and
periodically  reviews  the  status  of these programs and the performance of the
managers  of  the  funded  programs.  The  current  members  of  the finance and
benefits  committee  are  Mr.  Siem,  Chairman, and Messrs. Lindenauer, Loyd and
Strachan.  The  finance  and  benefits  committee  met  4  times  during  2002.

     Corporate  Governance  Committee.  The corporate governance committee makes
recommendations  to  the board with respect to the selection and compensation of
the  board,  how  the  board  functions  and  how  the  board


                                        6

should  interact with shareholders and management. It reviews the qualifications
of potential candidates for the board of directors, evaluates the performance of
incumbent  directors  and  recommends to the board nominees to be elected at the
annual  meeting of shareholders. The current members of the corporate governance
committee  are  Mr.  Grijalva,  Chairman,  and Messrs. Kuehn, Loyd, McNamara and
Monti,  although  Mr.  Kuehn  has  submitted  his  resignation from the Board of
Directors  to  be  effective  as  of  March  31,  2003. The corporate governance
committee  met  2  times  during  2002.

     The  corporate  governance  committee  will  consider nominees for director
recommended  by  shareholders.  Please  submit  your recommendations in writing,
along  with a resume of the nominee's qualifications and business experience and
a  signed  statement  of  the  proposed  candidate  consenting  to be named as a
candidate  and,  if  nominated  and  elected,  to  serve  as a director.  Submit
nominations  to  Eric  B.  Brown,  Secretary, Transocean Inc., 4 Greenway Plaza,
Houston,  Texas  77046.

     Audit  Committee.  The  audit  committee  assists our board of directors in
fulfilling  its  oversight  responsibilities  by monitoring the integrity of the
Company's  financial  statements  and  the  independence  and performance of our
auditors  and  by  reviewing  our  financial reporting processes.  The committee
reviews  and reports to the board the scope and results of audits by our outside
auditor  and  our  internal  auditing  staff.  It  also reviews with the outside
auditor  the  adequacy  of  our  system  of  internal  controls.  It  reviews
transactions  between  us and our directors and officers, our policies regarding
those  transactions  and  compliance  with  our  business ethics and conflict of
interest  policies.  The  audit  committee  also  recommends  to  the  board  of
directors  a  firm  of  certified  public  accountants  to  serve as our outside
auditor,  reviews  the  audit  and  other  professional services rendered by the
outside  auditor  and  periodically  reviews  the  independence  of  the outside
auditor.  The  board  of  directors  has adopted a written charter for the audit
committee, which is attached as Appendix A to this proxy statement.  The current
members  of  the  audit  committee  are  Mr.  Lindenauer,  Chairman, and Messrs.
McNamara  and Strachan.  Mr. Siem was also a member of the audit committee until
February  2003.  The  audit  committee  met  8  times  during  2002.

     The rules of the New York Stock Exchange, Inc. restrict directors that have
relationships  with  the  company  that may interfere with the exercise of their
independence  from  management  and  the  company  from  serving  on  the  audit
committee.  We  believe  that  the  members  of the audit committee have no such
relationships  and  are  therefore  independent  for  purposes of New York Stock
Exchange  rules.

                             AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT

     Our  committee  has reviewed and discussed the audited financial statements
of  the  Company  for  the  year  ended  December  31, 2002 with management, our
internal  auditors  and  Ernst & Young LLP.  In addition, we have discussed with
Ernst  &  Young  LLP, the independent auditing firm for the Company, the matters
required  by  Codification  of Statements on Auditing Standards No. 61 (SAS 61).
The  Sarbanes-Oxley  Act  of 2002 requires certifications by the Company's chief
executive  officer  and  chief  financial  officer  in  certain of the Company's
filings  with  the  Securities  and  Exchange Commission ("SEC").  The committee
discussed the review of the Company's reporting and internal controls undertaken
in  connection  with  these  certifications  with  the  Company's management and
outside  auditors.  The  audit  committee has further periodically reviewed such
other  matters  as  it  deemed  appropriate,  including  other provisions of the
Sarbanes-Oxley  Act  of  2002 and rules adopted or proposed to be adopted by the
SEC  and  the  New  York  Stock  Exchange.

     The committee also has received the written disclosures and the letter from
Ernst  &  Young LLP required by Independence Standards Board Standard No. 1, and
we have reviewed, evaluated and discussed the written disclosures with that firm
and  its  independence from the Company.  We also have discussed with management
of  the  Company  and  the  auditing  firm  such other matters and received such
assurances  from  them  as  we  deemed  appropriate.

     Based  on the foregoing review and discussions and relying thereon, we have
recommended  to  the Company's Board of Directors the inclusion of the Company's
audited  financial  statements  for  the  year  ended  December  31, 2002 in the
Company's  Annual  Report  on  Form  10-K  for  such  year  filed  with the SEC.

     ARTHUR LINDENAUER, CHAIRMAN                  IAN C. STRACHAN

     MARTIN B. MCNAMARA


                                        7

                       SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF 5% BENEFICIAL
                              OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

     The  table  below  shows how many ordinary shares each of our directors and
nominees,  each  of  the  executive  officers  named in the summary compensation
section  below  and  all directors and executive officers as a group owned as of
January  31,  2003.  The  table below also sets forth information concerning the
persons  known  by  us  to  beneficially  own 5% or more of our ordinary shares.



                                  AMOUNT AND NATURE OF BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP

                                                                     SHARES OWNED        PERCENT OF SHARES
NAME OF BENEFICIAL OWNER                                          BENEFICIALLY (1)(2)  OWNED BENEFICIALLY (3)
----------------------------------------------------------------  -------------------  ----------------------
                                                                                 
Jean P. Cahuzac (4). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .              138,603
Gregory L. Cauthen (4) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .               17,090
Victor E. Grijalva . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .               46,851
Ronald L. Kuehn, Jr .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .               40,684
Arthur Lindenauer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .               13,788
Robert L. Long (4)(5). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .              178,679
Paul B. Loyd, Jr.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .            1,472,354
Martin B. McNamara . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .               36,688
Roberto Monti. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                8,667
Richard A. Pattarozzi. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .               34,667
Donald R. Ray (4)(6) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .              271,901
Alain Roger. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .               14,209
Kristian Siem (7). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .               19,520
Ian C. Strachan. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                9,167
J. Michael Talbert (4)(8). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .              669,526
All directors and executive officers as a group (21 persons) (4)            3,195,225                      1%
Montag & Caldwell, Inc. (9). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .           20,882,399                      7%


---------------
(1)  The business address of each director and executive officer is c/o
     Transocean Inc., 4 Greenway Plaza, Houston, Texas 77046.

(2)  Includes options exercisable within 60 days held by Messrs. Cahuzac
     (136,928), Cauthen (15,000), Grijalva (8,667), Kuehn (32,833), Lindenauer
     (8,667), Long (137,666), Loyd (1,407,354), McNamara (28,339), Monti
     (8,667), Pattarozzi (34,667), Ray (230,413), Roger (8,667), Siem (19,508),
     Strachan (8,667), Talbert (588,793) and all directors and executive
     officers as a group (3,190,300). Also includes rights to acquire ordinary
     shares under our deferred compensation plan held by Messrs. Grijalva
     (13,037), Kuehn (7,851) and McNamara (7,349), and all directors and
     executive officers as a group (28,237).

(3)  As of January 31, 2003, each listed individual beneficially owned less than
     1.0% of the outstanding ordinary shares.

(4)  Includes:



                                                                          All directors
                                                                          and executive
                                                                          officers as a
                Mr. Cahuzac  Mr. Cauthen  Mr. Long  Mr. Ray  Mr. Talbert      group
                -----------  -----------  --------  -------  -----------  -------------
                                                        
Shares held by
Trustee under
401(k) plan. .            0            0     3,269    2,960        1,914         12,350

Shares held in
Employee Stock
Purchase Plan.        1,294          590     3,422    3,297            0         16,737



                                        8

(5)  Includes 34,322 shares held in a joint account with his wife.

(6)  Includes 35,231 shares held in a joint trust account with his wife.

(7)  Siem Industries, Inc. holds 1,423,720 of our ordinary shares. Mr. Siem is
     the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Siem Industries, Inc. As a
     result, he may be deemed a beneficial owner of those ordinary shares.

(8)  Includes 80,409 shares held in a joint account with his wife.

(9)  Based on a Schedule 13G filed with the SEC on January 31, 2003. According
     to the filing, Montag & Caldwell, Inc. has sole dispositive power over
     20,882,399 shares and does not have voting power over any shares. The
     address of Montag & Caldwell, Inc. is 3455 Peachtree Road, NE Suite 1200,
     Atlanta, Georgia 30326-3248.

SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

     We  believe  all  Section  16(a)  reporting  requirements  related  to  our
directors  and executive officers were timely fulfilled during 2002 except for a
late  Form  4  reporting  one option grant for each of Mr. Long and Mr. Cahuzac.
This  belief  is  based  solely  on a review of the reports required to be filed
under  Section  16(a) of the U.S. Securities Exchange Act of 1934 that have been
furnished  to  us and written representations from those with filing obligations
that  all  reports  were  timely  filed.

                       COMPENSATION OF EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE

     The  executive  compensation  committee  is  composed solely of nonemployee
directors.  It  administers our executive compensation program.  The committee's
primary  responsibility  is  to  ensure  that the executive compensation program
furthers  our  interests  and  those  of  our  shareholders.

     Our executive compensation program has three principal objectives:

     (1)  to  attract  and  retain  a  highly qualified and motivated management
          team;

     (2)  to  appropriately reward individual executives for their contributions
          to  the  attainment  of  key  strategic  goals;  and

     (3)  to  link  the  interests  of  executives  and  shareholders  through
          stock-based  plans  and  performance  measures.

     The  committee  meets  with outside consultants at least annually to review
and  compare  the level of compensation we pay or award to key executives to the
compensation practices of a peer group of companies.  For 2002, the primary peer
group  of  companies  used  to  determine compensation (base salary, annual cash
bonus  incentives and stock options) for key executives consisted of 14 publicly
held  companies  which  the  committee  believes  are  generally  of  comparable
financial  size, business focus and scope; however, as described below, we use a
slightly  different group of companies for comparison based on total shareholder
return.

     The  key  components of our executive compensation program are base salary,
annual  cash  bonus  incentives and long-term stock incentives.  The committee's
policies  with respect to each component of the program, including the basis for
the  compensation  of  the  Chief  Executive  Officer, are described below.  The
committee  consults with the Chief Executive Officer in reviewing the individual
performance  and  compensation of key executives (other than the Chief Executive
Officer).  The  committee  reviews the Chief Executive Officer's performance and
compensation  at  least  annually.

     Base  Salaries.  The  committee reviews at least annually the base salaries
of  key  executive  officers and determines whether salaries should be adjusted.
Any  adjustments  are based primarily on the executive's individual performance,
responsibilities  and  experience and salary survey information. In general, the
committee's  objective  is


                                        9

to  maintain  executive salaries at the size-adjusted median of the salaries for
comparable executives in our peer group. Executive salaries for 2002 were at the
median  level  as  compared  to the peer group of companies. Accordingly, at its
salary  review  meeting  on  July  10,  2002,  the committee made no significant
adjustment  of  the  base  salaries  of the executive officers. The committee is
advised  by  a third party executive compensation consultant. Upon Mr. Talbert's
resignation  as  CEO and appointment as Chairman in October 2002, his salary was
adjusted  from  $950,000  to  $475,000.  Upon  Mr.  Long's appointment as CEO in
October  2002,  his  salary  was  adjusted  from  $500,000  to  $600,000.

     Annual  Cash  Bonus  Incentives.  We  award  annual  cash  bonus  incentive
opportunities under the Performance Award and Cash Bonus Plan.  The amount of an
executive's  bonus  opportunity,  which  is  expressed  as  a percentage of base
salary,  depends  primarily upon that individual's position and responsibilities
and  bonus opportunities provided to comparable positions within our peer group.
At  the  beginning  of  each  year,  the  committee  reviews and approves annual
performance  goals.  Shortly after the end of the year, the committee determines
the  appropriate  bonus  payout  levels based on the degree to which these goals
have  been  achieved.  The  annual  incentive  program  is designed to pay total
annual  cash  compensation,  which is salary plus bonus, above the median of our
peer  group  when  we  meet  substantially  all  of the goals established for an
executive's  bonus opportunity.  Similarly, when the goals are not achieved, the
program is intended to result in total annual cash compensation below the median
of  our  peer  group.  The  committee  also  has  the  discretion  to  award
performance-based  cash  bonuses  under  our  Long-Term  Incentive  Plan.

     The  committee  determined  that  the  payout  of an executive's 2002 bonus
opportunity  was  to  be  based  on  the  level of achievement of a company-wide
financial  goal,  corporate goals and individual goals, as described below.  The
financial  goal  was  weighted  at  50%,  the  corporate  goals  at  35% and the
individual  goals  at 15%.  The committee also has discretion to make additional
cash  bonus  awards  beyond  the  bonus  opportunity  to  recognize  exceptional
individual  performance  or  to  take  account  of  other  factors.

     The  financial  goal  included  in  the  2002 bonus opportunities under our
Performance  Award  and Cash Bonus Plan for senior executive officers, including
Mr.  Long, was our 2002 earnings per share (''EPS'') as compared to our budgeted
EPS.  Payout  of the EPS goal was based on minimum, target and maximum levels of
achievement.  Mr.  Talbert had no financial goal under our Performance Award and
Cash  Bonus  Plan, but he had similar financial performance goals under our Long
Term  Incentive Plan.  The corporate goals for all senior executives included in
the 2002 bonus opportunities included operating excellence, technical leadership
and  annual  goals  relating  to  safety  and  customer  focus  programs.

     The  committee  met  in  December  2002 and February 2003 to review the EPS
performance  versus  the  goals  and  the  attainment of the corporate goals and
objectives  for  the year 2002.  Mr. Talbert's bonus under our Performance Award
Cash  Bonus Plan and Long-Term Incentive Plan for the period during which he was
CEO  was  determined  by  the  committee  to  entitle  him to a bonus payment of
$685,000  or  114%  of  his  bonus  opportunity.   Mr.  Long's  bonus  under our
Performance  Award  Cash  Bonus  Plan for the period during which he was CEO was
determined  by  the  committee  to entitle him to a bonus payment of $114,000 or
114%  of  his  bonus  opportunity.  Mr. Talbert's and Mr. Long's bonuses for the
entire  year  were  $735,000  and  $400,000,  respectively.

     Long-Term Stock Incentives.  The long-term stock incentive component of our
executive  compensation  program  is designed to align executive and shareholder
interests by rewarding executives for the attainment of stock price appreciation
and  total  shareholder  return.

     As  a general rule, the committee administers the long-term stock incentive
program  through annual grants of stock options to designated executive officers
and  other  key employees.  In addition, the committee may consider the award of
restricted  stock  based  on the company's total shareholder return ("TSR") when
compared  to  a peer group of companies, and the committee may also make special
awards  to  individual  executives  and other key employees during the year on a
discretionary  basis.  The  peer group of companies used to measure our relative
TSR  consists of fifteen (15) publicly traded companies with a narrower focus on
contract  drilling  and  oilfield services.  On July 11, 2002 the committee made
stock option grants to executives, including Mr. Talbert and Mr. Long, and stock
option  grants  to  other key employees in order to further the goal of aligning
the  executives' and key employees' interests with those of the shareholders and
to  encourage management continuity. A further stock option grant was awarded to
Mr.  Long  upon  his  appointment  as  CEO  on  October  9,  2002.


                                       10

     Each  executive  officer  is  given  a  grant  opportunity  based  on  the
executive's  individual position and compensation survey data of our peer group.
The executives are granted stock options at the 50th percentile level each year,
subject  to the committee's discretion to grant more or fewer options based upon
company  performance.  Vesting  of  options  would  occur  over  three  years.
Restricted  stock  awards  generally  would only be made for company performance
based  upon the last year's TSR, if TSR had been above the 50th percentile.  The
committee  determines  whether  or not the restricted stock grant opportunity is
earned  by  comparing  our  annual  TSR,  calculated  by considering stock price
appreciation  and dividends, to the total shareholder return of the companies in
the  peer  group.  Restricted  stock  awards  would  provide long-term incentive
compensation  between the competitive median and 75th percentile levels directly
proportional  to  TSR  performance  between  the  50th  and  75th  percentiles.

     Based  upon  the  above  criteria, on July 11, 2002, we granted Mr. Talbert
options  to  purchase 200,000 ordinary shares at an exercise price of $28.80 per
share, which was the fair market value of the ordinary shares at the date of the
grant.  On  October  10,  2002,  we  granted Mr. Long options to purchase 50,000
ordinary  shares at an exercise price of $18.82, which was the fair market value
of  the  ordinary  shares  at the date of the grant. Based upon the formula, the
executives,  including Messrs. Talbert and Long, were not awarded any restricted
stock.  Mr.  Long  also  received a grant of options to purchase 60,000 ordinary
shares  at  an exercise price of $28.80 per share, which was the market value of
the ordinary shares at the date of the grant, related to the portion of 2002 for
which  he  was  not  CEO.

     Stock  Ownership Guidelines.  In 1993, the committee established guidelines
designed  to  encourage  our  key executives to attain specified levels of stock
ownership over a five-year period.  Stock ownership goals are based on the value
of  the  ordinary shares and are expressed as a multiple of the executive's base
salary.

     Limitations  on  Deductibility  of  Non-Performance  Based  Compensation.
Section  162(m)  of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code limits the tax deduction that
we  or  our subsidiaries can take with respect to the compensation of designated
executive  officers,  unless  the  compensation  is  ''performance-based.''  The
committee  expects  that  all  income  recognized by executive officers upon the
exercise  of  stock  options  granted  under  the  Long-Term Incentive Plan will
qualify as performance-based compensation.  The committee also believes that all
restricted  stock  which  it  has  awarded  to  date  also  qualifies  as
performance-based.

     Under  the  Long-Term  Incentive  Plan, the committee has the discretion to
award performance-based cash compensation that qualifies under Section 162(m) of
the U.S. Internal Revenue Code based on the achievement of objective performance
goals.  For  2002,  Mr.  Talbert  was  the  only  executive  eligible  for  a
performance-based  cash award under the Long-Term Incentive Plan.  The committee
may  determine  to award compensation that does not qualify under Section 162(m)
as  performance-based  compensation.

     Conclusion.  The  committee  believes  that  the  executive  compensation
philosophy  that  we  have adopted effectively serves our interests and those of
our  shareholders.  It  is  the  committee's intention that the pay delivered to
executives  be  commensurate  with  company  performance.

     Ronald L. Kuehn, Jr., Chairman               Roberto L. Monti

     Richard A. Pattarozzi                        Alain Roger

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

     The  table  below  shows the compensation during 2000, 2001 and 2002 of the
two  individuals  who  served as our Chief Executive Officer during 2002 and our
four  most  highly compensated executive officers other than our Chief Executive
Officer  who  were  serving as executive officers at the end of 2002 (the "named
executive  officers").


                                       11



                                                SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

                                                                                 LONG-TERM
                                         ANNUAL COMPENSATION                COMPENSATION AWARDS
                                --------------------------------------   ----------------------------
Name and                                                                 Restricted     Securities
------------------------                                 Other Annual       Stock       Underlying         All Other
Principal Position        Year  Salary($)  Bonus($)(1)  Compensation($)  Award($)(2)  Options/SARs(3)  Compensation($)(4)
------------------------  ----  ---------  -----------  ---------------  -----------  ---------------  ------------------
                                                                                  
J. Michael Talbert (5) .  2002    851,042      735,000               0             0          200,000        2,318,844(6)
    Chairman              2001    896,218      625,000               0             0          175,000             86,550
                          2000    736,458      580,700               0             0          175,000             54,602

Robert L. Long . . . . .  2002    520,833      400,000               0             0          110,000          968,380(7)
    President and Chief   2001    460,494      260,039               0             0           50,000             46,938
    Executive Officer     2000    346,875      179,100               0             0           50,000             22,925

Jean P. Cahuzac. . . . .  2002    395,000      281,768        45,486(8)            0           75,000             57,547
    Executive Vice        2001    384,244      196,656        50,365(8)            0           50,000             74,708
    President, Chief      2000    328,750      173,400        86,525(8)                        50,000             40,393
    Operating Officer

Donald R. Ray. . . . . .  2002    345,000      208,061               0             0           40,000             17,300
    Executive Vice        2001    334,244      137,300               0             0           40,000             25,888
    President, Quality,   2000    381,542      189,630               0             0           40,000             24,041
    Safety, Health and
    Environment

Gregory L. Cauthen (9) .  2002    286,458      154,340               0             0           40,000             13,002
    Senior Vice           2001    176,791       53,270               0             0           30,000              1,060
    President, Chief
    Financial Officer
    and Treasurer


---------------
     (1)  The amount shown as "Bonus" for a given year includes amounts earned
          with respect to that year but paid in the first quarter of the
          following year.

     (2)  Represents the number of restricted shares times the market price of
          the shares on the date of grant. Any declared dividends are paid on
          all restricted shares. As of December 31, 2002, none of the named
          executive officers held any restricted ordinary shares.

     (3)  Represents options to purchase our ordinary shares at fair market
          value on the date of the grants.

     (4)  With respect to 2002, the amounts shown as "All Other Compensation"
          include the following:



                          Mr. Cahuzac  Mr. Cauthen  Mr. Long  Mr. Ray  Mr. Talbert
                          -----------  -----------  --------  -------  -----------
                                                        
Matching contributions
under the Savings Plan .        8,250        6,188     8,325    3,825        7,615

Contributions under the
Supplemental Benefit
Plan . . . . . . . . . .       10,449        6,814    17,546   13,475       38,286

Defined contribution . .       38,848            0         0        0            0
international retirement
benefit plan


     (5)  Mr. Talbert served as our Chief Executive Officer until October 2002.

     (6)  In addition to the items listed in footnote (4), includes a payment of
          $2,272,943 to Mr. Talbert in connection with the change of control
          provisions in his former employment agreement. See "-Employment
          Agreements."


                                       12

     (7)  In addition to the items listed in footnote (4), includes a payment of
          $942,509 to Mr. Long in connection with the change of control
          provisions in his former employment agreement. See "-Employment
          Agreements."

     (8)  For the years 2001 and 2002, includes payments to Mr. Cahuzac relating
          to school fees ($30,192 and $31,876, respectively) and home country
          travel entitlement ($14,172 and $7,610, respectively). For the year
          2000, includes payments relating to Mr. Cahuzac's relocation ($36,735)
          and school fees ($26,852).

     (9)  Mr. Cauthen was not employed by us in 2000.


OPTIONS GRANTED

     The  table  below  contains information with respect to options to purchase
our  ordinary  shares  granted  to  the  named  executive  officers  in  2002.



                                  OPTION/SAR GRANTS IN 2002

                                                                           Potential Realizable
                                                                                Value at
                                                                           Assumed Annual Rates
                                                                               of Company
                                                                               Share Price
                                                                          Appreciation for Option
                                      Individual Grants                       Term (10 Years)
                    ---------------------------------------------------  --------------------------
                                   % of Total
                     Number of    Options/SARs
                     Securities    Granted to
                     Underlying     Company      Exercise
                    Options/SARs  Employees in    Price     Expiration
Name                  Granted         2002      ($/share)     Date(1)       5%(2)       10%(2)
------------------  ------------  ------------  ----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
                                                                    
J. Michael Talbert       200,000             9  $    28.80      7/10/12  $3,622,433   $9,179,956
Robert L. Long . .        60,000             3  $    28.80      7/10/12  $1,086,729   $2,753,986
                          50,000             2  $    18.82     10/10/12  $  567,356   $1,460,805
Jean P. Cahuzac. .        50,000             2  $    28.80      7/10/12  $  905,608   $2,294,989
                          25,000             1  $    18.82     10/10/12  $  283,678   $  730,402
Donald R. Ray. . .        40,000             2  $    28.80      7/10/12  $  724,486   $1,835,991
Gregory L. Cauthen        40,000             2  $    28.80      7/10/12  $  724,486   $1,835,991


---------------
     (1)  The options are subject to termination prior to their expiration date
          in some cases where employment is terminated.

     (2)  These columns show the gains the named executives and all of our
          shareholders could realize if our shares appreciate at a 5% or 10%
          rate. These growth rates are arbitrary assumptions specified by the
          Securities and Exchange Commission, not our predictions.

AGGREGATE OPTION EXERCISES

     The  following  table  shows information concerning options to purchase our
ordinary  shares  the  named  executive  officers  exercised  during  2002,  and
unexercised  options  they  held  as  of  December  31,  2002:


                                       13



       AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN 2002 AND 2002 YEAR-END OPTION VALUE


                                              Number of Securities
                                                   Underlying                Value of Unexercised,
                                               Unexercised Options           In-the-Money Options
                                               at Fiscal Year End             at Fiscal Year End
                                               ------------------             ------------------
                      Shares
                    Acquired on    Value
Name                 Exercise    Realized   Exercisable  Unexercisable  Exercisable(1)   Unexercisable
------------------  -----------  ---------  -----------  -------------  ---------------  --------------
                                                                       

J. Michael Talbert            0  $    0.00      530,459        375,001  $       991,362  $            0
Robert L. Long . .            0  $    0.00      120,999        160,001  $             0  $      219,000
Jean P. Cahuzac. .            0  $    0.00      120,261        125,001  $             0  $      109,500
Donald R. Ray. . .            0  $    0.00      217,079         80,001  $     1,523,324  $            0
Gregory L. Cauthen            0  $    0.00       10,000         60,000  $             0  $            0


---------------
     (1)  The value of each unexercised in-the-money option or tandem SAR is
          equal to the difference between $23.20, which was the closing price of
          our ordinary shares on December 31, 2002, and the exercise price of
          the option.

DEFINED BENEFIT PLANS

     We  maintain  a  U.S.  Retirement  Plan  for  our  qualifying employees and
officers  and  those  of participating subsidiaries.  In general, we base annual
retirement  benefits  on  average  covered  compensation  for  the  highest five
consecutive years of the final ten years of employment and years of service.  We
include  salaries and bonuses and some personal benefits as covered compensation
under  the  U.S. Retirement Plan.  We do not include (1) amounts relating to the
grant  or  vesting  of  restricted shares, the exercise of options and SARs, and
receipt  of  tax-offset  supplemental  payments with respect to options, SARs or
restricted  shares,  or (2) employer contributions under our Savings Plan or our
Supplemental  Benefit  Plan.

     The  maximum  annual  retirement  benefit under our U.S. Retirement Plan is
generally  60%  of the participant's average covered compensation minus 19.5% of
his  or  her  covered  social  security  earnings.  The  eligible survivors of a
deceased  U.S.  Retirement Plan participant are entitled to a survivor's benefit
under  the  plan.  Benefits under our U.S. Retirement Plan are generally paid as
life  annuities.

     Eligible  participants  in  our  U.S.  Retirement  Plan  and their eligible
survivors  are  entitled to receive retirement and survivors benefits that would
have  been payable under the U.S. Retirement Plan but for the fact that benefits
payable  under  funded  pension  plans  are  limited  by federal tax laws.  As a
general  rule,  during  2002, the federal tax laws limited annual benefits under
tax-qualified  retirement plans to $160,000, subject to reduction in some cases,
and  required  those  plans  to  disregard any portion of the participant's 2002
compensation  in  excess  of  $200,000.  A  participant may choose to have these
benefits paid either as a life annuity or in a cash lump sum upon termination of
employment.

     Mr.  Cahuzac  is  a  non-U.S.  citizen  and  participates  in  a  defined
contribution  international retirement plan. He does not participate in our U.S.
Retirement  Plan.

     The  following  table  contains the benefits payable to the named executive
officers  under  our U.S. Retirement Plan and related supplemental benefit plans
as  of  December  31,  2002:


                                       14



                           DEFINED BENEFIT PLAN TABLE


                                     Estimated Annual
                                        Retirement
                    Current Years       Benefit at
Name                of Service(1)       Age 65(2)
------------------  --------------  ------------------
                              
J. Michael Talbert             8.3  $          503,702
Robert L. Long . .            27.5  $          430,339
Donald R. Ray. . .            30.8  $          275,320
Gregory L. Cauthen             1.6  $          147,938


---------------
(1)  Includes years of service with Sonat Inc. in the case of Messrs. Long and
     Ray.

(2)  Estimated annual retirement benefit payable under the Retirement Plan and
     related supplemental benefit plans as a single life annuity at age 65
     (based on the assumptions that the officer retires from employment with us
     at age 65 with average covered compensation at his retirement date equal to
     his 2002 covered compensation) and calculated prior to the offset for
     covered social security earnings.

PERFORMANCE GRAPH

     The graph below compares the cumulative total shareholder return of (1) our
ordinary shares, (2) the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index and (3) the Simmons &
Company  International Upstream Index over our last five fiscal years. The graph
assumes  that $100 was invested in our ordinary shares and each of the other two
indices on December 31, 1997, and that all dividends were reinvested on the date
of  payment.



                       CUMULATIVE TOTAL SHAREHOLDER RETURN

                        INDEXED TOTAL SHAREHOLDER RETURN
                       DECEMBER 31, 1997-DECEMBER 31, 2002



                               [GRAPHIC OMITTED]

                                        December 31,
                        ---------------------------------------------
                          1997    1998    1999    2000    2001   2002
                        ------  ------  ------  ------  ------  -----
                                              
Transocean              100.00   55.85   70.44   96.19   71.31  49.42
S&P 500                 100.00  128.57  155.61  141.46  124.68  97.16
Simmons Upstream Index  100.00   57.79   57.79   98.13   73.34  70.32



                                       15

COMPENSATION UPON CHANGE OF CONTROL

     Some  of  our benefit plans provide for the acceleration of benefits in the
event  of  a  change  of  control of our company.  A change of control generally
includes  acquisitions  of  beneficial  ownership of 20% or more of our ordinary
shares,  changes  in board composition and certain merger and sale transactions.

     Upon  the  occurrence  of  a  change of control, all outstanding restricted
shares  granted under the Long-Term Incentive Plan will immediately vest and all
options and SARs granted under the Long-Term Incentive Plan to outside directors
or  held  by  then-current  employees  will  become immediately exercisable.  In
addition,  the  executive  compensation  committee  may provide that if a SAR is
exercised  within  60  days of the occurrence of a change of control, the holder
will  receive a payment equal to the excess over the amount otherwise due of the
highest price per ordinary share paid during the 60-day period prior to exercise
of  the  SAR.  The  executive  compensation  committee also may provide that the
holder is entitled to a supplemental payment on that excess.  Those payments are
in  addition to the amount otherwise due on exercise.  Also, upon the occurrence
of  a  change  of  control,  the  participant  will become vested in 100% of the
maximum  performance  award he could have earned under our Performance Award and
Cash  Bonus  Plan  for the proportionate part of the performance period prior to
the  change  of  control  and  will  retain the right to earn out any additional
portion  of  his  award  if  he  remains  in  our  employ.

     The  Sedco Forex merger constituted a change of control under our Long-Term
Incentive  Plan  and  Performance  Award  and  Cash  Bonus  Plan.

CONSULTING AGREEMENTS WITH DIRECTORS

     As  part of the Sedco Forex merger and as a condition to his appointment as
Chairman  of  the  Board,  we entered into a consulting agreement with Victor E.
Grijalva.  The  consulting agreement originally contained the following material
terms:

     -    we will nominate Mr. Grijalva to the board of directors to serve as
          Chairman until his 65th birthday, at which time he will tender his
          resignation for action by the board of directors. Mr. Grijalva will
          turn 65 in July of 2003;

     -    until the time of his resignation, Mr. Grijalva will provide
          consulting services to us, as an independent contractor, with regard
          to long-range planning, strategic direction and integration and
          rationalization matters;

     -    we will pay Mr. Grijalva $400,000 per year;

     -    we will indemnify Mr. Grijalva in connection with the services he
          provides to the fullest extent available under our articles of
          association; and

     -    Mr. Grijalva will be entitled to the non-cash compensation and
          benefits we provide to non-employee directors.

     Effective October 10, 2002, the consulting agreement was amended to provide
that  Mr.  Grijalva  would resign as Chairman of the Board but would remain as a
member  of  the  board.  Mr.  Grijalva agreed to resign as a consultant no later
than  the date of his 65th birthday.  If Mr. Grijalva remains on the board after
the  period  he  serves  as  a  consultant,  he  will  be  entitled  to the same
compensation  and benefits (including any pro-rated cash director fees) as other
non-employee  members  of  the  board  in  accordance  with  our  policies.

     At  the time of the R&B Falcon merger, R&B Falcon entered into a consulting
agreement  with  Paul  B.  Loyd,  Jr.  The  consulting  agreement, which has now
expired,  contained  the  following  material  terms:

     -    the term of the consulting agreement was for a period of two years
          following the date of Mr. Loyd's termination of employment from R&B
          Falcon, which occurred on January 31, 2001, and he could terminate it
          at any time on 30 days' advance written notice;


                                       16

     -    Mr. Loyd would provide consulting services with regard to strategies,
          policies, special projects, incentives, goals and other matters
          related to the development and growth of R&B Falcon for a minimum of
          30 hours per month;

     -    Mr. Loyd agreed not to perform substantially similar services during
          the term of the consulting agreement for any other company that
          provides offshore contract drilling services;

     -    we would pay Mr. Loyd $360,000 per year and he would waive all
          director's fees or other remuneration that he would otherwise receive
          for being a member of our board of directors; and

     -    Mr. Loyd would be entitled to reimbursement of expenses incurred in
          providing consulting services.

EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENTS

     During September and October 2000, we entered into new agreements with some
of  our  executive officers, including Messrs. Talbert, Long, Ray, Brown and Ms.
Koucouthakis.  These  agreements  replaced  employment  agreements  entered into
prior  to  the  Sedco  Forex  merger.  The  prior  agreements  provided that the
occurrence  of  a change in control triggered provisions that allowed executives
to  leave  for  any  reason  during  a  specified period following the change of
control  and  receive  the  payments defined in the employment agreements, which
generally guaranteed a minimum salary and bonus for a period of three years. The
Sedco  Forex  merger triggered these provisions, and as a result, the executives
could  have  left  for  any reason during January 2001 and received the payments
under  the  employment  agreements.  In order to induce the executives to remove
such  right  and remain with our company, we offered the executives either (a) a
cash  payment  equivalent  to  the  amount  otherwise  due  under the employment
agreement  as  if the executive left in January 2001 to be vested and paid, with
interest,  over  a  three  year  period  in equal annual installments commencing
January  2002,  in  exchange  for  termination of the employment agreement (such
amounts  would  become  payable  if  the  executive remained employed, and would
become  payable  in  a  lump  sum if the executive's termination occurred due to
death,  disability or termination without cause, or due to certain reductions in
authority  or  base  salary),  or  (b)  an  extension of the existing employment
agreement  for  three  years  beyond the current one month trigger period with a
first  term  of  18  months during which the employee commits to remain with our
company,  followed  by an additional term of 18 months (commencing July 1, 2002)
during  which  the employee can self trigger the payment rights to predetermined
amounts, with interest, under the employment agreement by terminating his or her
employment.  Mr. Brown and Ms. Koucouthakis entered into agreements described in
clause  (a) of the foregoing sentence, and Messrs. Talbert, Long and Ray entered
into  agreements described in clause (b) of the foregoing sentence.  None of the
new  agreements  contain  change  of  control  provisions.  The  agreements with
Messrs. Talbert, Long, and Ray provide that in the event the payments called for
under  the  agreement would subject the executive to an excise tax under Section
4999  of  the  U.S.  Internal  Revenue  Code,  the executive will be entitled to
receive  an  additional  "gross-up"  payment in some circumstances.  Mr. Ray has
indicated  that  he plans to retire at the end of this year, which would trigger
the  payment  of  $1,794,212  excluding  interest.

     In  May  2002,  Mr.  Long entered into an agreement revoking his employment
agreement  described  above,  which  had  provided  him a right to leave for any
reason  and  receive his change of control payments.  The new agreement provides
for  a  cash  payment of $2,142,756 to be vested and paid, with interest, over a
three  year  period  in  equal  annual installments beginning June 1, 2002.  The
amount  of this payment is approximately equal to the amount Mr. Long would have
been  entitled  to  receive under his employment agreement if his employment had
been  terminated  in  January  2001.

     In  October  2002,  in  connection  with  the change in his duties with the
Company, Mr. Talbert entered into an agreement revoking his employment agreement
described  above,  which  had  provided  him a right to leave for any reason and
receive  his  change  of  control  payments.  The new agreement provides for the
reduction  in  his annual salary to $475,000 and a cash payment of $4,877,593 to
be  vested  and  paid,  with  interest, over a three year period in equal annual
installments  beginning  October  2002.  The  amount  of  this  payment  is
approximately  equal  to  the  amount  Mr.  Talbert  would have been entitled to
receive  under  his  prior  employment  agreement  if  his  employment  had been
terminated  in  January 2001.  The agreement also provides that Mr. Talbert will
tender  his  resignation  as


                                       17

Chairman  of  the  Board for action by the board of directors on the earliest to
occur  of  any  regularly scheduled meeting of the board of directors in October
2004  and  October  16,  2004.

     Neither  Mr.  Cahuzac nor Mr. Cauthen is a party to an employment agreement
with  us.

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

     The  members  of  the  executive  compensation  committee  of  the board of
directors  during  the  last completed fiscal year were Mr. Kuehn, Chairman, and
Messrs.  Monti,  Pattarozzi  and  Roger.  There  are  no  matters  relating  to
interlocks  or  insider  participation  that  we  are  required  to  report.

                              CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS

     We  own  a  50 percent interest in an unconsolidated joint venture company,
Overseas  Drilling  Limited ("ODL"), which owns the drillship Joides Resolution.
DSND  Inc.  owns  the  other 50 percent interest in ODL.  Our director, Kristian
Siem,  is  the  chairman  of DSND and is also a director and officer of ODL.  We
provide  operational  and management services to ODL, and we earned $1.2 million
for  these services in 2002.  ODL also reimburses us for costs which we incur in
connection with these services.  ODL loaned $1 million to each of DSND and us in
March  2003.  These  loans  are  to  be repaid in September 2003 and do not bear
interest  if  repaid  on  time.  Mr.  Siem  is also chairman and chief executive
officer  of Siem Industries, Inc., which owns more than a 50 percent interest in
DSND.


                 PROPOSAL TO AMEND OUR LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN

DESCRIPTION OF THE PROPOSAL

     Our  board of directors has unanimously adopted a resolution to submit to a
vote  of  our  shareholders  a proposal to amend our Long-Term Incentive Plan to
allow grants of incentive stock options for an additional ten year period to May
1,  2013,  and  to  allow  a  continuing  right to grant stock options and share
appreciation  rights  to our outside directors.  The provisions of the Long-Term
Incentive  Plan  relating to grants to outside directors and grants of incentive
stock  options  will  terminate  on May 1, 2003 unless shareholders approve this
proposal.  The  board  believes  that  the amendment is necessary to attract and
retain  qualified  outside  directors  and  to allow flexibility in the types of
stock  options  that  we  award  under  the  incentive  plan.

     OUR  BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" THE PROPOSAL TO
APPROVE  THE  AMENDMENT  TO  OUR  LONG-TERM  INCENTIVE  PLAN.

PRINCIPAL PROVISIONS OF THE LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN

     The  following  summary  of the incentive plan is qualified by reference to
the  full  text  of the proposed amended and restated plan, which is attached as
Appendix  B  to  this  proxy  statement.

     The  incentive plan is administered by the executive compensation committee
of  the  board  of  directors,  all  of  the  members of which are "non-employee
directors" within the meaning of Rule 16b-3 under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934  and  "outside  directors" within the meaning of Section 162(m) of the U.S.
Internal Revenue Code. It is intended that the grant of awards under the amended
incentive plan, after approval by shareholders, will satisfy the requirements of
Section  162(m)  of  the  code,  as  applicable  to limitations on deductions of
compensation  expenses  in  excess of $1 million for certain executive officers.

     The  committee designates the employees of our company and our subsidiaries
and  affiliated  companies to be granted awards under the incentive plan and the
type  and  amount  of  awards  to  be  granted.  The  committee has authority to
interpret and amend the incentive plan, adopt administrative regulations for the
operation  of  the incentive plan and determine and amend the terms of awards to
employees  under  the incentive plan. However, the committee has no authority to
vary  the amount or terms of awards to outside directors from those set forth in
the  incentive  plan.


                                       18

     Under  the  incentive  plan,  options  to  purchase  ordinary shares, share
appreciation  rights  in  tandem  with  options, freestanding share appreciation
rights,  restricted  shares  and  cash  performance  awards  may  be  granted to
employees  at  the  discretion of the committee. The committee may provide for a
supplemental  cash  payment upon the exercise of an option or share appreciation
right  to  cover  the  employee's  tax  burden  associated with the exercise. In
addition,  the incentive plan provides for automatic awards to outside directors
of  options to purchase 4,000 ordinary shares at the time the individual becomes
one  of  our  directors and options to purchase 6,000 ordinary shares after each
annual  meeting  of  our  shareholders  at  which  the  individual remains or is
reelected  as  a  director.  Outside directors who reside in Norway may elect to
receive  share  appreciation  rights  instead  of  these  option  grants.

     The  aggregate  number  of  ordinary  shares  that  may be issued under the
incentive  plan  may  not  exceed  18,900,000  shares  with respect to awards to
employees, reduced by the number of shares that have previously been issued with
respect  to  awards to employees. Cash tax-offset supplemental payments will not
count  against  these  limits.  Lapsed,  forfeited or canceled awards, including
options canceled upon the exercise of tandem share appreciation rights, will not
count against these limits and can be regranted under the incentive plan. If the
exercise price of an option is paid in ordinary shares or if ordinary shares are
withheld from payment of an award to satisfy tax obligations with respect to the
award,  those  shares  will also not count against the above limits. No employee
may  be  granted  options or restricted shares with respect to more than 600,000
ordinary  shares  in  any  fiscal  year. The aggregate number of ordinary shares
subject  to  awards  to  outside directors may not exceed 600,000. The aggregate
number  of  ordinary shares subject to awards of freestanding share appreciation
rights  to  employees may not exceed 300,000. The aggregate number of restricted
shares  which  may be issued from and after January 31, 2001 from the 18,900,000
shares  then reserved under the plan may not exceed 2,000,000. The shares issued
under  the  incentive plan may be ordinary shares held in treasury or authorized
but  unissued  ordinary  shares.

     Our  officers  are  eligible  to  participate in the incentive plan, as are
employees  of  our  company  and  our subsidiaries, and of partnerships or joint
ventures in which we and our subsidiaries have a significant ownership interest,
as  determined by the committee. Our outside directors are automatically granted
options  or, for outside directors residing in Norway, share appreciation rights
that  have  the terms specified in the incentive plan. Outside directors are not
eligible  for  any  other  awards  under  the  incentive plan. Approximately 350
current  employees and all of our current outside directors have received awards
under  the  incentive  plan. All of our employees are eligible to receive awards
under  the  incentive  plan  at  present.

     Each  stock  option  and  SAR granted to a director has a ten-year term and
becomes  exercisable in equal annual installments on the first, second and third
anniversaries  of the date of grant assuming continued service on the board.  In
the  event  of  an  outside director's retirement in accordance with the board's
retirement  policy  or  his  earlier  death  or disability, or in the event of a
change  of  control  of  our  company,  options and SARs will become immediately
exercisable  and  will  remain  exercisable  for the remainder of their ten-year
term.  Options  and SARs will terminate 60 days after an outside director leaves
the board for any other reason.  However, if that person ceases to be a director
for our convenience, as determined by the board, the board may at its discretion
accelerate  the exercisability and retain the original term of those options and
SARs.

     The  committee  determines,  in  connection  with each option awarded to an
employee,  the  exercise  price, whether that price is payable in cash, ordinary
shares  or  by  cashless exercise, the terms and conditions of exercise, whether
the  option  will  qualify  as an incentive stock option under the U.S. Internal
Revenue  Code, or a non-qualified option, restrictions on transfer of the option
and  other provisions not inconsistent with the incentive plan. The committee is
also  authorized  to  grant  share  appreciation  rights  to  incentive  plan
participants,  either  as freestanding awards or in tandem with an option. Every
share  appreciation  right  entitles the participant, upon exercise of the share
appreciation  right,  to receive in cash or ordinary shares a value equal to the
excess  of the market value of a specified number of ordinary shares at the time
of exercise, over the exercise price established by the committee. The incentive
plan  requires  that the exercise price of options and share appreciation rights
be at least equal to fair market value on the date of grant, except with respect
to  options granted within 90 days of the closing of our initial public offering
in  June  1993.  The  term  of  options  and share appreciation rights under the
incentive plan may not exceed 10 years, except that the committee may extend the
term  for  up  to  one  year  following  the  death  of  the  participant.

     The committee is authorized to grant employees awards of restricted shares.
The  committee  determines the terms, conditions, restrictions and contingencies
applicable  to  awards  of  restricted  shares.  Awards  of  restricted


                                       19

shares  may  be  designated  as "qualified performance-based compensation" under
Section  162(m) of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code. The performance goals will be
based  on  the  same  criteria  as  the cash performance awards discussed below.

     The  committee  may  also  provide for cash performance awards to employees
based  on  the  achievement  of  one  or  more objective performance goals. Cash
performance  awards  may  be  designated  as  "qualified  performance-based
compensation"  under  Section  162(m)  of  the U.S. Internal Revenue Code. If so
designated,  the cash performance awards will be contingent upon our performance
during  the  performance  period,  as  measured  by  targets  established by the
committee,  based  on  any  one  or  more  of:

     -    sales;

     -    operating profits;

     -    operating profits before interest expense and taxes;

     -    net earnings;

     -    earnings per share;

     -    return on equity;

     -    return on assets;

     -    return on invested capital;

     -    total shareholder return;

     -    cash flow;

     -    debt-to-equity ratio;

     -    market share;

     -    stock price;

     -    economic value added; and

     -    market value added.

     Such  performance measures may be applied to us on a consolidated basis and
to  a  business  unit, as an absolute measure or as a measure relative to a peer
group  of companies. The committee will establish the performance objectives for
an  award in writing no later than 90 days after beginning of the fiscal year to
which  the  award  relates.

     We  have not granted any incentive options to date under the plan but could
determine  to  do  so  in  the  future.

     The  number  and  kind  of  shares  covered  by  the  incentive plan and by
outstanding  awards  under  the  incentive  plan  and  the  exercise  price  of
outstanding  awards  are  subject  to  adjustment  in  the  event  of  any:

     -    reorganization;

     -    recapitalization;


                                       20

     -    stock dividend;

     -    stock split;

     -    merger;

     -    consolidation;

     -    extraordinary cash dividend;

     -    split-up;

     -    spin-off;

     -    combination; or

     -    exchange of shares.

     Upon  the  occurrence  of  a  change  of control, following the grant of an
award,  (1)  all  outstanding  restricted  shares will immediately vest, (2) all
options  and  share  appreciation  rights  held by outside directors will become
immediately  exercisable  and will remain exercisable for the remainder of their
term,  and  (3)  all  outstanding  options, tandem share appreciation rights and
freestanding  share  appreciation  rights  held  by  then-current employees will
become  immediately exercisable and will remain exercisable for the remainder of
their  term.

     The  incentive  plan  is  not  limited  in  duration by its terms. However,
pursuant  to Section 422(b)(2) of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code, no option that
is  intended  to  constitute  an incentive stock option may currently be granted
under  the  incentive  plan  after  May  1,  2003.  Also,  the provisions of the
incentive  plan relating to outside directors will terminate on May 1, 2003. The
proposal  to  amend  our  incentive  plan  would  extend the period during which
incentive  stock  options  may  be granted for an additional ten years to May 1,
2013  and  extend  indefinitely  the  right  to  grant  stock  options and share
appreciation  rights to our outside directors. Our board of directors may at any
time  amend,  suspend  or  terminate  the incentive plan, but in doing so cannot
adversely  affect  any outstanding awards without the grantee's written consent.
In  addition,  the  board  of  directors  may  not increase the number of shares
reserved  for  issuance under the incentive plan or change the minimum option or
share  appreciation  right  price  without  shareholder  approval.

     The  amount  and  type  of  awards  to  be  granted in the future under the
incentive  plan  to the named officers, to all executive officers as a group and
to  all  other  employees  are  not  currently  determinable.

U.S. FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

     The  following  is  a  summary of the general rules of present U.S. federal
income  tax  law  relating  to  the  tax  treatment  of incentive stock options,
non-qualified stock options, share appreciation rights, restricted shares awards
and  cash performance awards issued under the incentive plan.  The discussion is
general in nature and does not take into account a number of considerations that
may  apply  based  on  the  circumstances  of a particular participant under the
incentive  plan, including the possibility that a participant may not be subject
to U.S. federal income taxation.  When the terms "we", "our" or "our company" is
used  in  this  section,  the  term  is  understood  to  mean the principal U.S.
operating  subsidiary  of  Transocean.

Options

     Some  of  the  options  issuable  under  the  incentive plan may constitute
"incentive stock options" within the meaning of Section 422 of the U.S. Internal
Revenue  Code,  while  other  options  granted  under the incentive plan will be
non-qualified  stock  options.  The  U.S. Internal Revenue Code provides for tax
treatment  of  stock  options  qualifying as incentive stock options that may be
more  favorable to employees than the tax treatment accorded non-qualified stock
options.  Upon  the  grant  of  either  form  of  option,  the optionee will not
recognize  income  for  tax


                                       21

purposes  and we will not receive any deduction. Generally, upon the exercise of
an  incentive  stock  option,  the  optionee  will  recognize no income for U.S.
federal  income tax purposes. However, the difference between the exercise price
of  the  incentive  stock  option and the fair market value of the shares at the
time  of  exercise  is  an item of tax adjustment that may require payment of an
alternative  minimum  tax.  On  the  sale  of  shares acquired by exercise of an
incentive  stock  option (assuming that the sale does not occur within two years
of the date of grant of the option or within one year from the date of exercise,
which  is  referred to as a disqualifying disposition) any gain will be taxed to
the  optionee  as  mid-term  or  long-term capital gain, depending on the actual
holding  period  from  the  exercise  date.  In contrast, upon the exercise of a
non-qualified  option,  the optionee recognizes taxable ordinary income (subject
to  withholding)  in  an  amount equal to the difference between the fair market
value  of  the  shares  on the date of exercise and the exercise price. Upon any
sale  of  such shares by the optionee, any difference between the sale price and
the fair market value of the shares on the date of exercise of the non-qualified
option  will  be  treated  generally  as a capital gain or loss. No deduction is
available  to  us  upon  the  exercise  of an incentive stock option (although a
deduction  may  be  available  if  the  employee  sells the shares acquired upon
exercise  before the applicable holding period expires) whereas upon exercise of
a  non-qualified stock option, we are entitled to a deduction in an amount equal
to  the  income  recognized  by the employee. Except in the case of the death or
disability  of  an  optionee,  an optionee has three months after termination of
employment  in  which to exercise an incentive stock option and retain favorable
tax  treatment  at exercise. An option exercised more than three months after an
optionee's  termination  of employment other than upon death or disability of an
optionee  cannot qualify for the tax treatment accorded incentive stock options.
Such  option  would  be  treated  as  a  non-qualified  stock  option  instead.

     Share Appreciation Rights

     The  amount  of  any cash or the fair market value of any share received by
the  holder  upon  the exercise of share appreciation rights under the incentive
plan  will be subject to ordinary income tax in the year of receipt, and we will
be  entitled  to  a  deduction  for  that  amount.

     Restricted Share Awards

     Generally,  a  grant  of  ordinary shares under the incentive plan that are
subject  to  vesting and transfer restrictions will not result in taxable income
to  the  recipient for U.S. federal income tax purposes or a tax deduction to us
in  the year of the grant.  The value of the shares will generally be taxable to
the  recipient  as compensation income in the years in which the restrictions on
the shares lapse.  Such value will be the fair market value of the shares on the
dates  the  restrictions  terminate, less any consideration paid for the shares.
Any recipient, however, may elect pursuant to Section 83(b) of the U.S. Internal
Revenue Code to treat the fair market value of the shares on the date of a grant
as  compensation  income in the year of the grant of restricted shares, provided
the  recipient makes the election pursuant to Section 83(b) within 30 days after
the  date  of  the  grant.  In  any  case,  we will receive a deduction for U.S.
federal  income  tax  purposes  corresponding  in  amount  to  the  amount  of
compensation included in the recipient's income in the year in which that amount
is  so  included.

     Cash Performance Awards

     Cash  performance  awards  are  taxable  income  to  the recipient for U.S.
federal  income  tax  purposes  at the time of payment.  The recipient will have
compensation  income  equal  to  the  amount  of  cash  paid, and we will have a
corresponding  deduction  for  U.S.  federal  income  tax  purposes.

     Other

     In  general,  a  U.S.  federal  income tax deduction is allowed to us in an
amount  equal to the ordinary income recognized by a participant with respect to
awards  under  the  incentive  plan,  provided  that  such amount constitutes an
ordinary  and  necessary  business  expense  of our company, that such amount is
reasonable,  and  that the qualified performance-based compensation requirements
of  Section 162(m) of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code are satisfied.  We will not
be  entitled  to  a  deduction  with  respect  to payments to employees that are
contingent  upon  a change of control if those payments are deemed to constitute
"excess parachute payments" under Section 280G of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code
and  do  not  qualify  as reasonable compensation pursuant to that section; such
payments  will  subject  the  recipients  to  a  20%  excise  tax.


                                       22

     A  participant's  tax  basis  in shares acquired upon exercise of an option
under  the  incentive plan is equal to the sum of the price paid for the shares,
if  any,  and  the  amount of ordinary income recognized by the participant upon
receipt  of  the shares.  The participant's holding period for the shares begins
upon  receipt  of the shares.  If a participant sells the shares, any difference
between  the  amount realized in the sale and the participant's tax basis in the
shares  is  taxed  as  long-term,  mid-term  or  short-term capital gain or loss
(provided  the shares are held as a capital asset on the date of sale) depending
on  the  participant's  holding  period  for  the  shares.

               PROPOSAL TO AMEND OUR EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN

DESCRIPTION OF THE PROPOSAL

     Our  board of directors has unanimously adopted a resolution to submit to a
vote of our shareholders a proposal to amend our Employee Stock Purchase Plan to
increase  the  number  of  ordinary shares reserved for issuance under the stock
purchase  plan  from  1,500,000  to 2,500,000. The purpose of our stock purchase
plan  is  to encourage and assist our employees to acquire an equity interest in
the  company  through  the  purchase  of ordinary shares. Our board of directors
believes  the  stock purchase plan is achieving its purpose, and desires to have
sufficient  shares  authorized  for  issuance  under  the  plan  to  continue
participation  by  our  employees.  We  currently have 225,984 authorized shares
remaining  for  issuance under the plan, and, based on current enrollment, we do
not  believe we would have a sufficient number of shares available at the end of
the  current  plan  year  to  meet  the  participants' purchase needs. The stock
purchase  plan  will  terminate  after all of our ordinary shares covered by the
stock  purchase  plan  have  been  purchased,  unless  our  board  of  directors
terminates  the  plan  earlier.

     OUR  BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" THE PROPOSAL TO
APPROVE  THE  AMENDMENT  TO  OUR  EMPLOYEE  STOCK  PURCHASE  PLAN.

PRINCIPAL PROVISIONS OF THE EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN

     The  following  summary of the employee stock purchase plan is qualified by
reference  to  the full text of the proposed amended and restated plan, which is
attached  as  Appendix  C  to  this  proxy  statement.

     Under  the  stock purchase plan, all full-time employees of Transocean Inc.
and  any  subsidiary  that  has,  with the consent of Transocean Inc.'s board of
directors,  adopted  the  stock purchase plan who do not own, or hold options to
acquire, five percent or more of the total combined voting power or value of our
ordinary  shares,  are  eligible  to  participate  in  the  stock purchase plan.
Participants in the stock purchase plan may purchase our ordinary shares through
payroll  deductions  on  an  after-tax  basis over a plan year beginning on each
January  1  and ending on the following December 31 during the term of the stock
purchase  plan.  A participant's right to participate in the stock purchase plan
terminates  immediately  when  a  participant  ceases  to  be employed by us. An
employee may elect to participate in the stock purchase plan as of any January 1
following  his  or  her  completion  of  six consecutive months of employment. A
participant  may  elect  to  make contributions each pay period in an amount not
less  than two percent of the participant's monthly compensation, with no dollar
minimum,  subject  to  a  monthly limitation equal to twenty percent of his base
monthly  earnings or such other amount established by the our board of directors
finance  and  benefits  committee,  taking  into  account  a  "maximum  share
limitation."  The  maximum  share  limitation  is  the number of ordinary shares
derived  by  dividing  $25,000  by  the  fair market value, as defined below, of
ordinary  shares  determined  as  of the first trading day of the plan year. The
contributions  will  be  held  in trust during a plan year, and interest will be
credited  to  the  participant's account. Unless a participant elects otherwise,
the  dollar amount in the participant's account at the end of the plan year will
then  be  used  to purchase as many whole ordinary shares as the funds in his or
her  account  will  allow  subject to the maximum share limitation. The purchase
price  for  the  stock  will  be 85 percent of the lesser of (1) its fair market
value  on the first trading day of the plan year or (2) its fair market value on
the  last  trading  day  of the plan year. "Fair market value" means the closing
composite  sales  price per ordinary share on the New York Stock Exchange on the
applicable  date. Any cash remaining in the participant's account is refunded to
the  participant  unless  the  finance  and  benefits  committee of the board of
directors  decides,  in  its discretion, to carry over the excess enrollments to
the  following  plan  year.

     If the participant elects not to purchase ordinary shares at the end of the
plan  year,  such  participant  will  receive  a  return  of  his or her payroll
deductions during the plan year plus the interest accrued on such deductions. At
the  end  of  each  plan  year,  participants  will receive a statement of their
account  balances,  including  interest  earned


                                       23

and  the  number  of  whole  ordinary  shares purchased and in the accounts. Any
dividends on ordinary shares held in a participant's account will be credited to
his  or  her  account.  A  participant  may  elect to withdraw his or her entire
contributions  for  the  current  year  from the stock purchase plan at any time
prior to the purchase of our ordinary shares. Any participant who so elects will
receive  his or her entire account balance, including interest and dividends, if
any.  A  participant  who  suspends  his  or her payroll deductions or withdraws
contributions cannot resume participation in the stock purchase plan during that
plan  year  and  must  reenroll in the stock purchase plan the following year in
order  to  participate.  A  participant  may  also elect at any time to withdraw
ordinary  shares  held in his or her account for at least one year. Although the
plan  provides  that  a  participant  may  not  sell ordinary shares held in the
participant's  account  for  less  than  three months, this restriction has been
waived  by  the  finance and benefits committee. In the event of a participant's
death, amounts credited to his or her account, including interest and dividends,
if  applicable,  will be paid in cash, and a certificate for any ordinary shares
will  be  delivered  to  his  or  her  designated  beneficiaries  or other legal
representative.

     Our  board of directors generally may amend or terminate the stock purchase
plan  at  any  time, provided that approval of our shareholders must be obtained
for  any  amendment  to the stock purchase plan if required under Section 423 of
U.S.  Internal  Revenue  Code or any other applicable law or regulation. Section
423 of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code currently requires shareholder approval of
a  plan  amendment  that would change the number of shares reserved for issuance
under  the  stock  purchase  plan. The shares to be issued pursuant to the stock
purchase plan may be ordinary shares held in treasury or authorized but unissued
ordinary  shares.

     The  amount  and type of awards to be granted in the future under the stock
purchase plan to the named officers, to all executive officers as a group and to
all  other  employees  are  not  currently  determinable.

U.S. FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

     The  following  is  a  summary of the general rules of present U.S. federal
income  tax  law  relating to the tax treatment of the ordinary shares purchased
under the stock purchase plan.  The discussion is general in nature and does not
take  into  account  a  number  of  considerations  that  may apply based on the
circumstances  of  a  particular  participant  under  the  stock  purchase plan,
including  the possibility that a participant may not be subject to U.S. federal
income  taxation.  When  the  term  "we," "our" or "our company" is used in this
section,  the term is understood to mean the principal U.S. operating subsidiary
of  Transocean.

     The  stock  purchase  plan  is  intended  to  qualify as an "employee stock
purchase  plan" under the provisions of Section 423 of the U.S. Internal Revenue
Code.  A  participant  under  the  stock  purchase  plan  is not subject to U.S.
federal  income taxation when ordinary shares are purchased under the plan, even
though  such  shares are purchased at 85% of the lesser of the fair market value
on  the  first  trading day of the calendar year or the fair market value on the
last  trading  day of the calendar year.  A participant, however, will recognize
taxable  ordinary  income upon disposition of the ordinary shares acquired under
the  stock  purchase  plan  if  such  shares are disposed of in a "disqualifying
disposition,"  which  is a disposition of the shares before the later of (1) two
years  from  the date a right to purchase stock was issued under the plan or (2)
one  year  from the date that shares acquired under the plan were transferred to
the  participant.  This  taxable  income  will  be recognized in the year of the
disqualifying  disposition  and  will  equal the amount by which the fair market
value  of  the  shares  on  the  purchase date exceeds the purchase price of the
shares, but in no event will the income recognized exceed the sales proceeds for
such  shares reduced by the purchase price for such shares.  Any additional gain
or  loss  recognized  on  the  disqualifying  disposition  of the shares will be
short-term  or  long-term  capital gain or loss, depending on the length of time
the  participant  has  held the shares after the exercise of the purchase right.
If  a  participant  sells  or  otherwise disposes of his or her shares after the
above  holding  period  so  that there is no disqualifying disposition or in the
event  of  a  participant's  death (whenever occurring), the participant (or the
participant's  estate  in  the event of death) would realize ordinary income, in
the year of the qualifying disposition, equal to the lesser of (1) the excess of
the  fair  market  value  of  the shares at the time of the disposition over the
purchase  price  or (2) the excess of the fair market value of the shares at the
time  the  purchase  right  was granted over the purchase price.  Any additional
gain  or  loss  recognized  on  the qualifying disposition of the shares will be
long-term  capital  gain  or  loss.  If  a participant sells the ordinary shares
acquired  under  the  stock  purchase  plan,  assuming there is no disqualifying
disposition,  any  difference  between  the  amount realized in the sale and the
participants'  tax  basis in the shares (which would include any ordinary income
recognized  with  respect  to  the  shares)  is taxed as long-term or short-term
capital  gain  or  loss,  provided the shares are held as a capital asset on the
date  of sale, and depending on the participant's holding period for the shares.


                                       24

     We  are  entitled  to  a deduction for U.S. federal income tax purposes for
dispositions of shares acquired by a participant in the stock purchase plan only
to  the  extent  that  the participant realizes ordinary income as a result of a
disqualifying disposition of shares acquired under the stock purchase plan.  Any
such  deduction  is  subject  to  the  limitations of Section 162(m) of the U.S.
Internal  Revenue  Code.



                                      EQUITY COMPENSATION PLAN INFORMATION

     The  following  table provides information concerning securities authorized
for  issuance  under  our  equity  compensation  plans  as of December 31, 2002.


                                                                                         Number of securities
                                                                                       remaining available for
                            Number of securities to be    Weighted-average exercise     future issuance under
                              issued upon exercise of       price of outstanding      equity compensation plans
                               outstanding options,         options, warrants and       (excluding securities
                                warrants and rights                rights              reflected in column (a))
Plan Category                           (a)                          (b)                         (c)
--------------------------  ---------------------------  ---------------------------  --------------------------
                                                                             
Equity compensation plans
    approved by security
    holders (1) (2) . . .                    15,522,950  $                     28.10                   9,273,465
                            ---------------------------  ---------------------------  --------------------------
Equity compensation plans
    not approved by
    security holders (3).                             -                            -                           -
                            ---------------------------  ---------------------------  --------------------------
Total . . . . . . . . . .                    15,522,950  $                     28.10                   9,273,465
                            ===========================  ===========================  ==========================

---------------
(1)  Includes  7,306,631  shares  to  be  issued upon exercise of options with a
     weighted  average  exercise price of $23.22 that were granted under (a) our
     Sedco  Forex  Employees  Option  Plan  in  connection  with the Sedco Forex
     merger, which was approved by our shareholders, and (b) equity compensation
     plans of R&B Falcon assumed by us in connection with the R&B Falcon merger,
     which  was  approved  by  our  shareholders.

(2)  In  addition  to  stock  options,  we  are  authorized  to  grant awards of
     restricted  stock  under  our  Long  Term  Incentive  Plan,  and 1,959,877
     ordinary  shares  are  available  for future issuance pursuant to grants of
     restricted  stock  under  this  plan.

(3)  Does  not  include  any  shares  that may be distributed under our deferred
     compensation  plan,  which has not been approved by our shareholders. Under
     this plan, our directors may defer any fees or retainers by investing those
     amounts  in  Transocean  ordinary share equivalents or in other investments
     selected  by the administrative committee. Amounts that are invested in the
     ordinary  share  equivalents at the time of distribution are distributed in
     ordinary  shares.  There  is no limit on the number of shares directors may
     acquire  under  this  plan.  As  of  December  31,  2002, our directors had
     purchased  27,688  Transocean  ordinary  share equivalents under this plan.


                              SELECTION OF AUDITOR

     We  have  selected  Ernst  & Young LLP as our auditor for the 2003 calendar
year.  Ernst  &  Young  LLP  served  as  our auditor for the 2002 calendar year.
Although  the  selection and appointment of independent auditors is not required
to be submitted to a vote of shareholders, the Board of Directors has decided to
ask  our  shareholders to approve this appointment.  Approval of our appointment
of Ernst & Young LLP to serve as independent auditors for the year 2003 requires
the  affirmative  vote  of holders of at least a majority of the ordinary shares
present in person or by proxy at the meeting and entitled to vote on the matter.
If  the  shareholders  do  not approve the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP, the
Board  of Directors will consider the appointment of other independent auditors.
A  representative  of  Ernst & Young LLP is expected to be present at the annual
general  meeting  with  the opportunity to make a statement if so desired and to
respond  to  appropriate  questions.


                                       25

                         FEES PAID TO ERNST & YOUNG LLP

     Ernst  &  Young  LLP has billed us fees as set forth in the table below for
(i)  the  audit  of  our  annual  financial  statements and reviews of quarterly
financial  statements,  (ii)  financial  information  systems  design  and
implementation  work  rendered  in 2002 and (iii) all other services rendered in
2002.



                                                                  All Other Fees
                            Financial Information  ------------------------------------------
                              Systems Design and   Audit-Related                  Total of
                  Audit Fees  Implementation Fees       Fees         Other     All Other Fees
                  ----------  -------------------       ----         -----    ---------------
                                                               
Fiscal year 2002  $  400,000  $                 0  $   1,815,060  $1,106,639  $     2,921,699


     The  audit  committee  pre-approves all auditing services, review or attest
engagements  and permitted non-audit services to be performed by our independent
auditor,  subject to the some de minimis exceptions for non-audit services which
are approved by the audit committee prior to the completion of the annual audit.
The audit committee has considered whether the provision of services rendered in
2002  other  than the audit of our financial statements and reviews of quarterly
financial statements was compatible with maintaining the independence of Ernst &
Young LLP and determined that the provision of such services was compatible with
maintaining  such  independence.

                                  HOUSEHOLDING

     The  SEC  permits a single set of annual reports and proxy statements to be
sent to any household at which two or more stockholders reside if they appear to
be members of the same family.  Each stockholder continues to receive a separate
proxy  card.  This procedure, referred to as householding, reduces the volume of
duplicate  information  stockholders  receive  and  reduces mailing and printing
expenses.  A  number  of  brokerage  firms  have  instituted  householding.

     As  a result, if you hold your shares through a broker and you reside at an
address  at  which two or more stockholders reside, you will likely be receiving
only  one  annual  report  and  proxy  statement  unless any stockholder at that
address  has  given  the  broker  contrary  instructions.  However,  if any such
beneficial  stockholder residing at such an address wishes to receive a separate
annual  report  or  proxy  statement  in  the  future, or if any such beneficial
stockholder that elected to continue to receive separate annual reports or proxy
statements  wishes  to  receive a single annual report or proxy statement in the
future,  that  stockholder  should contact their broker or send a request to our
corporate  secretary  at  Eric  B. Brown, Secretary, Transocean Inc., 4 Greenway
Plaza,  Houston, Texas 77046, telephone number (713) 232-7500.  We will deliver,
promptly  upon  written  or  oral request to the corporate secretary, a separate
copy  of  the  2002  annual  report  and  this  proxy  statement to a beneficial
stockholder  at  a  shared  address  to which a single copy of the documents was
delivered.

                  2002 ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

     At  our  last  Annual General Meeting held on May 9, 2002, our shareholders
elected  Ronald  L.  Kuehn,  Jr.,  Paul  B.  Loyd, Jr., Roberto Monti and Ian C.
Strachan  as  directors,  approved  the  appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our
independent auditors for 2002 and approved the change of our name to "Transocean
Inc."  Since  the  2002  Annual  General Meeting, our articles and memorandum of
association have not been amended, other than to reflect the name change, and no
meetings  of  shareholders  have  been  held.

                           PROPOSALS OF SHAREHOLDERS

     Shareholder  Proposals  in  the  Proxy  Statement.  Rule  14a-8  under  the
Securities  Exchange  Act  of  1934  addresses  when  a  company  must include a
shareholder's  proposal  in its proxy statement and identify the proposal in its
form  of  proxy  when  the  company  holds  an  annual  or  special  meeting  of
shareholders.  Under  Rule  14a-8,  in order for your proposals to be considered
for  inclusion in the proxy statement and proxy card relating to our 2004 annual
general  meeting,  your  proposals  must  be received at our principal executive
offices,  4  Greenway Plaza, Houston, Texas 77046, by no later than November 28,
2003.  However,  if  the date of the 2004 annual general meeting changes by more
than  30  days  from  the  anniversary  of  the 2003 annual general meeting, the
deadline  is  a  reasonable


                                       26

time  before  we begin to print and mail our proxy materials. We will notify you
of  this deadline in a Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q or in another communication
to  you.  Shareholder  proposals  must also be otherwise eligible for inclusion.

     Shareholder  Proposals  and  Nominations  for  Directors to Be Presented at
Meetings.  If  you desire to bring a matter before an annual general meeting and
the proposal is submitted outside the process of Rule 14a-8, you must follow the
procedures  set  forth  in  our  articles  of  association.  Our  articles  of
association  provide generally that, if you desire to propose any business at an
annual  general  meeting,  you must give us written notice not less than 90 days
prior  to  the  anniversary  of the originally scheduled date of the immediately
preceding  annual  general  meeting.  However,  if  the  date of the forthcoming
annual  general  meeting  is  more than 30 days before or after that anniversary
date,  the  deadline is the close of business on the tenth day after we publicly
disclose  the  meeting  date. The deadline under our articles of association for
submitting  proposals  will  be  February  8,  2004  for the 2004 annual general
meeting  unless  it  is more than 30 days before or after the anniversary of the
2003  annual  general  meeting.  Your  notice  must  set  forth:

     -    a  brief  description of the business desired to be brought before the
          meeting  and  the  reasons for conducting the business at the meeting;

     -    your  name  and  address;

     -    a  representation  that  you  are  a  holder of record of our ordinary
          shares  entitled to vote at the meeting, or if the record date for the
          meeting  is  subsequent to the date required for shareholder notice, a
          representation  that  you  are  a  holder of record at the time of the
          notice and intend to be a holder of record on the date of the meeting,
          and,  in  either  case,  intend to appear in person or by proxy at the
          meeting  to  propose  that  business;  and

     -    any  material  interest  you  have  in  the  business.

     If  you desire to nominate directors at an annual general meeting, you must
give  us  written  notice  within  the  time  period  described in the preceding
paragraph.  If  you  desire  to  nominate  directors at an extraordinary general
meeting  at  which  the board of directors has determined that directors will be
elected,  you  must give us written notice by the close of business on the tenth
day  following our public disclosure of the meeting date. Notice must set forth:

     -    your  name  and  address  and  the  name  and address of the person or
          persons  to  be  nominated;

     -    a  representation  that  you  are  a  holder of record of our ordinary
          shares  entitled to vote at the meeting or, if the record date for the
          meeting  is  subsequent  to  the  date  required  for that shareholder
          notice,  a  representation that you are a holder of record at the time
          of  the  notice and intend to be a holder of record on the date of the
          meeting  and,  in  either  case, setting forth the class and number of
          shares  so  held,  including  shares  held  beneficially;

     -    a  representation that you intend to appear in person or by proxy as a
          holder  of  record  at  the  meeting to nominate the person or persons
          specified  in  the  notice;

     -    a  description  of  all arrangements or understandings between you and
          each  nominee you proposed and any other person or persons under which
          the  nomination  or  nominations  are  to  be  made  by  you;

     -    any  other  information regarding each nominee you proposed that would
          be  required to be included in a proxy statement filed pursuant to the
          proxy  rules  of  the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission;  and

     -    the  consent  of  each  nominee  to serve as a director if so elected.


                                       27

     The  chairman  of  the  meeting  may  refuse to transact any business or to
acknowledge  the  nomination  of  any  person  if  you  fail  to comply with the
foregoing  procedures.

     You  may  obtain  a  copy  of  our  articles of association, in which these
procedures  are  set  forth,  upon  written request to Eric B. Brown, Secretary,
Transocean  Inc.,  4  Greenway  Plaza,  Houston,  Texas  77046.


                                       28

                                                                      APPENDIX A

                                   TRANSOCEAN

                             AUDIT COMMITTEE CHARTER



PURPOSE

     The  Audit  Committee is to assist the Board of Directors in fulfilling its
oversight  responsibilities  by  reviewing:  the  Company's financial statements
contained  in  the  annual  report  to  stockholders;  the  Company's systems of
internal control regarding finance, accounting, legal compliance and ethics that
management  and  the  Board  have  established;  and  the  Company's  auditing,
accounting  and  financial  reporting processes in general. Consistent with this
oversight function, the Audit Committee encourages continuous improvement of and
fosters  adherence  to  the  company's policies, procedures and practices at all
levels.  The  Audit  Committee's  primary  duties  and  responsibilities are to:

     -    Serve  as  an  independent  and  objective  party  to  monitor  the
          corporation's financial reporting process and internal control system.

     -    Review  and  appraise  the  audit efforts of the Company's independent
          auditors  and  internal  audit  function.

     -    Provide  an  open  avenue  of  communication  among  the  independent
          auditors,  financial  and  senior  management,  the  internal auditing
          department,  and  the  Board  of  Directors.

     -    Prepare  the  audit  committee  report  required  by  the rules of the
          Securities  and  Exchange Commission (the "Commission") to be included
          in  the  Company's  annual  proxy  statement.

     The  Audit  Committee  will  primarily  fulfill  these  responsibilities by
carrying out the activities enumerated in the section on Committee Authority and
Responsibilities.

COMMITTEE MEMBERSHIP

     The  Audit  Committee shall consist of at least three active members of the
Board,  each  of whom shall be independent directors, as defined by the New York
Stock  Exchange, the rules and regulations of the Commission and applicable law,
and  free  from  any  relationship  that,  in  the  opinion  of the Board, would
interfere  with  the  exercise of his or her independent judgment as a member of
the Committee. In no event shall an active or retired officer or employee of the
Company  be  a  member  of  the  Committee.

     The proposed committee members and Chairman of the Audit Committee shall be
recommended to the Board of Directors by the Corporate Governance Committee. All
members of the committee shall have a working familiarity with basic finance and
accounting  practices,  and  at  least  one  member  of the Committee shall have
accounting  or  related  financial  management  expertise.

MEETINGS

     The  Audit  Committee  shall  meet  as  often as it determines but not less
frequently  than  quarterly.  The  Committee  should  meet periodically with the
internal auditors and the independent auditors in separate executive sessions to
discuss  any matters that the Committee or any of these groups believe should be
discussed  privately.


                                       29

COMMITTEE AUTHORITY AND RESPONSIBILITIES

     The  Audit  Committee  shall have the sole authority to retain or terminate
the  independent auditors. The Audit Committee shall be directly responsible for
the  compensation  and  oversight  of  the  work  of  the  independent  auditors
(including  resolution  of  disagreements between management and the independent
auditors  regarding financial reporting) for the purpose of preparing or issuing
an  audit report or related work. The independent auditors shall report directly
to  the  Audit  Committee.

     The  Audit  Committee  shall  pre-approve  all auditing services, review or
attest  engagements  and  permitted  non-audit  services (including the fees and
terms  thereof)  to  be  performed  for the Company by its independent auditors,
subject to the de minimis exceptions for non-audit services described in Section
10A(i)(1)(B) of the Exchange Act which are approved by the Audit Committee prior
to  the  completion of the audit. The Audit Committee may establish policies and
procedures for purposes of such pre-approval to the extent allowed by applicable
law  and  regulations.

     The  Audit  Committee  may  form  and  delegate  authority to subcommittees
consisting  of  one or more members when appropriate, including the authority to
grant  pre-approvals  of  audit  and permitted non-audit services, provided that
decisions  of such subcommittee to grant pre-approvals shall be presented to the
full  Audit  Committee  at  its  next  scheduled  meeting.

     The  Audit Committee shall have the authority to retain, dismiss or replace
independent  legal, accounting or other advisors. The Audit Committee shall have
the  sole  authority  to  approve  the  fees  and  other retention terms for any
advisors  employed  by  the  Audit  Committee.  The  Company  shall  provide for
appropriate  funding,  as  determined  by  the  Audit  Committee, for payment of
compensation to the independent auditors for the purpose of rendering or issuing
an  audit  report  and  to  any  advisors  employed  by  the  Audit  Committee.

     A.   WITH REGARD TO THE INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

          1.   Review  at  least annually plans for the scope of the independent
               auditors'  activities,  including  the  auditors'  performance of
               non-audit  services,  and  expected fees to be incurred therefor,
               the  auditors'  report  of findings resulting from examination of
               the  Company's  records  and  systems  of  internal  accounting
               controls,  and  matters  affecting  their  independence  in  the
               performance  of  the  audit  of  Company  accounts.

          2.   Review  with  Internal  Audit  and the independent auditors their
               annual  audit  plans, including the degree of coordination of the
               respective  plans.  The Committee should inquire as to the extent
               to  which  the  planned  audit scope can be relied upon to detect
               fraud  or  weaknesses  in  internal  accounting  controls.

          3.   Have  a  clear  understanding  with the independent auditors that
               they  are  ultimately  accountable  to  the  Audit  Committee, as
               representatives  of  the shareholders, and that these shareholder
               representatives  have  ultimate  authority  and responsibility to
               engage,  evaluate,  and if appropriate, terminate their services.
               To this end, the Committee will have the exclusive authority with
               regard  to  the  appointment  or  discharge  of  the  independent
               auditors.

          4.   On  an  annual  basis,  obtain  from  the  independent auditors a
               written  communication  delineating  all  their relationships and
               professional services as required by Independence Standards Board
               Standard  No.  1, Independence Discussions with Audit Committees.
               In  addition, review with the independent auditors the nature and
               scope of any disclosed relationships or professional services and
               take,  or  recommend  appropriate action to ensure the continuing
               independence  of  the auditors. Evaluate whether the provision of
               permitted  non-audit  services is compatible with maintaining the
               auditors'  independence.

          5.   Review  with  the  independent  auditors the cooperation received
               from  Management during the course of the audit and extent of any
               restrictions  that  may  have  affected  their  examination.


                                       30

          6.   Review  and  discuss  reports  from  the independent auditors on:

               -    All  critical  accounting policies and practices to be used;

               -    All  alternative  treatments  within  Generally  Accepted
                    Accounting  Principles for policies and practices related to
                    material  items  that  have  been discussed with Management,
                    including  ramification  of  the  use  of  such  alternative
                    disclosures  and  treatments; and the treatment preferred by
                    the  independent  auditors;

               -    Other  material  written  communications  between  the
                    independent  auditors  and  the  Management,  such  as  any
                    management  letter  or  schedule  of unadjusted differences.

          7.   Discuss  with the independent auditors the matters required to be
               discussed  by  Statement on Auditing Standards No. 61 relating to
               the  conduct  of  the  audit.

     B.   WITH  REGARD  TO THE COMPANY'S FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND FOOTNOTES, AND
          INTERNAL  ACCOUNTING  CONTROL  SYSTEMS

          1.   Review  the  Annual  Report  and  footnotes  thereto prior to its
               publication,  and  discuss  with  the  independent  auditors  any
               significant  transactions  not  a  normal  part  of the Company's
               business,  significant adjustments proposed by them, and comments
               submitted  by  the  independent auditors concerning the Company's
               system  of internal accounting control together with Management's
               actions  to  correct  any  deficiencies  noted.

          2.   Review  with  the  independent auditors the quality, not just the
               acceptability,  of the company's accounting principles as applied
               in  its  financial  reporting in terms of clarity of disclosures,
               degree  of  aggressiveness  or  conservatism  of  the  Company's
               accounting  principles  and  underlying  estimates  and  other
               significant  decisions  made  by  the  Company  in  preparing the
               financial  disclosures.

          3.   Review steps taken to assure compliance with the Company's policy
               regarding  conflicts  of  interest  and  business  ethics.

          4.   Review  transactions or relationships between the Company and any
               Director,  Officer,  or  shareholder  owning  more than 5% of the
               Company's  common  stock  (including  any  family  members of the
               foregoing),  and  make  recommendation  to the Board of Directors
               concerning  whether  such  relationships  should  continue.

          5.   Ascertain  that  appropriate  reporting  of  such transactions or
               relationships  is  made  to  the  Commission  or other regulatory
               agencies.

          6.   Review  the  quality  and  depth  of  staffing  of  the Company's
               financial,  accounting,  and  internal  audit  personnel.

          7.   Review  disclosures  made to the Audit Committee by the Company's
               CEO  and CFO during their certification process for the Form 10-K
               and Form 10-Q about any significant deficiencies in the design or
               operation  of internal controls or material weaknesses therein or
               instances  of  fraud  involving management or other employees who
               have  a  significant  role  in  the  Company's internal controls.

          8.   Review  and  discuss with management and the independent auditors
               the  annual  audited  financial  statements,  and  based upon the
               review  and  discussion  decide whether to recommend to the Board
               that  the  audited financial statements should be included in the
               Company's  Form  10-K.


                                       31

     C.   WITH  REGARD  TO  THE  COMPANY'S  INTERNAL  AUDITORS

          1.   Review  the  scope  of  the  internal auditors' activities, their
               report  of  findings  resulting  from  the  examination  of  the
               Company's records, operations, and systems of internal accounting
               controls,  and  matters  affecting  their  independence  in  the
               performance  of  the  audit  of  Company  accounts, including the
               cooperation  received  from  Management  during the course of any
               audit,  and the extent of any restrictions that may have affected
               their  examination.

     D.   OTHER  RESPONSIBILITIES

          1.   Review  expense  accounts  and  executive  perquisites  of  the
               Company's  senior  officers.

          2.   Review  litigation involving claims by shareholders of wrongdoing
               by or against directors, officers, or independent auditors of the
               Company.

          3.   Review  and  update this Charter periodically, at least annually,
               as  conditions  dictate.

          4.   Annually  review  the  Audit  Committee's  own  performance.

          5.   Establish  procedures for the receipt, retention and treatment of
               complaints received by the Company regarding accounting, internal
               accounting  controls  or  auditing matters, and the confidential,
               anonymous  submission  by  employees  of  concerns  regarding
               questionable  accounting  or  auditing  matters.

LIMITATION OF AUDIT COMMITTEE'S ROLE

     While  the Audit Committee has the responsibilities and powers set forth in
this  Charter,  it  is  not  the  duty of the Audit Committee to plan or conduct
audits  or  to determine that the Company's financial statements and disclosures
are  complete  and  accurate  and  are  in  accordance  with  generally accepted
accounting  principles  and  applicable  rules  and  regulations.  These are the
responsibilities  of  Management  and  the  independent  auditors.

     Unless  he  or  she believes to the contrary (in which case, he or she will
advise  the  Audit Committee of such belief), each member of the Audit Committee
shall  be  entitled to assume and rely on (1) the integrity of those persons and
organizations  within  and outside the Company that it receives information from
and  (2)  the accuracy of the financial, legal and other information provided to
the  Audit  Committee  by  such  persons  or  organizations.


                                       32

                                                                      APPENDIX B

             PROPOSED AMENDED AND RESTATED LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN

                                       OF

                                 TRANSOCEAN INC.

                (As Amended and Restated Effective May 8, 2003)

                                   I.  GENERAL

1.1  PURPOSE  OF  THE  PLAN

     The  Long-Term  Incentive  Plan  (the  "Plan") of Transocean Inc., a Cayman
Islands  exempted  company  (the  "Company"),  is  intended  to advance the best
interests  of  the  Company  and  its  subsidiaries  by  providing Directors and
employees with additional incentives through the grant of options ("Options") to
purchase ordinary shares, par value US $0.01 per share of the Company ("Ordinary
Shares"),  share  appreciation  rights  ("SARs"),  restricted  Ordinary  Shares
("Restricted  Shares")  and  cash  performance  awards  ("Cash Awards"), thereby
increasing  the  personal stake of such Directors and employees in the continued
success  and  growth  of  the  Company.

1.2  ADMINISTRATION  OF  THE  PLAN

     (a)     The  Plan  shall  be  administered  by  the  Executive Compensation
Committee  or  other  designated  committee  (the  "Committee")  of the Board of
Directors  of  the  Company (the "Board of Directors") which shall consist of at
least  two Directors, all of whom (i) are not eligible for awards under Articles
II  and III of the Plan, (ii) are "non-employee directors" within the meaning of
Rule  16b-3  under  the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, and (iii) are outside
directors  satisfying the requirements of Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue
Code  of 1986, as amended, or any successor thereto ("the Code").  The Committee
shall  have  authority  to interpret conclusively the provisions of the Plan, to
adopt  such  rules  and  regulations  for  carrying  out the Plan as it may deem
advisable,  to  decide  conclusively  all  questions  of  fact  arising  in  the
application  of  the  Plan,  and  to  make all other determinations necessary or
advisable  for  the  administration of the Plan.  Notwithstanding the foregoing,
the  Committee  shall have no power or discretion to vary the amount or terms of
awards  under  Article  IV  of the Plan, except as provided in Section 6.2.  All
decisions and acts of the Committee shall be final and binding upon all affected
Plan  participants.

     (b)     The Committee shall designate the eligible employees, if any, to be
granted  awards under Articles II and III and the type and amount of such awards
and  the  time  when  awards will be granted.  All awards granted under the Plan
shall  be  on  the  terms  and  subject  to the conditions hereinafter provided.

1.3  ELIGIBLE  PARTICIPANTS

     Employees,  including officers, of the Company and its subsidiaries, and of
partnerships  or joint ventures in which the Company and its subsidiaries have a
significant  ownership  interest  as  determined  by  the Committee (all of such
subsidiaries,  partnerships  and  joint  ventures  being  referred  to  as
"Subsidiaries") shall be eligible for awards under Articles II, III and V of the
Plan.  Directors  who are not employees of the Company or its Subsidiaries shall
not  be  eligible  for  awards  under  Articles  II,  III  and  V.

     Each  Director  of  the  Company  who  is not an officer or employee of the
Company  or any of its subsidiaries (an "Eligible Director") shall automatically
be  granted awards under Article IV of the Plan.  Each Eligible Director to whom
Options  or  SARs  are  granted under Article IV is hereinafter referred to as a
"Participant."

1.4  AWARDS  UNDER  THE  PLAN

     Awards  to  employees  under  Articles II and III may be in the form of (i)
Options to purchase Ordinary Shares, (ii) Share Appreciation Rights which may be
either  freestanding or issued in tandem with Options, (iii)


                                       33

Restricted Ordinary Shares, (iv) Supplemental Payments which may be awarded with
respect to Options, Share Appreciation Rights and Restricted Ordinary Shares, or
(v)  any  combination of the foregoing. Awards to employees under Article V will
be  in  the  form  of  performance  awards  payable  in  cash.

     Awards  to  Eligible Directors under Article IV shall be in the form of (i)
Options  to  purchase  Ordinary  Shares  and  Supplemental Payments with respect
thereto,  or  (ii)  solely in the case of Eligible Directors residing in Norway,
freestanding  SARs.

1.5  SHARES  SUBJECT  TO  THE  PLAN

     The aggregate number of Ordinary Shares which may be issued with respect to
awards  made  under  Articles  II  and  III  shall not exceed 18,900,000 shares,
reduced by the number of shares which have been issued pursuant to such Articles
prior  to  January 31, 2001.  Of such 18,900,000 shares, the aggregate number of
Restricted  Ordinary Shares which may be issued pursuant to Article III from and
after  January  31,  2001,  shall not exceed 2,000,000 shares.  In addition, the
aggregate  number  of Ordinary Shares which may be issued with respect to awards
made  under Article IV shall not exceed 600,000, reduced by the number of shares
which  have  been issued pursuant to such Article prior to January 31, 2001.  At
no time shall the number of shares issued plus the number of shares estimated by
the  Committee  to be ultimately issued with respect to outstanding awards under
the  Plan  exceed  the  number  of shares that may be issued under the Plan.  No
employee shall be granted Share Options, freestanding Share Appreciation Rights,
or Restricted Ordinary Shares, or any combination of the foregoing, with respect
to  more  than 600,000 Ordinary Shares in any fiscal year (subject to adjustment
as  provided  in  Section  6.2).  No  employee  shall  be granted a Supplemental
Payment  in  any  fiscal  year  with respect to more than the number of Ordinary
Shares  covered  by  Share  Options,  freestanding  Share Appreciation Rights or
Restricted  Ordinary Shares awards granted to such employee in such fiscal year.
Shares  distributed  pursuant to the Plan may consist of authorized but unissued
shares  or  treasury  shares of the Company, as shall be determined from time to
time  by  the  Board  of  Directors.

     If  any  Option  under  the  Plan  shall  expire,  terminate or be canceled
(including  cancellation  upon  the  holder's  exercise  of  a  related  Share
Appreciation  Right) for any reason without having been exercised in full, or if
any  Restricted  Ordinary  Shares  shall  be  forfeited  to  the  Company,  the
unexercised  Options  and  forfeited  Restricted Ordinary Shares shall not count
against  the  above  limit and shall again become available for grants under the
Plan  (regardless  of  whether  the  holder  of  such Options or shares received
dividends  or  other  economic benefits with respect to such Options or shares).
Ordinary  Shares  equal  in  number  to the shares surrendered in payment of the
option  price,  and  Ordinary  Shares  which  are  withheld  in order to satisfy
federal,  state  or local tax liability, shall not count against the above limit
and  shall again become available for grants under the Plan.  Only the number of
Ordinary  Shares  actually issued upon exercise of a Share Appreciation Right or
payment  of  a Supplemental Payment shall count against the above limit, and any
shares which were estimated to be used for such purposes and were not in fact so
used  shall  again  become  available  for  grants  under  the  Plan.

     Freestanding Shares Appreciation Rights which may be settled solely in cash
shall  be issued with respect to no more than an aggregate of 300,000 underlying
shares.  Such  SARs  shall  not  count against the limits set forth above on the
number  of  Ordinary  Shares  which  may  be  issued  under  the  Plan.  If  any
freestanding  SAR shall expire, terminate, or be canceled for any reason without
having been exercised in full, the unexercised SARs shall not count against this
limit  and  shall  again  become  available  for  grants  under  the  Plan.

1.6  OTHER  COMPENSATION  PROGRAMS

     The  existence  and  terms of the Plan shall not limit the authority of the
Board  of  Directors  in compensating Directors and employees of the Company and
its  subsidiaries  in  such  other  forms  and  amounts,  including compensation
pursuant  to  any  other  plans  as may be currently in effect or adopted in the
future,  as  it  may  determine  from  time  to  time.


                                       34

                II.  SHARE OPTIONS AND SHARE APPRECIATION RIGHTS

2.1  TERMS  AND  CONDITIONS  OF  OPTIONS

     Subject  to the following provisions, all Options granted under the Plan to
employees  of  the  Company and its Subsidiaries shall be in such form and shall
have  such  terms  and  conditions as the Committee, in its discretion, may from
time  to  time  determine.

     (a)     Option  Price.  The  option  price per share shall not be less than
the fair market value of the Ordinary Shares (as determined by the Committee) on
the date the Option is granted.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, the option price
per  share with respect to any Option granted by the Committee within 90 days of
the  closing  of  the  initial  public offering of the Company's Ordinary Shares
shall  be  at  the  initial  public  offering  price  for  such  Shares.

     (b)     Term  of  Option.  The term of an Option shall not exceed ten years
from  the  date  of  grant,  except  as provided pursuant to Section 2.1(g) with
respect  to  the  death  of an optionee.  No Option shall be exercised after the
expiration  of  its  term.

     (c)     Exercise  of Options.  Options shall be exercisable at such time or
times and subject to such terms and conditions as the Committee shall specify in
the  Option  grant.  The  Committee shall have discretion to at any time declare
all  or  any  portion  of  the  Options  held  by any optionee to be immediately
exercisable.  An  Option may be exercised in accordance with its terms as to any
or  all  shares  purchasable  thereunder.

     (d)     Payment for Shares.  The Committee may authorize payment for shares
as  to  which  an  Option  is  exercised to be made in cash, Ordinary Shares, by
"cashless  exercise"  or in such other manner as the Committee in its discretion
may  provide.

     (e)     Nontransferability  of  Options.  No Option or any interest therein
shall  be  transferable  by  the  optionee  other than by will or by the laws of
descent  and  distribution.  During an optionee's lifetime, all Options shall be
exercisable  only by such optionee or by the guardian or legal representative of
the  optionee.

     (f)     Shareholder  Rights.  The  holder of an Option shall, as such, have
none  of  the  rights  of  a  shareholder.

     (g)     Termination  of Employment.  The Committee shall have discretion to
specify  in the Option grant or an amendment thereof, provisions with respect to
the  period  during  which  the Option may be exercised following the optionee's
termination  of  employment.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Committee shall
not  permit any Option to be exercised beyond the term of the Option established
pursuant  to  Section  2.1(b),  except  that  the  Committee  may  provide that,
notwithstanding  such Option term, an Option which is outstanding on the date of
an  optionee's death shall remain outstanding and exercisable for up to one year
after  the  optionee's  death.

     (h)     Change  of  Control.  Notwithstanding  the  exercisability schedule
governing  any Option, upon the occurrence of a Change of Control (as defined in
Section  6.10) all Options outstanding at the time of such Change of Control and
held  by  optionees  who are employees of the Company or its Subsidiaries at the
time  of such Change of Control shall become immediately exercisable and, unless
the  optionee  agrees  otherwise  in  writing,  shall remain exercisable for the
remainder  of  the  Option  term.

2.2  SHARE  APPRECIATION  RIGHTS  IN  TANDEM  WITH  OPTIONS

     (a)     The  Committee  may, either at the time of grant of an Option or at
any  time  during  the  term of the Option, grant Share Appreciation Rights with
respect  to all or any portion of the Ordinary Shares covered by such Option.  A
tandem Share Appreciation Right may be exercised at any time the Option to which
it  relates  is  then exercisable, but only to the extent the Option to which it
relates  is  exercisable,  and  shall be subject to the conditions applicable to
such Option.  When a tandem Share Appreciation Right is exercised, the Option to
which  it  relates  shall cease to be exercisable to the extent of the number of
shares  with  respect to which the tandem Share Appreciation Right is exercised.
Similarly,  when  an  Option  is exercised, the tandem Share Appreciation Rights


                                       35

relating  to  the  shares  covered by such Option exercise shall terminate.  Any
tandem Share Appreciation Right which is outstanding on the last day of the term
of  the  related  Option  (as  determined  pursuant  to Section 2.1(b)) shall be
automatically  exercised  on  such  date  for  cash  without  any  action by the
optionee.

     (b)     Upon  exercise  of  a  tandem  Share Appreciation Right, the holder
shall  receive,  for  each  share  with  respect  to  which  the  tandem  Share
Appreciation  Right  is  exercised,  an amount (the "Appreciation") equal to the
amount by which the fair market value (as defined below) of an Ordinary Share on
the  date  of  exercise of the Share Appreciation Right exceeds the option price
per  share  of  the Option to which the tandem Share Appreciation Right relates.
For  purposes  of  the  preceding sentence, the fair market value of an Ordinary
Share  shall be the average of the high and low prices of such share as reported
on the consolidated reporting system. The Appreciation shall be payable in cash,
Ordinary  Shares,  or a combination of both, at the option of the Committee, and
shall  be  paid  within 30 days of the exercise of the tandem Share Appreciation
Right.

     (c)     Notwithstanding the foregoing, if a tandem Share Appreciation Right
is  exercised  within  60 days of the occurrence of a Change of Control, (i) the
Appreciation  and  any Supplemental Payment (as defined in Section 2.4) to which
the  holder is entitled shall be payable solely in cash, and (ii) in addition to
the  Appreciation  and  the  Supplemental  Payment  (if  any),  the holder shall
receive,  in cash, (1) the amount by which the greater of (a) the highest market
price  per  Ordinary  Share  during  the 60-day period preceding exercise of the
tandem  Share Appreciation Right or (b) the highest price per Ordinary Share (or
the  cash-equivalent thereof as determined by the Board of Directors) paid by an
acquiring person during the 60-day period preceding a Change of Control, exceeds
the fair market value of an Ordinary Share on the date of exercise of the tandem
Share  Appreciation  Right, plus (2) if the holder is entitled to a Supplemental
Payment,  an  additional  payment, calculated under the same formula as used for
calculating  such  holder's  Supplemental  Payment,  with  respect to the amount
referred  to  in  clause  (1)  of  this  sentence.

2.3  FREESTANDING  SHARE  APPRECIATION  RIGHTS

     The Committee may grant Freestanding Share Appreciation Rights to employees
of  the  Company  and  its  Subsidiaries, in such form and having such terms and
conditions as the Committee, in its discretion, may from time to time determine,
subject  to  the  following  provisions.

     (a)     Base  Price  and  Appreciation.  Each  freestanding  SAR  shall  be
granted with a base price, which shall not be less than the fair market value of
the  Ordinary  Shares  (as  determined  by the Committee) on the date the SAR is
granted.  Upon  exercise  of  a  freestanding SAR, the holder shall receive, for
each  share  with  respect  to  which  the  SAR  is  exercised,  an  amount (the
"Appreciation")  equal  to the amount by which the fair market value (as defined
below)  of an Ordinary Share on the date of exercise of the SAR exceeds the base
price of the SAR.  For purposes of the preceding sentence, the fair market value
of  an  Ordinary  Share  shall be the average of the high and low prices of such
share  as  reported  on  the  New  York  Stock  Exchange  composite  tape.  The
Appreciation  shall  be  payable in cash and shall be paid within 30 days of the
exercise  of  the  SAR.

     (b)     Term  of  SAR.  The term of a freestanding SAR shall not exceed ten
years from the date of grant, except as provided pursuant to Section 2.3(f) with
respect  to  the  death  of  the  grantee.  No  SAR shall be exercised after the
expiration  of  its term.  Any freestanding SAR which is outstanding on the last
day of its term (as such term may be extended pursuant to Section 2.3(f)) and as
to  which  the  Appreciation  is  a  positive  number  on  such  date  shall  be
automatically exercised on such date for cash without any action by the grantee.

     (c)     Exercise  of  SARs.  Freestanding SARs shall be exercisable at such
time  or  times  and  subject  to such terms and conditions as the Committee may
specify  in  the  SAR grant.  The Committee shall have discretion to at any time
declare  all  or  any  portion  of  the freestanding SARs then outstanding to be
immediately exercisable.  A freestanding SAR may be exercised in accordance with
its  terms  in  whole  or  in  part.

     (d)     Nontransferability  of  SARs.  No SAR or any interest therein shall
be  transferable by the grantee other than by will or by the laws of descent and
distribution.  During  a  grantee's lifetime, all SARs shall be exercisable only
by  such  grantee  or  by  the  guardian or legal representative of the grantee.

     (e)     Shareholder Rights.  The holder of an SAR shall, as such, have none
of the  rights  of  a  shareholder.


                                       36

     (f)     Termination  of Employment.  The Committee shall have discretion to
specify in the SAR grant or an amendment thereof, provisions with respect to the
period during which the SAR may be exercised following the grantee's termination
of  employment.  Notwithstanding  the  foregoing, the Committee shall not permit
any  SAR  to  be  exercised  beyond  the term of the SAR established pursuant to
Section 2.3(b), except that the Committee may provide that, notwithstanding such
SAR  term,  an  SAR  which is outstanding on the date of a grantee's death shall
remain outstanding and exercisable for up to one year after the grantee's death.

     (g)     Change  of  Control.  Notwithstanding  the  exercisability schedule
governing  any  SAR,  upon  the occurrence of a Change of Control (as defined in
Section  6.10)  all  SARs  outstanding at the time of such Change of Control and
held  by  grantees  who  are employees of the Company or its Subsidiaries at the
time  of such Change of Control shall become immediately exercisable and, unless
the  grantee  agrees  otherwise  in  writing,  shall  remain exercisable for the
remainder  of  the  SAR  term.  In addition, the Committee may provide that if a
freestanding  SAR  is  exercised within 60 days of the occurrence of a Change of
Control,  in addition to the Appreciation the holder shall receive, in cash, the
amount  by  which the greater of (a) the highest market price per Ordinary Share
during  the 60-day period preceding exercise of the SAR or (b) the highest price
per Ordinary Share (or the cash equivalent thereof as determined by the Board of
Directors)  paid  by  an  acquiring  person during the 60-day period preceding a
Change  of  Control,  exceeds  the fair market value of an Ordinary Share on the
date  of  exercise  of  the  SAR.

2.4  SUPPLEMENTAL PAYMENT ON EXERCISE OF OPTIONS OR SHARE APPRECIATION RIGHTS

     The  Committee,  either  at the time of grant or at the time of exercise of
any  Option  or  tandem Share Appreciation Right, may provide for a supplemental
payment (the "Supplemental Payment") by the Company to the optionee with respect
to  the  exercise  of  any  Option  or  tandem  Share  Appreciation  Right.  The
Supplemental  Payment  shall  be in the amount specified by the Committee, which
shall  not  exceed  the  amount  necessary  to pay the income tax payable to the
national  government with respect to both exercise of the Option or tandem Share
Appreciation  Right  and  receipt  of  the  Supplemental  Payment,  assuming the
optionee  is  taxed at the maximum effective income tax rate applicable thereto.
The  Committee shall have the discretion to grant Supplemental Payments that are
payable  solely  in  cash  or  Supplemental  Payments  that are payable in cash,
Ordinary Shares, or a combination of both, as determined by the Committee at the
time  of  payment.  The Supplemental Payment shall be paid within 30 days of the
date  of exercise of an Option or Share Appreciation Right (or, if later, within
30  days  of  the  date  on  which  income  is recognized for federal income tax
purposes  with  respect  to  such  exercise).

2.5  STATUTORY  OPTIONS

     Subject  to  the  limitations on Option terms set forth in Section 2.1, the
Committee  shall  have the authority to grant (i) incentive stock options within
the  meaning  of  Section 422 of the Code and (ii) Options containing such terms
and conditions as shall be required to qualify such Options for preferential tax
treatment  under  the  Code  as  in  effect  at the time of such grant.  Options
granted pursuant to this Section 2.4 may contain such other terms and conditions
permitted  by  Article  II of this Plan as the Committee, in its discretion, may
from  time to time determine (including, without limitation, provision for Share
Appreciation  Rights  and  Supplemental Payments), to the extent that such terms
and  conditions  do  not  cause  the  Options  to  lose  their  preferential tax
treatment.  To  the  extent  the  Code  and  Regulations  promulgated thereunder
require  a  plan to contain specified provisions in order to qualify options for
preferential tax treatment, such provisions shall be deemed to be stated in this
Plan.


                        III.  RESTRICTED ORDINARY SHARES

3.1  TERMS  AND  CONDITIONS  OF  RESTRICTED  ORDINARY  SHARES  AWARDS

     Subject  to  the  following  provisions,  all awards of Restricted Ordinary
Shares  under the Plan to employees of the Company and its Subsidiaries shall be
in  such  form and shall have such terms and conditions as the Committee, in its
discretion,  may  from  time  to  time  determine.

     (a)     The  Restricted  Ordinary  Shares award shall specify the number of
Restricted  Ordinary  Shares to be awarded, the price, if any, to be paid by the
recipient  of  the  Restricted  Ordinary  Shares,  and  the  date  or  dates  on


                                       37

which  the  Restricted  Ordinary  Shares  will  vest.  The vesting of Restricted
Ordinary  Shares may be conditioned upon the completion of a specified period of
service  with  the Company or its Subsidiaries, upon the attainment of specified
performance goals, or upon such other criteria as the Committee may determine in
its  sole  discretion.

     (b)     Share  certificates  representing  the  Restricted  Ordinary Shares
granted  to  an  employee  shall  be  registered  in  the employee's name.  Such
certificates  shall  either be held by the Company on behalf of the employee, or
delivered  to  the  employee  bearing  a  legend  to  restrict  transfer  of the
certificate  until  the Restricted Ordinary Shares have vested, as determined by
the  Committee.  The  Committee  shall determine whether the employee shall have
the  right  to  vote  and/or receive dividends on the Restricted Ordinary Shares
before  they  have  vested.  No  Restricted  Ordinary  Shares  may  be  sold,
transferred,  assigned,  or  pledged  by  the employee until they have vested in
accordance with the terms of the Restricted Ordinary Shares award.  In the event
of an employee's termination of employment before all of his Restricted Ordinary
Shares  have  vested,  or  in  the  event  other  conditions  to  the vesting of
Restricted Ordinary Shares have not been satisfied prior to any deadline for the
satisfaction  of such conditions set forth in the award, the Restricted Ordinary
Shares  which  have not vested shall be forfeited and any purchase price paid by
the employee shall be returned to the employee.  At the time Restricted Ordinary
Shares  vest  (and,  if  the  employee  has been issued legended certificates of
Restricted  Ordinary  Shares,  upon  the  return  of  such  certificates  to the
Company),  a  certificate  for  such  vested  shares  shall  be delivered to the
employee  (or the Beneficiary designated by the employee in the event of death),
free  of  all  restrictions.

     (c)     Notwithstanding  the vesting conditions set forth in the Restricted
Ordinary  Shares  award,  (i) the Committee may in its discretion accelerate the
vesting  of  Restricted  Ordinary  Shares  at  any time, and (ii) all Restricted
Ordinary  Shares  shall  vest  upon  a  Change  of  Control  of  the  Company.

3.2  PERFORMANCE  AWARDS  UNDER  SECTION  162(M)  OF  THE  CODE

     The  Committee  shall  have  the  right  to  designate awards of Restricted
Ordinary  Shares  as "Performance Awards."  Notwithstanding any other provisions
of this Article III, awards so designated shall be granted and administered in a
manner designed to preserve the deductibility of the compensation resulting from
such awards in accordance with Section 162(m) of the Code.  The grant or vesting
of  a  Performance  Award  shall  be  subject  to the achievement of performance
objectives  (the "Performance Objectives") established by the Committee based on
one  or more of the following criteria, in each case applied to the Company on a
consolidated  basis and/or to a business unit, and either as an absolute measure
or  as  a  measure  of  comparative  performance  relative  to  a  peer group of
companies:  sales,  operating profits, operating profits before interest expense
and taxes, net earnings, earnings per share, return on equity, return on assets,
return  on invested capital, total shareholder return, cash flow, debt to equity
ratio,  market share, share price, economic value added, and market value added.

     The Performance Objectives for a particular Performance Award relative to a
particular fiscal year shall be established by the Committee in writing no later
than  90  days  after  the beginning of such year.  The Committee shall have the
authority  to  determine  whether the Performance Objectives and other terms and
conditions  of  the award are satisfied, and the Committee's determination as to
the  achievement of Performance Objectives relating to a Performance Award shall
be  made in writing.  The Committee shall have discretion to modify or waive the
Performance  Objectives  or  conditions to the grant or vesting of a Performance
Award  only  to  the extent that the exercise of such discretion would not cause
the  Performance  Award  to  fail to qualify as "performance-based compensation"
within  the  meaning  of  Section  162(m)  of  the  Code.

3.3  SUPPLEMENTAL PAYMENT ON  VESTING  OF  RESTRICTED  ORDINARY  SHARES

     The  Committee,  either  at  the time of grant or at the time of vesting of
Restricted  Ordinary  Shares,  may  provide  for  a  Supplemental Payment by the
Company  to the employee in an amount specified by the Committee which shall not
exceed  the  amount necessary to pay the federal income tax payable with respect
to  both  the  vesting  of  the  Restricted  Ordinary  Shares and receipt of the
Supplemental  Payment,  assuming  the employee is taxed at the maximum effective
federal  income  tax  rate  applicable  thereto and has not elected to recognize
income  with  respect  to  the  Restricted  Ordinary Shares before the date such
Restricted  Ordinary Shares vest.  The Supplemental Payment shall be paid within
30  days of each date that Restricted Ordinary Shares vest.  The Committee shall
have  the  discretion  to grant Supplemental Payments that are payable solely in
cash  or  Supplemental  Payments that are payable in cash, Ordinary Shares, or a
combination  of  both,  as  determined  by the Committee at the time of payment.



                                       38

          IV.  SHARE OPTIONS OR FREESTANDING SHARE APPRECIATION RIGHTS
                                  FOR DIRECTORS

4.1  GRANT  OF  OPTIONS  OR  FREESTANDING  SARS

     Each person who becomes an Eligible Director (other than a person who first
becomes  an  Eligible Director on the date of an annual meeting of the Company's
shareholders)  shall be granted, effective as of the date such person becomes an
Eligible Director, (i) an Option to purchase 4,000 Ordinary Shares (the "Initial
Option"),  if such person is not then residing in Norway, or (ii) a freestanding
SAR with respect to 4,000 Ordinary Shares (the "Initial SAR"), if such person is
then  residing in Norway.  Each person who is or becomes an Eligible Director on
the date of an annual meeting of the Company's shareholders and whose service on
the  Board  of  Directors  will  continue  after  such meeting shall be granted,
effective  as  of  the  date  of  such  meeting, (i) an Option to purchase 6,000
Ordinary  Shares  (the  "Annual Option"), if such person is not then residing in
Norway,  or  (ii)  a freestanding SAR with respect to 6,000 Ordinary Shares (the
"Annual  SAR"),  if  such  person  is  then  residing  in  Norway.

4.2  TERMS  AND  CONDITIONS  OF  OPTIONS

     Each  Option  granted under this Article shall have the following terms and
conditions:

     (a)     Option  Price.  The  option  price  per  share shall be the closing
sales  price  of an Ordinary Share on the date the Option is granted (or, if the
Ordinary  Shares  are not traded on such date, on the immediately preceding date
on  which  the  Ordinary  Shares  are  traded).

     (b)     Term  of  Option.  Each Option shall expire ten years from the date
of  grant,  except as provided in Section 4.2(c) with respect to the death of an
optionee.  No  Option  shall  be  exercised  after  the  expiration of its term.

     (c)     Exercise  of  Options.  Subject to Section 4.2(g) and the remainder
of  this  paragraph, the Initial Option shall become exercisable in installments
as  follows:  (1)  a  total  of  1,333  Ordinary Shares may be purchased through
exercise  of the Initial Option on or after the first anniversary of the date of
grant; (2) a total of 2,666 Ordinary Shares may be purchased through exercise of
the  Initial Option on or after the second anniversary of the date of grant; and
(3)  a  total  of 4,000 Ordinary Shares may be purchased through exercise of the
Initial  Option on or after the third anniversary of the date of grant.  Subject
to  Section  4.2(g) and the remainder of this paragraph, the Annual Option shall
become  exercisable  in  installments as follows:  (1) a total of 2,000 Ordinary
Shares  may  be  purchased through exercise of the Annual Option on or after the
first anniversary of the date of grant; (2) a total of 4,000 Ordinary Shares may
be  purchased  through  exercise  of  the  Annual  Option on or after the second
anniversary  of  the date of grant; and (3) a total of 6,000 Ordinary Shares may
be  purchased  through  exercise  of  the  Annual  Option  on or after the third
anniversary  of  the date of grant.  If a Participant ceases to be a Director of
the  Company  as  a result of death, disability, or retirement from the Board of
Directors  on  his  Retirement  Date (as defined in Section 4.2(i)), each Option
shall  immediately become fully exercisable and shall remain exercisable for the
remainder of its term, except that an Option which is outstanding on the date of
an  optionee's  death shall remain outstanding and exercisable for a term of the
greater  of  ten  years  from the date of grant or one year after the optionee's
death.  If  a  Participant ceases to be a Director of the Company for any reason
not  set  forth  in the preceding sentence, no additional portions of the Option
will  become exercisable, and the portion of the Option that is then exercisable
shall  expire  if  not  exercised within 60 days after cessation of service as a
Director.  An  Option may be exercised in accordance with its terms as to any or
all  shares  purchasable  thereunder.

     (d)     Payment  for  Shares.  Payment  for shares as to which an Option is
exercised  shall  be made in cash, Ordinary Shares, by "cashless exercise," or a
combination  thereof,  in  the  discretion  of the Participant.  Ordinary Shares
delivered  in  payment of the Option price shall be valued at the average of the
high  and low prices of such Shares on the date of exercise (or, if the Ordinary
Shares  are not traded on such date, at the weighted average of the high and low
prices  on  the  nearest  trading  dates  before  and  after  such  date).


                                       39

     (e)     Nontransferability  of  Options.  No Option or any interest therein
shall  be  transferable  by the Participant other than by will or by the laws of
descent and distribution.  During a Participant's lifetime, all Options shall be
exercisable  only by such Participant or by the guardian or legal representative
of  the  Participant.

     (f)     Shareholder  Rights.  The  holder of an Option shall, as such, have
none  of  the  rights  of  a  shareholder.

     (g)     Change  of  Control.  Notwithstanding  any  other provisions of the
Plan,  upon  the  occurrence of a Change of Control (as defined in Section 6.10)
all  Options  outstanding  at  the  time  of such Change of Control shall become
immediately  exercisable and shall remain exercisable for the remainder of their
term.

     (h)     Tax  Status.  The  Options  granted  under  this  Article  shall be
"non-qualified"  options, and shall not be incentive stock options as defined in
Section  422  of  the  Code.

     (i)     Retirement  Date.  For  purposes  of  this Article, a Participant's
Retirement  Date  shall mean the date on which the Participant shall be required
to retire from the Board of Directors under the retirement policies of the Board
of  Directors  as  in  effect  on  the  date  of  the  Participant's retirement.

4.3  TERMS  AND  CONDITIONS  OF  FREESTANDING  SHARE  APPRECIATION  RIGHTS

     Each Freestanding Share Appreciation Right granted under this Article shall
have  the  following  terms  and  conditions:

     (a)     Base  Price  and  Appreciation.  The base price of the SAR shall be
the closing sales price of an Ordinary Share on the date the SAR is granted (or,
if the Ordinary Shares are not traded on such date, on the immediately preceding
date  on  which  the  Ordinary Shares are traded).  Upon exercise of an SAR, the
holder shall receive, for each share with respect to which the SAR is exercised,
an  amount  (the  "Appreciation")  equal  to the amount by which the fair market
value  of  an Ordinary Share on the date of exercise of the SAR exceeds the base
price of the SAR.  For purposes of the preceding sentence, the fair market value
of  an  Ordinary  Share  shall be the average of the high and low prices of such
share  as  reported  on  the  New  York  Stock  Exchange  composite  tape.  The
Appreciation  shall  be  payable in cash and shall be paid within 30 days of the
exercise  of  the  SAR.

     (b)     Term  of  SAR.  Each  SAR  shall  expire ten years from the date of
grant,  except  as  provided  in  Section  4.3(c) with respect to the death of a
Participant.  No  SAR  shall  be  exercised  after  the  expiration of its term.

     (c)     Exercise  of  SARs.  Subject to Section 4.3(f) and the remainder of
this  paragraph,  the  Initial  SAR  shall become exercisable in installments as
follows:  (1)  the  Initial  SAR shall be exercisable with respect to a total of
1,333  Ordinary  Shares  on or after the first anniversary of the date of grant;
(2)  the  Initial  SAR  shall  be  exercisable  with respect to a total of 2,666
Ordinary Shares on or after the second anniversary of the date of grant; and (3)
the  Initial  SAR shall be exercisable with respect to a total of 4,000 Ordinary
Shares  on  or  after  the  third  anniversary of the date of grant.  Subject to
Section  4.3(f) and the remainder of this paragraph, the Annual SAR shall become
exercisable  in installments as follows: (1) the Annual SAR shall be exercisable
with  respect  to  a  total  of  2,000  Ordinary  Shares  on  or after the first
anniversary  of  the date of grant; (2) the Annual SAR shall be exercisable with
respect  to  a total of 4,000 Ordinary Shares on or after the second anniversary
of  the  date of grant; and (3) the Annual SAR shall be exercisable with respect
to  a  total  of  6,000 Ordinary Shares on or after the third anniversary of the
date  of  grant.  If  a  Participant ceases to be a Director of the Company as a
result  of  death,  disability, or retirement from the Board of Directors on his
Retirement  Date  (as  defined  in  Section  4.2(i)), each SAR shall immediately
become  fully  exercisable and shall remain exercisable for the remainder of its
term,  except  that  notwithstanding  the  term  of  the  SAR,  an  SAR which is
outstanding  on  the  date of a Participant's death shall remain outstanding and
exercisable for a term of the greater of ten years from the date of grant or one
year after the Participant's death.  If a Participant ceases to be a Director of
the  Company  for  any  reason  not  set  forth  in  the  preceding sentence, no
additional  portions  of the SAR will become exercisable, and the portion of the
SAR  that is then exercisable shall expire if not exercised within 60 days after
cessation  of service as a Director.  An SAR may be exercised in accordance with
its  terms  in  whole  or  in  part.


                                       40

     (d)     Nontransferability  of  SARs.  No SAR or any interest therein shall
be  transferable by the Participant other than by will or by the laws of descent
and  distribution.  During  a  Participant's  lifetime,  all  SARs  shall  be
exercisable  only by such Participant or by the guardian or legal representative
of  the  Participant.

     (e)     Shareholder Rights.  The holder of an SAR shall, as such, have none
of the  rights  of  a  shareholder.

     (f)     Change  of  Control.  Notwithstanding  any  other provisions of the
Plan,  upon  the  occurrence of a Change of Control (as defined in Section 6.10)
all  SARs  outstanding  at  the  time  of  such  Change  of Control shall become
immediately  exercisable and shall remain exercisable for the remainder of their
term.

     (g)     Special  Provisions.  Notwithstanding  the  foregoing provisions of
Section  4.3,  the  freestanding  SARs granted to Eligible Directors residing in
Norway  who were first elected to the Board of Directors in 1996 (and who waived
the  grant  of an Option to which they were then entitled under the terms of the
Plan  as  then in effect) with respect to their initial election to the Board of
Directors  (i)  shall  have a base price equal to the closing sales price of the
Ordinary  Shares  on  the  date  of  their initial election, and (ii) shall have
exercise and expiration dates determined as if such SARs had been granted on the
date  of  their  initial  election.

4.4  SUPPLEMENTAL PAYMENT ON  EXERCISE  OF  PRIOR AWARDS OF OPTIONS OR SARS

     (a)     Supplemental  Payments.  Within 30 days of each date that an Option
or SAR granted prior to the date of this Amendment and Restatement is exercised,
a Supplemental Payment shall be paid to the Participant (or to the Participant's
Beneficiary  in  the  event of death), in cash, in an amount equal to the amount
necessary  to  pay  the  income tax payable to the national government where the
Director  resides  with  respect  to both the exercise of such Option or SAR and
receipt  of  the  Supplemental Payment, assuming the Participant is taxed at the
maximum effective income tax rate applicable thereto; provided, however, that no
such  payment  shall  be  made  if  the  Participant has waived his right to the
payment  pursuant  to  Section  4.4(b).

     (b)     Waiver.  The  Committee  may  grant an additional Option or SAR, as
applicable,  to  any  Participant  who  agrees  in writing to waive the right to
receive  a  supplemental  cash payment under Section 4.4(a).  Such Option or SAR
shall  be  immediately  exercisable.  All other provisions of Section 4.2 or 4.3
will  apply  as though the date of acceptance of the Option or SAR were the date
of  grant.  Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  however, in no event shall (i) the
number  of Ordinary Shares subject to this Section 4.4(b) exceed 50,000, or (ii)
the  number  of  SARs  subject  to  this  Section  4.4(b)  exceed  50,000.


                           V.  CASH PERFORMANCE AWARDS

5.1  TERMS  AND  CONDITIONS  OF  CASH  PERFORMANCE  AWARDS

     A  "Cash Award" is a cash bonus paid solely on account of the attainment of
one  or  more  objective  performance goals that have been preestablished by the
Committee.  Each  Cash  Award  shall  be  subject  to such terms and conditions,
restrictions  and  contingencies,  if  any,  as  the  Committee shall determine.
Restrictions  and  contingencies  limiting  the  right to receive a cash payment
pursuant to a Cash Award shall be based on the achievement of single or multiple
performance  goals  over  a performance period established by the Committee.  No
employee  shall  receive  Cash  Awards  during  any calendar year aggregating in
excess  of  $1  million.


                                       41

5.2  PERFORMANCE  OBJECTIVES  UNDER  SECTION  162(M)  OF  THE  CODE

     The  Committee  shall  have  the  right  to  designate Cash Awards as "Cash
Performance  Awards."  Notwithstanding  any  other provisions of this Article V,
awards  so  designated shall be granted and administered in a manner designed to
preserve  the  deductibility  of  the compensation resulting from such awards in
accordance  with  Section 162(m) of the Code.  The payment of a Cash Performance
Award  shall  be  subject  to  the  achievement  of  performance objectives (the
"Performance  Objectives")  established by the Committee based on one or more of
the  following  criteria,  in each case applied to the Company on a consolidated
basis  and/or  to  a  business  unit,  and either as an absolute measure or as a
measure of comparative performance relative to a peer group of companies: sales,
operating  profits,  operating  profits  before  interest expense and taxes, net
earnings,  earnings  per  share,  return  on equity, return on assets, return on
invested  capital,  total  shareholder  return, cash flow, debt to equity ratio,
market  share,  share  price,  economic  value  added,  and  market value added.

     The Performance Objectives for a particular Cash Performance Award relative
to  a particular fiscal year shall be established by the Committee in writing no
later  than  90 days after the beginning of such year.  The Committee shall have
the  authority  to  determine whether the Performance Objectives and other terms
and  conditions of the award are satisfied, and the Committee's determination as
to  the  achievement  of  Performance  Objectives relating to a Cash Performance
Award  shall  be  made  in  writing.

                           VI.  ADDITIONAL PROVISIONS

6.1  GENERAL  RESTRICTIONS

     Each  award  under the Plan shall be subject to the requirement that, if at
any  time  the  Committee  shall determine that (i) the listing, registration or
qualification  of  the  Ordinary  Shares  subject  or  related  thereto upon any
securities  exchange  or  under any state or federal law, or (ii) the consent or
approval  of  any  government  regulatory  body,  or  (iii)  an agreement by the
recipient  of  an  award  with  respect to the disposition of Ordinary Shares is
necessary  or desirable (in connection with any requirement or interpretation of
any  federal  or state securities law, rule or regulation) as a condition of, or
in  connection  with,  the  granting  of such award or the issuance, purchase or
delivery  of  Ordinary  Shares  thereunder, such award may not be consummated in
whole  or  in  part  unless  such listing, registration, qualification, consent,
approval  or  agreement  shall  have  been  effected  or  obtained  free  of any
conditions  not  acceptable  to  the  Committee.

6.2  ADJUSTMENTS  FOR  CHANGES  IN  CAPITALIZATION

     In  the event of a scheme of arrangement, reorganization, recapitalization,
Ordinary  Share  split,  Ordinary  Share dividend, combination of shares, rights
offer,  liquidation,  dissolution,  merger,  consolidation,  spin-off,  sale  of
assets,  payment  of  an  extraordinary cash dividend, or any other change in or
affecting  the  corporate  structure  or  capitalization  of  the  Company,  the
Committee  shall  make  appropriate  adjustment in the number and kind of shares
authorized  by the Plan (including any limitations on individual awards), in the
number,  price  or  kind  of shares covered by the awards and in any outstanding
awards under the Plan; provided, however, that no such adjustment shall increase
the  aggregate  value  of  any  outstanding  award.

6.3  AMENDMENTS

     (a)     The  Board  of  Directors may amend the Plan from time to time.  No
such  amendment  shall  require  approval by the shareholders unless shareholder
approval  is required to satisfy Rule 16b-3 under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934  or  Section  162(m)  of  the  Code, or by applicable law or Stock exchange
requirements.

     (b)     The  Committee  shall  have  the  authority  to  amend any grant to
include  any provision which, at the time of such amendment, is authorized under
the  terms  of the Plan; however, no outstanding award may be revoked or altered
in a manner unfavorable to the holder without the written consent of the holder.

     (c)     If  a  Participant has ceased or will cease to be a Director of the
Company  for  the  convenience  of  the  Company  (as determined by the Board of
Directors),  the  Board  of  Directors  may  amend  all  or  any portion of such
Participant's  Options  or  SARs  so  as  to  make  such  Options  or SARs fully
exercisable and/or specify a schedule


                                       42

upon  which  they  become  exercisable, and/or permit all or any portion of such
Options  or SARs to remain exercisable for such period designated by it, but not
beyond  the  expiration  of  the  term established pursuant to Section 4.2(b) or
4.3(b).  A Participant shall not participate in the deliberations or vote by the
Board of Directors under this paragraph with respect to his Options or SARs. The
exercise  periods  of  Options  or  SARs  established  by the Board of Directors
pursuant  to  this  paragraph shall override the provisions of Section 4.2(c) or
4.3(c)  to  the  extent  inconsistent  therewith.

6.4  CANCELLATION  OF  AWARDS

     Any  award granted under Articles II and III of the Plan may be canceled at
any  time  with the consent of the holder and a new award may be granted to such
holder  in lieu thereof, which award may, in the discretion of the Committee, be
on  more  favorable  terms  and  conditions  than  the canceled award; provided,
however,  that  the  Committee  may  not  reduce  the  exercise or base price of
outstanding  Options or SARs where the existing exercise or base price is higher
than  the  then  current  market  price  of  the  Ordinary  Shares.

6.5  BENEFICIARY

     An  employee or Participant may file with the Company a written designation
of  Beneficiary,  on such form as may be prescribed by the Committee, to receive
any  Options, SARs, Restricted Shares, Ordinary Shares and Supplemental Payments
that  become  deliverable  to  the  employee or Participant pursuant to the Plan
after  the  employee's  or Participant's death.  An employee or Participant may,
from  time  to  time,  amend  or  revoke  a  designation  of Beneficiary.  If no
designated  Beneficiary  survives  the  employee or Participant, the executor or
administrator  of  the  employee's or Participant's estate shall be deemed to be
the  employee's  or  Participant's  Beneficiary.

6.6  WITHHOLDING

     (a)     Whenever  the  Company proposes or is required to issue or transfer
Ordinary  Shares under the Plan, the Company shall have the right to require the
award  holder  to  remit  to  the  Company  an  amount sufficient to satisfy any
applicable  withholding  tax  liability prior to the delivery of any certificate
for  such shares.  Whenever under the Plan payments are to be made in cash, such
payments  shall  be  net  of an amount sufficient to satisfy any withholding tax
liability.

     (b)     An  employee entitled to receive Ordinary Shares under the Plan who
has  not  received a cash Supplemental Payment may elect to have the withholding
tax  liability  (or  a  specified portion thereof) with respect to such Ordinary
Shares  satisfied  by  having  the  Company  withhold  from the shares otherwise
deliverable  to  the employee Ordinary Shares having a value equal to the amount
of  the  tax  liability to be satisfied with respect to the Ordinary Shares.  An
election  to have all or a portion of the tax liability satisfied using Ordinary
Shares  shall  comply with such requirements as may be imposed by the Committee.

6.7  NON-ASSIGNABILITY

     Except  as expressly provided in the Plan, no award under the Plan shall be
assignable  or  transferable by the holder thereof except by will or by the laws
of  descent  and  distribution.  During the life of the holder, awards under the
Plan  shall  be  exercisable  only  by  such  holder or by the guardian or legal
representative  of  such  holder.

6.8  NON-UNIFORM  DETERMINATIONS

     Determinations  by  the  Committee  under  the  Plan  (including,  without
limitation,  determinations  of  the persons to receive awards under Articles II
and III; the form, amount and timing of such awards; the terms and provisions of
such  awards  and the agreements evidencing same; and provisions with respect to
termination of employment) need not be uniform and may be made by it selectively
among  persons  who  receive, or are eligible to receive, awards under the Plan,
whether  or  not  such  persons  are  similarly  situated.

6.9  NO  GUARANTEE  OF  EMPLOYMENT  OR  DIRECTORSHIP


                                       43

     The  grant  of an award under the Plan shall not constitute an assurance of
continued  employment for any period or any obligation of the Board of Directors
to  nominate  any  Director  for  re-election  by  the  Company's  shareholders.

6.10 CHANGE  OF  CONTROL

     A  "Change  of  Control"  means:

     (a)     The  acquisition  by  any  individual,  entity or group (within the
meaning  of Section 13(d)(3) or 14(d)(2) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
as  amended  (the  "Exchange Act")) (a "Person") of beneficial ownership (within
the  meaning of Rule 13d-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act) of 20% or more of
either (i) the then outstanding ordinary shares of the Company (the "Outstanding
Company  Ordinary  Shares")  or  (ii)  the  combined  voting  power  of the then
outstanding  voting  securities of the Company entitled to vote generally in the
election  of  directors (the "Outstanding Company Voting Securities"); provided,
however,  that  for  purposes of this subsection (a), the following acquisitions
shall  not constitute a Change of Control: (i) any acquisition directly from the
Company,  (ii)  any  acquisition  by  the  Company, (iii) any acquisition by any
employee  benefit plan (or related trust) sponsored or maintained by the Company
or  any  corporation  or  other  entity  controlled  by  the Company or (iv) any
acquisition  by  any corporation or other entity pursuant to a transaction which
complies  with  clauses  (i),  (ii) and (iii) of subsection (c) of  this Section
6.10;  or

     (b)     Individuals who, as of the date hereof, constitute the Board of the
Company  (the  "Incumbent  Board") cease for any reason to constitute at least a
majority  of  the  Board of the Company; provided, however, that for purposes of
this  Section  6.10  any  individual  becoming a director subsequent to the date
hereof whose election, or nomination for election by the Company's shareholders,
was  approved  by a vote of at least a majority of the directors then comprising
the  Incumbent Board shall be considered as though such individual were a member
of  the  Incumbent  Board,  but excluding, for this purpose, any such individual
whose initial assumption of office occurs as a result of an actual or threatened
election  contest  with respect to the election or removal of directors or other
actual  or  threatened  solicitation of proxies or consents by or on behalf of a
Person  other  than  the  Board  of  the  Company;  or

     (c)     Consummation  of a scheme of arrangement, reorganization, merger or
consolidation  or  sale  or other disposition of all or substantially all of the
assets  of  the  Company  (a  "Business  Combination"),  in  each  case, unless,
following  such  Business  Combination,  (i)  all  or  substantially  all of the
individuals  and  entities  who were the beneficial owners, respectively, of the
Outstanding  Company  Ordinary  Shares and Outstanding Company Voting Securities
immediately  prior  to  such  Business Combination beneficially own, directly or
indirectly, more than 50% of, respectively, the then outstanding ordinary shares
or  shares of common stock and the combined voting power of the then outstanding
voting  securities  entitled  to vote generally in the election of directors, as
the case may be, of the corporation or other entity resulting from such Business
Combination  (including, without limitation, a corporation or other entity which
as  a result of such transaction owns the Company or all or substantially all of
the  Company's  assets  either  directly or through one or more subsidiaries) in
substantially the same proportions as their ownership, immediately prior to such
Business  Combination of the Outstanding Company Ordinary Shares and Outstanding
Company  Voting  Securities,  as  the case may be, (ii) no Person (excluding any
corporation  or  other  entity  resulting  from such Business Combination or any
employee  benefit  plan (or related trust) of the Company or such corporation or
other  entity  resulting  from  such  Business  Combination)  beneficially owns,
directly  or  indirectly,  20%  or  more  of, respectively, the then outstanding
ordinary  shares  or  shares  of common stock of the corporation or other entity
resulting  from  such  Business  Combination or the combined voting power of the
then outstanding voting securities of such corporation or other entity except to
the  extent  that  such  ownership existed prior to the Business Combination and
(iii)  at  least  a  majority  of  the  members of the board of directors of the
corporation  resulting  from  such  Business  Combination  were  members  of the
Incumbent  Board at the time of the action of the Board of the Company providing
for  such  Business  Combination;  or

     (d)     Approval  by  the  shareholders  of  the  Company  of  a  complete
liquidation  or  dissolution  of  the  Company.


                                       44

6.11 DURATION  AND  TERMINATION

     (a)     The  Plan  shall  be  of  unlimited  duration.  Notwithstanding the
foregoing,  no  incentive Share option (within the meaning of Section 422 of the
Code)  shall  be  granted  under  the Plan after May 1, 2013, but awards granted
prior  to  such  dates  may extend beyond such dates, and the terms of this Plan
shall  continue  to  apply  to  all  awards  granted  hereunder.

     (b)     The Board of Directors may discontinue or terminate the Plan at any
time.  Such action shall not impair any of the rights of any holder of any award
outstanding  on the date of the Plan's discontinuance or termination without the
holder's  written  consent.

6.12 EFFECTIVE  DATE

     The  Plan  was  originally effective May 1, 1993.  The Plan was amended and
restated  effective  March  13,  1997, March 12, 1998 and January 1, 2000.

     IN  WITNESS  WHEREOF,  this  document  has  been  executed  effective as of
May 8, 2003.

                                           TRANSOCEAN INC.



                                            By:
                                               -----------------------------
                                               Eric  B.  Brown
                                               Corporate  Secretary



                                       45

                                                                      APPENDIX C

           PROPOSED AMENDED AND RESTATED EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN
                                       OF
                                 TRANSOCEAN INC.

                (As Amended and Restated Effective May 8, 2003)

1.   PURPOSE

     The  Transocean  Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan (the "Plan") is designed
to  encourage  and  assist  all  employees  of Transocean Inc., a Cayman Islands
exempted  company  limited by shares ("Transocean") and Subsidiaries (as defined
in  Section  4)  (hereinafter  collectively referred to as the "Company"), where
permitted  by  applicable laws and regulations, to acquire an equity interest in
Transocean  through the purchase of ordinary shares, par value US$.01 per share,
of  Transocean  ("Ordinary  Shares").  It  is  intended  that  this  Plan  shall
constitute  an  "employee stock purchase plan" within the meaning of Section 423
of  the  Internal  Revenue  Code  of  1986,  as  amended  (the  "Code").

2.   ADMINISTRATION OF THE PLAN

     The  Plan shall be administered and interpreted by the Finance and Benefits
Committee  (the  "Committee")  appointed by the Board of Directors of Transocean
(the  "Board"),  which Committee shall consist of at least two (2) persons.  The
Committee  shall  supervise  the  administration  and  enforcement  of  the Plan
according  to  its  terms  and provisions and shall have all powers necessary to
accomplish  these purposes and discharge its duties hereunder including, but not
by  way  of  limitation,  the  power  to (i) employ and compensate agents of the
Committee  for  the  purpose  of  administering  the  accounts  of participating
employees; (ii) construe or interpret the Plan; (iii) determine all questions of
eligibility;  and  (iv)  compute the amount and determine the manner and time of
payment  of  all  benefits  according  to  the  Plan.

     The Committee may act by decision of a majority of its members at a regular
or special meeting of the Committee or by decision reduced to writing and signed
by all members of the Committee without holding a formal meeting.  The Committee
may delegate its duties and authority under this Plan to one or more officers of
the  Company, and actions taken by such duly authorized officers shall be deemed
to  be  actions  of  the  Committee.

3.   NATURE AND NUMBER OF SHARES

     The  Ordinary  Shares subject to issuance under the terms of the Plan shall
be  shares  of  Transocean's authorized but unissued Ordinary Shares, previously
issued  Ordinary  Shares  reacquired  and  held by Transocean or Ordinary Shares
purchased on the open market.  The aggregate number of Ordinary Shares which may
be  issued  under  the  Plan  shall not exceed two million five hundred thousand
(2,500,000)  Ordinary  Shares.  All  Ordinary  Shares  purchased under the Plan,
regardless  of  source,  shall  be  counted against the two million five hundred
thousand  (2,500,000)  Ordinary  Share  limitation.

     In  the  event  of  any scheme of arrangement, reorganization, share split,
reverse  share  split,  share  dividend,  combination  of  shares,  merger,
consolidation,  offering  of  rights  or  other  similar  change  in the capital
structure  of  Transocean, the Committee may make such adjustment, if any, as it
deems  appropriate in the number, kind and purchase price of the Ordinary Shares
available  for  purchase  under  the  Plan and in the maximum number of Ordinary
Shares  which may be issued under the Plan, subject to the approval of the Board
and  in  accordance  with  Section  19.

4.   ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS

     Each  "Employee"  (as hereinafter defined), except as described in the next
following  paragraph,  shall  become  eligible  to  participate  in  the Plan in
accordance  with  Section  5 on the first "Enrollment Date" (as defined therein)
following  employment  by  the Company.  Participation in the Plan is voluntary.


                                       46

     The following Employees are not eligible to participate in the Plan:

          (i)  Employees who would, immediately upon enrollment in the Plan, own
               directly  or indirectly, or hold options or rights to acquire, an
               aggregate  of  five  percent  (5%)  or more of the total combined
               voting power or value of all outstanding shares of all classes of
               the  Company or any subsidiary (in determining share ownership of
               an  individual,  the rules of Section 424(d) of the Code shall be
               applied,  and  the  Committee may rely on representations of fact
               made  to  it  by the employee and believed by it to be true); and

          (ii) Employees  of  Transocean  who  are customarily employed for less
               than  twenty  (20) hours per week or less than five (5) months in
               any  calendar  year;  and

         (iii) Employees  of  any Subsidiary who are excluded under the terms of
               any  agreement  evidencing  the  adoption  of  the  Plan;  and

          (iv) Employees who reside in a country in which the Plan fails to meet
               applicable  legal  and  regulatory  requirements  or in a country
               whose  laws  make  participation  impractical.

     "Employee"  shall  mean  any  individual  employed  by  Transocean  or  any
Subsidiary  (as  hereinafter  defined).  "Subsidiary" shall mean any corporation
(a)  which is in an unbroken chain of corporations beginning with Transocean if,
on  or  after  the  Effective Date, each of the corporations other than the last
corporation  in  the  chain owns stock possessing fifty percent (50%) or more of
the  total  combined  voting  power  of all classes of stock in one of the other
corporations  in  the chain and (b) which has adopted the Plan with the approval
of  the  Committee.

5.   ENROLLMENT

     Each  eligible Employee of Transocean or any Subsidiary as of May 14, 1998,
(the "Effective Date" herein) may enroll in the Plan as soon as administratively
feasible  after  the Effective Date, as determined by the Committee.  Each other
eligible  Employee  of  Transocean  or a participating Subsidiary who thereafter
becomes  eligible  to  participate may enroll in the Plan on the first January 1
following  the  date  he  first meets the eligibility requirements of Section 4.
Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  with respect to the Plan's designated purchase
period  (the  "Purchase  Period") ending December 31, 2000, an eligible employee
must  enroll  in the Plan prior to the first to occur of (i) January 1, 2000 or,
if later, the date of the consummation of the merger transaction contemplated by
the  July  12,  1999  Agreement and Plan of Merger between Schlumberger Limited,
Sedco  Forex  Holdings  Limited, and the Company (the "Merger") or (ii) February
29,  2000.  Any  eligible Employee not enrolling in the Plan when first eligible
may  enroll  in the Plan on any subsequent January 1.  Any eligible Employee may
enroll  or  re-enroll  in  the  Plan on the dates hereinabove prescribed or such
other specific dates established by the Committee from time to time ("Enrollment
Dates").  In  order  to  enroll,  an  eligible  Employee must complete, sign and
submit  the  appropriate  form  to  the  person  designated  by  the  Committee.

6.   METHOD OF PAYMENT

     Payment  for  shares is to be made as of the applicable "Purchase Date" (as
defined  in Section 9) through payroll deductions on an after-tax basis (with no
right  of  prepayment)  over  the Purchase Period, with the first such deduction
commencing with the first payroll period ending after the Enrollment Date.  Each
Purchase  Period  under  the Plan shall be a period of one (1) year beginning on
each  January  1 and ending on the following December 31 or such other period as
the  Committee may prescribe.  Each participating Employee (hereinafter referred
to  as  a  "Participant")  will  authorize such deductions from his pay for each
month  during  the  Purchase  Period,  and  such  amounts  will  be  deducted in
conformity  with  his  employer's payroll deduction schedule; provided, however,
that  payroll  withholding during the initial Purchase Period will begin as soon
as  administratively feasible, after the Effective Date, as is determined by the
Committee  in  its  discretion.

     Each Participant may elect to make contributions each pay period in amounts
not  less  than two percent (2%) of the Participant's monthly compensation (with
no dollar minimum), not to exceed a monthly contribution equal to twenty percent
(20%)  of  the  Participant's  monthly  compensation  (base pay and overtime pay
associated


                                       47

with  base  pay,  but  excluding  premium or special pay and overtime associated
therewith)  (or  such  other  dollar amounts as the Committee may establish from
time  to  time  before  an Enrollment Date for all purchases to occur during the
relevant  Purchase  Period).  In  establishing other dollar amounts of permitted
contributions,  the  Committee  may  take  into  account  the  "Maximum  Share
Limitation"  (as  defined  in  Section  8).  The  rate  of contribution shall be
designated  by  the  Participant  in  the  enrollment  form.

     A  Participant  may  elect to increase or decrease the rate of contribution
effective  as  of  the  first day of the Purchase Period by giving prior written
notice  to  the  person  designated by the Committee on the appropriate form.  A
Participant  may  not  elect  to  increase  or decrease the rate of contribution
during  a  Purchase Period.  A Participant may suspend payroll deductions at any
time  during  the  Purchase  Period by giving prior written notice to the person
designated by the Committee on the appropriate form.  If a Participant elects to
suspend  his  payroll  deductions,  such  Participant's account will continue to
accrue  interest  and will be used to purchase shares at the end of the Purchase
Period.  A  Participant  may also elect to withdraw his entire contributions for
the current Purchase Period in accordance with Section 8 by giving prior written
notice  to  the person designated by the Committee on the appropriate form.  Any
Participant  who  withdraws  his  contributions  will  receive,  as  soon  as
practicable,  his  entire  account balance, including interest and dividends, if
any.  Any Participant who suspends payroll deductions or withdraws contributions
during any Purchase Period cannot resume payroll deductions during such Purchase
Period  and  must  re-enroll  in  the  Plan  in order to participate in the next
Purchase  Period.

     Any  Participant,  in  accordance  with  the  procedure  established by the
Company,  can  elect  to  contribute  to the Plan by making a cash payment or by
assigning  to  the Company the right to receive a cash payment.  This assignment
or  transfer  of a cash payment to the Plan must occur after the consummation of
the  Merger  and  not  later  than  February  29,  2000.

     Except  in case of cancellation of election to purchase, death, resignation
or  other terminating event, the amount in a Participant's account at the end of
the  Purchase  Period  will  be  applied  to  the  purchase  of Ordinary Shares.

7.   CREDITING OF CONTRIBUTIONS, INTEREST AND DIVIDENDS

     Contributions  shall  be  credited  to  a  Participant's account as soon as
administratively  feasible  after  payroll  withholding.  Unless  otherwise
prohibited  by  laws  and  regulations,  Participant  contributions will receive
interest at a rate realized for the investment vehicle or vehicles designated by
the  Committee  for  purposes  of  the  Plan.  Interest  will  be  credited to a
Participant's  account  from  the  first  date  on  which  such  Participant's
contributions are deposited with the investment vehicle until the earlier of (i)
the  end  of  the  Purchase  Period or (ii) in the event of cancellation, death,
resignation  or  other  terminating  event,  the  last day for which interest is
allocated  for  such  investment  vehicle  prior  to  the  date  on  which  such
contributions  are  returned  to the Participant.  Dividends on shares held in a
Participant's  account in the Plan will be invested in Ordinary Shares under the
Company's  Shareholder  Dividend  Reinvestment  Plan.  Any  such  contributions,
interest  and  dividends  shall  be  deposited in or held by a bank or financial
institution  designated  by  the  Committee  for this purpose (the "Custodian").

8.   GRANT OF RIGHT TO PURCHASE SHARES ON ENROLLMENT

     Enrollment in the Plan by an Employee on an Enrollment Date will constitute
the  grant  by  the Company to the Participant of the right to purchase Ordinary
Shares  under  the  Plan.  Re-enrollment  by  a  Participant  in  the  Plan will
constitute  a  grant  by  the Company to the Participant of a new opportunity to
purchase  shares  on  the Enrollment Date on which such re-enrollment occurs.  A
Participant  who  has  not  (a)  terminated  employment,  (b)  withdrawn  his
contributions from the Plan, or (c) notified the Company in writing, by December
1  (or  such date as the Committee shall establish), of his election to withdraw
his payroll deductions plus interest as of December 31 will have Ordinary Shares
purchased  for him on the applicable Purchase Date, and he will automatically be
re-enrolled  in  the  Plan  on  the  Enrollment  Date  immediately following the
Purchase  Date  on  which  such  purchase  has occurred, unless each Participant
notifies  the person designated by the Committee on the appropriate form that he
elects  not  to  re-enroll.

     Each  right  to  purchase  Ordinary Shares under the Plan during a Purchase
Period  shall  have  the  following  terms:


                                       48

          (i)  the  right  to  purchase  Ordinary  Shares  during  a  particular
               Purchase  Period  shall  expire  on  the  earlier  of:  (A)  the
               completion  of  the  purchase  of  shares  on  the  Purchase Date
               occurring  in  the  Purchase  Period,  or  (B)  the date on which
               participation  of such Participant in the Plan terminates for any
               reason;

          (ii) payment  for  shares  purchased  will  be  made  through  payroll
               withholding  and  the  crediting  of  interest  and dividends, if
               applicable,  in  accordance  with  Sections  6  and  7;

         (iii) purchase  of shares  will be accomplished only in accordance with
               Section  9;

          (iv) the  price per share will be determined as provided in Section 9;

          (v)  the  right to purchase shares (taken together with all other such
               rights  then  outstanding  under  this  Plan  and under all other
               similar  stock  purchase  plans  of Transocean or any Subsidiary)
               will  in  no  event  give the Participant the right to purchase a
               number  of  shares during a calendar year in excess of the number
               of  Ordinary  Shares  derived  by  dividing  twenty-five thousand
               dollars  (US$25,000)  by  the  fair  market value of the Ordinary
               Shares  (the  "Maximum Share Limitation") on the applicable Grant
               Date  determined  in  accordance  with  Section  9;

          (vi) shares purchased under this Plan may not be sold within three (3)
               months  of  the  Purchase Date, unless the Committee, in its sole
               discretion,  waives  this  requirement;  and

         (vii) the  right  to purchase shares will in all respects be subject to
               the  terms  and  conditions  of  the  Plan, as interpreted by the
               Committee  from  time  to  time.

9.   PURCHASE OF SHARES

     The right to purchase Ordinary Shares granted by the Company under the Plan
is  for  the  term  of a Purchase Period.  The fair market value of the Ordinary
Shares ("Fair Market Value") to be purchased during such Purchase Period will be
the  closing  composite  sales  price  per  Ordinary Share in the New York Stock
Exchange  Composite  Transactions  Quotations  on  the  first trading day of the
calendar  month  of  January,  or  such  other  trading  date  designated by the
Committee  (the  "Grant  Date"); provided, however, that for the Purchase Period
which  begins on the Effective Date, the Grant Date shall be the Effective Date.
Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  with  respect  to  the  Purchase Period ending
December  31, 2000, the Grant Date shall be the first to occur of (i) January 1,
2000  or,  if later, the date of the consummation of the Merger or (ii) February
29, 2000.  The Fair Market Value of the Ordinary Shares will again be determined
in the same manner on the last trading day of the calendar month of December, or
such  other  trading  date  designated  by  the Committee (the "Purchase Date");
however,  in  no  event  shall the Committee, in the exercise of its discretion,
designate  a Purchase Date beyond twelve (12) months from the related Enrollment
Date  or  otherwise  fail  to  meet the requirements of Section 423(b)(7) of the
Code.  These  dates  constitute  the  date of grant and the date of exercise for
valuation  purposes  of  Section  423  of  the  Code.

     As  of the Purchase Date, the Committee shall apply the funds then credited
to  each  Participant's account to the purchase of Ordinary Shares.  The cost to
the  Participant  for the shares purchased during a Purchase Period shall be the
lower  of:

          (i)  eighty-five  percent  (85%)  of the Fair Market Value of Ordinary
               Shares  on  the  Grant  Date;  or

          (ii) eighty-five  percent  (85%)  of the Fair Market Value of Ordinary
               Shares  on  the  Purchase  Date.

     Certificates  evidencing  shares  purchased  shall  be  delivered  to  the
Custodian  or  to  any  other  bank  or  financial institution designated by the
Committee  for  this purpose or delivered to the Participant (if the Participant
has  elected  by  written notice to the Committee to receive the certificate) as
soon  as  administratively  feasible  after


                                       49

the  Purchase  Date;  however,  certificates  shall  not  be  delivered  to  the
Participant  within  one (1) year of the Purchase Date of the underlying shares,
except as otherwise provided herein. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Participants
shall  be  treated  as  the  record  owners  of their shares effective as of the
Purchase  Date.  Shares  that  are held by the Custodian or any other designated
bank  or  financial  institution  shall  be  held in book entry form. Until such
certificates  are  distributed  to  the Participant, the Participant will not be
permitted  to  transfer  ownership of the certificates except as contemplated by
Section  10 or Section 14 of the Plan. Any Participant who terminates employment
will  receive  a  certificate for the number of shares held in his account and a
cash  refund  attributable  to  amounts  equal to less than the price of a whole
share,  and  any  accumulated  contributions, dividends and interest. If for any
reason  the  purchase  of  shares  with  a Participant's allocations to the Plan
exceeds  or would exceed the Maximum Share Limitation, such excess amounts shall
be refunded to the Participant as soon as practicable after such excess has been
determined  to  exist.

     If  as  of  any  Purchase Date the shares authorized for purchase under the
Plan are exceeded, enrollments shall be reduced proportionately to eliminate the
excess.  Any  funds  that  cannot  be  applied  to the purchase of shares due to
excess  enrollment  shall  be  refunded  as  soon  as administratively feasible,
including  interest  determined  in accordance with Section 7.  The Committee in
its  discretion  may also provide that excess enrollments may be carried over to
the  next Purchase Period under this Plan or any successor plan according to the
regulations  set  forth  under  Section  423  of  the  Code.

10.  WITHDRAWAL OF SHARES AND SALE OF SHARES

     (a)     A  Participant  may  elect  to  withdraw  at  any  time  (without
withdrawing  from  participation in the Plan) shares which have been held in his
account  for  at least one (1) year by giving notice to the person designated by
the  Committee  on  the  appropriate form.  Upon receipt of such notice from the
person  designated  by  the  Committee,  the  Custodian, bank or other financial
institution  designated  by  the Committee for this purpose will arrange for the
issuance  and  delivery of such shares held in the Participant's account as soon
as  administratively  feasible.

     (b)     Notwithstanding anything in the Plan to the contrary, a Participant
may  sell shares which are held in his account, including shares which have been
held  in  his  account  for  less than one (1) year, but not less than three (3)
months  as provided in Section 8(vi) (unless waived by the Committee), by giving
notice  to the person designated by the Committee on the appropriate form.  Upon
receipt  of  such  notice  from  the  person  designated  by  the Committee, the
Custodian,  bank  or other financial institution designated by the Committee for
this  purpose  will arrange for the sale of such Participant's shares.  Any sale
will  be  deemed  to occur as soon as practicable after the Participant provides
such notice to the person designated by the Committee.  The proceeds of any sale
under  this  subsection  10(b),  less  any  associated  commissions  or required
withholding  for  taxes, shall be paid to the Participant as soon as practicable
after  the  sale.

11.  TERMINATION OF PARTICIPATION

     The  right  to  participate  in  the  Plan  terminates  immediately  when a
Participant  ceases  to  be  employed  by  the Company for any reason whatsoever
(including death, unpaid disability or when the Participant's employer ceases to
be a Subsidiary) or the Participant otherwise becomes ineligible.  Participation
also  terminates  immediately  when  the  Participant  voluntarily withdraws his
contributions  from  the  Plan.  Participation  terminates immediately after the
Purchase  Date  if  the  Participant is not re-enrolled in the Plan for the next
Purchase  Period  or  if the Participant has suspended payroll deductions during
any  Purchase  Period  and has not re-enrolled in the Plan for the next Purchase
Period.  As soon as administratively feasible after termination of participation
due  to  cessation  of employment, the Committee shall pay to the Participant or
his  beneficiary  or  legal  representative all amounts credited to his account,
including  interest  and dividends, if applicable, determined in accordance with
Section  7,  and  shall cause a certificate for the number of shares held in his
account  to  be  delivered  to  the  Participant, subject to the restrictions in
Section  9.  For  purposes  of  the  Plan,  a  Participant is not deemed to have
terminated  his  employment  if  he  transfers  employment  from Transocean to a
Subsidiary,  or  vice  versa,  or  transfers  employment  between  Subsidiaries.


                                       50

12.  UNPAID LEAVE OF ABSENCE

     Unless the Participant has voluntarily withdrawn his contributions from the
Plan,  shares  will  be  purchased  for  his  account  on the Purchase Date next
following  commencement  of  an  unpaid  leave  of  absence by such Participant,
provided such leave does not constitute a termination of employment.  The number
of  shares  to  be  purchased will be determined by applying to the purchase the
amount  of  the  Participant's contributions made up to the commencement of such
unpaid  leave  of  absence plus interest on such contributions and dividends, if
applicable,  both determined in accordance with Section 7.  If the Participant's
unpaid  leave  of absence both commences and terminates during the same Purchase
Period and he has resumed eligible employment prior to the Purchase Date related
to  that Purchase Period, he may also resume payroll deductions immediately, and
shares  will be purchased for him on such Purchase Date as otherwise provided in
Section  9.

13.  DESIGNATION OF BENEFICIARY

     Each  Participant  may  designate one or more beneficiaries in the event of
death and may, in his sole discretion, change such designation at any time.  Any
such designation shall be effective upon receipt by the person designated by the
Committee  and  shall  control  over  any  disposition  by  will  or  otherwise.

     As  soon  as  administratively  feasible  after the death of a Participant,
amounts  credited  to  his  account,  including  interest  and  dividends,  if
applicable, determined in accordance with Section 7, shall be paid in cash and a
certificate  for  any  shares shall be delivered to the Participant's designated
beneficiaries  or,  in  the  absence  of  such  designation,  to  the  executor,
administrator  or  other legal representative of the Participant's estate.  Such
payment  shall  relieve  the  Company  of  further  liability  to  the  deceased
Participant  with  respect  to  the  Plan.  If  more  than  one  beneficiary  is
designated,  each  beneficiary  shall  receive  an  equal portion of the account
unless  the  Participant  has  given  express  contrary  instructions.

14.  ASSIGNMENT

     Except  as  provided  in  Section 13, the rights of a Participant under the
Plan  will not be assignable or otherwise transferable by the Participant, other
than by will or the laws of descent and distribution or pursuant to a "qualified
domestic  relations  order,"  as  defined  in  Section  414(p)  of the Code.  No
purported assignment or transfer of such rights of a Participant under the Plan,
whether  voluntary  or involuntary, by operation of law or otherwise, shall vest
in  the  purported  assignee  or  transferee  any  interest  or  right  therein
whatsoever,  but immediately upon such assignment or transfer, or any attempt to
make  the same, such rights shall terminate and become of no further effect.  If
this  provision  is  violated,  the  Participant's election to purchase Ordinary
Shares  shall  terminate, and the only obligation of the Company remaining under
the  Plan will be to pay to the person entitled thereto the amount then credited
to  the  Participant's  account.  No Participant may create a lien on any funds,
securities,  rights  or  other  property held for the account of the Participant
under  the  Plan,  except  to  the  extent  that there has been a designation of
beneficiaries in accordance with the Plan, and except to the extent permitted by
will  or  the  laws  of  descent and distribution if beneficiaries have not been
designated.  A  Participant's  right  to purchase shares under the Plan shall be
exercisable  only  during  the  Participant's  lifetime  and  only  by  him.

15.  COSTS

     All costs and expenses incurred in administering this Plan shall be paid by
the Company.  Any brokerage fees for the sale of shares purchased under the Plan
shall  be  paid  by  the  Participant.

16.  REPORTS

     At  the  end of each Purchase Period, the Company shall provide or cause to
be  provided  to  each  Participant  a  report  of  his contributions, including
interest  earned,  and  the  number  of  Ordinary  Shares  purchased  with  such
contributions  by  that  Participant  on  each  Purchase  Date.


                                       51

17.  EQUAL RIGHTS AND PRIVILEGES

     All  eligible Employees shall have equal rights and privileges with respect
to  the  Plan to the extent necessary to enable the Plan to qualify for U.S. tax
purposes  as an "employee stock purchase plan" within the meaning of Section 423
or  any  successor provision of the Code and related regulations.  Any provision
of the Plan which is inconsistent with Section 423 or any successor provision of
the  Code  shall  without further act or amendment by the Company be reformed to
comply  with  the  requirements  of  Section  423.  This  Section  17 shall take
precedence  over  all  other  provisions  in  the  Plan.

18.  RIGHTS AS SHAREHOLDERS

     A  Participant  will  have no rights as a shareholder under the election to
purchase  until he becomes a shareholder as herein provided.  A Participant will
become a shareholder with respect to shares for which payment has been completed
as  provided  in  Section 9 at the close of business on the last business day of
the  Purchase  Period.

19.  MODIFICATION AND TERMINATION

     The  Board may amend or terminate the Plan at any time insofar as permitted
by  law.  No amendment shall be effective unless within one (1) year after it is
adopted  by the Board, it is approved by the holders of Transocean's outstanding
shares  if  and  to  the  extent  such  amendment  is required to be approved by
shareholders  in  order  to  cause the rights granted under the Plan to purchase
Ordinary  Shares  to  meet  the  requirements of Section 423 of the Code (or any
successor  provision).

     The  Plan  shall  terminate after all Ordinary Shares issued under the Plan
have been purchased, unless terminated earlier by the Board or unless additional
Ordinary Shares are issued under the Plan with the approval of the shareholders.
In  the  event  the Plan is terminated, the Committee may elect to terminate all
outstanding  rights to purchase shares under the Plan either immediately or upon
completion  of  the  purchase  of  shares  on the next Purchase Date, unless the
Committee  has designated that the right to make all such purchases shall expire
on some other designated date occurring prior to the next Purchase Date.  If the
rights to purchase shares under the Plan are terminated prior to expiration, all
funds  contributed to the Plan which have not been used to purchase shares shall
be  returned to the Participants as soon as administratively feasible, including
interest  and dividends, if applicable, determined in accordance with Section 7.

20.  BOARD AND SHAREHOLDER APPROVAL; EFFECTIVE DATE

     The  Plan  was  originally  adopted  by the Board on March 12, 1998 and was
effective  immediately  on  such  date.  The  Plan  was  originally  approved by
shareholders  at  the  1998  annual  meeting.  The Plan was amended and restated
effective  January 1, 2000.  This amendment and restatement of the Plan shall be
effective as of May 8, 2003.

21.  GOVERNMENTAL APPROVALS OR CONSENTS

     This  Plan  and any offering or sale made to Employees under it are subject
to  any  governmental  approvals or consents that may be or become applicable in
connection  therewith.  Subject  to  the provisions of Section 19, the Board may
make  such  changes in the Plan and include such terms in any offering under the
Plan  as  may  be  desirable  to  comply  with  the  rules or regulations of any
governmental  authority.


                                       52

22.  LISTING OF SHARES AND RELATED MATTERS

     If at any time the Board or the Committee shall determine, based on opinion
of  legal counsel, that the listing, registration or qualification of the shares
covered by the Plan upon any national securities exchange or reporting system or
under  any  state or federal law is necessary or desirable as a condition of, or
in  connection  with,  the  sale or purchase of shares under the Plan, no shares
will be sold, issued or delivered unless and until such listing, registration or
qualification  shall  have been effected or obtained, or otherwise provided for,
free  of  any  conditions  not  acceptable  to  legal  counsel.

23.  EMPLOYMENT RIGHTS

     The  Plan  shall  neither  impose  any  obligation  on Transocean or on any
Subsidiary  to  continue  the  employment  of  any  Participant,  nor impose any
obligation  on  any  Participant to remain in the employ of Transocean or of any
Subsidiary.

24.  WITHHOLDING OF TAXES

     The  Committee  may make such provisions as it may deem appropriate for the
withholding  of any taxes which it determines is required in connection with the
purchase  of  Ordinary  Shares  under  the  Plan.

25.  SUBSIDIARY TERMS

     In  addition  to  changes  in  eligibility  requirements,  the  adopting
Subsidiaries  may make any changes in the terms of this Plan applicable to their
Employees as shall be acceptable to the Committee, provided that such changes do
not cause the Plan to fail to comply with the requirements of Section 423 of the
Code,  to  the  extent  it  is  applicable.

26.  GOVERNING LAW

     The  Plan and rights to purchase shares that may be granted hereunder shall
be  governed  by  and  construed and enforced in accordance with the laws of the
State  of  Texas.

27.  USE OF GENDER

     The  gender  of  words  used  in  the  Plan  shall  be construed to include
whichever  may  be  appropriate  under  any  particular  circumstances  of  the
masculine,  feminine  or  neuter  genders.

28.  OTHER PROVISIONS

     The  agreements  to  purchase  Ordinary Shares under the Plan shall contain
such  other  provisions  as  the  Committee  and the Board shall deem advisable,
provided  that  no such provision shall in any way be in conflict with the terms
of  the  Plan.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, this document has been executed effective as of May 8, 2003.

                                            TRANSOCEAN INC.


                                            By: ___________________________
                                                   Eric B. Brown
                                                   Corporate Secretary


                                       53

                                 TRANSOCEAN INC.
                                  Walker House
                                   Mary Street
                                P. O. Box 265 GT
                                   George Town
                                  Grand Cayman
                                 Cayman Islands


                                    P R O X Y

               PROXY SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

     The undersigned, revoking any proxy heretofore given in connection with the
Annual  General  Meeting  described  below,  hereby appoints J. Michael Talbert,
Robert L. Long, Gregory L. Cauthen and Eric B. Brown, and each of them, proxies,
with  full  powers  of  substitution, to represent the undersigned at the Annual
General  Meeting  of Transocean Inc. to be held on Thursday, May 8, 2003 at 9:00
a.m.,  at  the  Royal Pavilion Hotel, St. James, Barbados and at any adjournment
thereof,  and to vote all ordinary shares that the undersigned would be entitled
to  vote  if  personally  present  as  follows:

     The  shares represented by this proxy will be voted as directed herein.  IF
THIS  PROXY  IS  DULY  EXECUTED AND RETURNED, AND NO VOTING DIRECTIONS ARE GIVEN
HEREIN, SUCH SHARES WILL BE VOTED "FOR" ALL NOMINEES LISTED IN ITEM 1, "FOR" THE
PROPOSAL  TO AMEND OUR LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN, "FOR" THE PROPOSAL TO AMEND OUR
EMPLOYEE  STOCK PURCHASE PLAN, AND "FOR" THE PROPOSAL TO APPROVE THE APPOINTMENT
OF  ERNST & YOUNG LLP. The undersigned hereby acknowledges receipt of notice of,
and  the  proxy  statement  for,  the  aforesaid  Annual  General  Meeting.

           (Continued and to be signed and dated on the reverse side)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" APPROVAL OF ITEMS 1 THROUGH 4.

Item 1.   Election  of  Directors

          Nominees  for  the  Board  of  Directors:  Victor  E. Grijalva, Arthur
          Lindenauer,  Richard  A.  Pattarozzi,  Kristian  Siem  and  J. Michael
          Talbert

          [ ]  FOR all nominees listed           [ ]  WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote
                                                        for all nominees listed

          [ ]  FOR  all  nominees listed, except vote withheld for the following
               nominee(s):

               -----------------------------------------------------------------

Item 2.   Approval  of  the  amendment  of our Long-Term Incentive Plan to allow
          grants of incentive stock options for an additional ten year period to
          May  1,  2013,  and to allow a continuing right to grant stock options
          and  share  appreciation  rights  to  our  outside  directors.

          [ ]  FOR                 [ ]  AGAINST                  [ ]  ABSTAIN

Item 3.   Approval  of  the  amendment  of  our  Employee Stock Purchase Plan to
          increase the number of ordinary shares reserved for issuance under the
          plan  from  1,500,000  to  2,500,000.

          [ ]  FOR                 [ ]  AGAINST                  [ ]  ABSTAIN



Item 4.   Approval  of  the  appointment  of  Ernst  &  Young  LLP  to  serve as
          independent  auditors.

          [ ]  FOR                 [ ]  AGAINST                  [ ]  ABSTAIN

ITEM 5.   IN  THEIR  DISCRETION,  THE  PROXIES  ARE AUTHORIZED TO VOTE UPON SUCH
          OTHER  MATTERS  AS  MAY  PROPERLY  COME  BEFORE  THE  MEETING.

                               Change of Address and/or Comments Mark Here [  ]

                               Date
                                    -------------------------------------------


                               ------------------------------------------------
                                                 Signature



                               ------------------------------------------------
                                                 Signature

                               Sign exactly as name appears hereon. (If shares
                               are held in joint names, both should sign. If
                               signing as Attorney, Executor, Administrator,
                               Trustee or Guardian, please give your title as
                               such. If the signer is a corporation, please sign
                               in the full corporate name by duly authorized
                               officer.)

                               Votes must be indicated [ x ] in Black or Blue
                               Ink.

(Please  sign,  date  and  return  this  proxy  promptly in the enclosed postage
prepaid envelope.)

TRANSOCEAN



                                      -2-