SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549

                                    FORM 10-Q


X        QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES
         EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 - For the quarter ended September 30, 2002

                                       OR

         TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES
         EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

                          Commission file number 1-640
                                                 -----


                               NL INDUSTRIES, INC.

             (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)



               New Jersey                                    13-5267260
- --------------------------------------                 --------------------
(State or other jurisdiction of                           (IRS Employer
incorporation or organization)                          Identification No.)



16825 Northchase Drive, Suite 1200, Houston, Texas           77060-2544
- --------------------------------------------------      --------------------
     (Address of principal executive offices)               (Zip Code)



Registrant's telephone number, including area code:      (281)  423-3300
                                                        ------------------



Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required
to be filed  by  Section  13 or 15 (d) of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934
during  the  preceding  12  months,  and (2) had  been  subject  to such  filing
requirements for the past 90 days. Yes X No

Number of shares of common stock outstanding on November 14, 2002: 47,682,384




                      NL INDUSTRIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

                                      INDEX




                                                                       Page
PART I.   FINANCIAL INFORMATION

  Item 1. Financial Statements.

          Consolidated Balance Sheets - September 30, 2002
           and December 31, 2001                                         3-4

          Consolidated Statements of Income - Three months and nine
           months ended September 30, 2002 and 2001                        5

          Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income
           - Three months and nine months ended
           September 30, 2002 and 2001                                     6

          Consolidated Statement of Shareholders' Equity
           - Nine months ended September 30, 2002                          7

          Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows - Nine
           months ended September 30, 2002 and 2001                      8-9

          Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements                   10-22

  Item 2. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
           Condition and Results of Operations                         23-32

  Item 4. Controls and Procedures                                         33

PART II.  OTHER INFORMATION

  Item 1. Legal Proceedings                                            34-35

  Item 6. Exhibits and Reports on Form 8-K                             35-36




                      NL INDUSTRIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

                           CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS

                                 (In thousands)





                                                        September 30, December 31,
              ASSETS                                        2002          2001
                                                        -----------   ----------

Current assets:

                                                                
    Cash and cash equivalents ........................   $  170,838   $  116,037
    Restricted cash equivalents ......................       52,832       63,257
    Restricted marketable debt securities ............        9,775        3,583
    Accounts and notes receivable ....................      158,569      125,721
    Receivable from affiliates .......................        2,601        3,698
    Refundable income taxes ..........................        1,102        1,530
    Inventories ......................................      170,841      231,056
    Prepaid expenses .................................        8,866        3,193
    Deferred income taxes ............................       11,461       11,011
                                                         ----------   ----------

        Total current assets .........................      586,885      559,086
                                                         ----------   ----------

Other assets:
    Marketable equity securities .....................       44,998       45,227
    Receivable from affiliate ........................       31,900       31,650
    Investment in TiO2 manufacturing joint venture ...      132,078      138,428
    Prepaid pension cost .............................       21,991       18,411
    Restricted marketable debt securities ............        7,204       16,121
    Restricted cash equivalents ......................        2,525         --
    Unrecognized net pension obligations .............        5,901        5,901
    Other ............................................       22,356        6,517
                                                         ----------   ----------

        Total other assets ...........................      268,953      262,255
                                                         ----------   ----------

Property and equipment:
    Land .............................................       26,861       24,579
    Buildings ........................................      141,948      130,710
    Machinery and equipment ..........................      602,388      537,958
    Mining properties ................................       77,910       67,649
    Construction in progress .........................        7,557        5,071
                                                         ----------   ----------
                                                            856,664      765,967
    Less accumulated depreciation and depletion ......      502,094      436,217
                                                         ----------   ----------

        Net property and equipment ...................      354,570      329,750
                                                         ----------   ----------

                                                         $1,210,408   $1,151,091
                                                         ==========   ==========





                      NL INDUSTRIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

                     CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS (CONTINUED)

                                 (In thousands)





    LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY            September 30,    December 31,
                                                        2002             2001
                                                    -----------     ------------

Current liabilities:

                                                              
    Notes payable ..............................    $      --       $    46,201
    Current maturities of long-term debt .......          1,221           1,033
    Accounts payable and accrued liabilities ...        144,419         176,223
    Payable to affiliates ......................          8,856           6,919
    Accrued environmental costs ................         52,887          59,891
    Income taxes ...............................          8,088           7,277
    Deferred income taxes ......................          1,832           1,530
                                                    -----------     -----------

        Total current liabilities ..............        217,303         299,074
                                                    -----------     -----------


Noncurrent liabilities:
    Long-term debt .............................        306,524         195,465
    Deferred income taxes ......................        154,116         143,256
    Accrued environmental costs ................         47,288          47,589
    Accrued pension cost .......................         26,149          26,985
    Accrued postretirement benefits cost .......         27,573          29,842
    Other ......................................         14,370          14,729
                                                    -----------     -----------

        Total noncurrent liabilities ...........        576,020         457,866
                                                    -----------     -----------


Minority interest ..............................          8,312           7,208
                                                    -----------     -----------


Shareholders' equity:
    Common stock ...............................          8,355           8,355
    Additional paid-in capital .................        777,638         777,597
    Retained earnings ..........................        222,722         222,722
    Accumulated other comprehensive loss .......       (174,357)       (206,351)
    Treasury stock .............................       (425,585)       (415,380)
                                                    -----------     -----------

        Total shareholders' equity .............        408,773         386,943
                                                    -----------     -----------

                                                    $ 1,210,408     $ 1,151,091
                                                    ===========     ===========


Commitments and contingencies (Note 16)





                      NL INDUSTRIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

                        CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME

                      (In thousands, except per share data)



                                           Three months ended    Nine months ended
                                             September 30,         September 30,
                                          ------------------    -------------------
                                            2002       2001       2002       2001
                                          --------   --------   --------   --------

Revenues and other income:
                                                               
    Net sales .........................   $234,061   $206,952   $663,327   $653,117
    Other income, net .................      4,329      6,826     17,230     27,555
                                          --------   --------   --------   --------

                                           238,390    213,778    680,557    680,672
                                          --------   --------   --------   --------

Costs and expenses:
    Cost of sales .....................    177,521    145,945    510,021    447,167
    Selling, general and administrative     39,143     30,665    106,377     92,323
    Interest ..........................      7,554      6,949     22,167     20,812
                                          --------   --------   --------   --------

                                           224,218    183,559    638,565    560,302
                                          --------   --------   --------   --------

        Income before income taxes and
          minority interest ...........     14,172     30,219     41,992    120,370

Income tax expense ....................      4,677      9,681     11,695     38,896
                                          --------   --------   --------   --------

        Income before minority interest      9,495     20,538     30,297     81,474

Minority interest .....................        713       --        1,083        953
                                          --------   --------   --------   --------

        Net income ....................   $  8,782   $ 20,538   $ 29,214   $ 80,521
                                          ========   ========   ========   ========

Earnings per share:
    Basic .............................   $    .18   $    .41   $    .60   $   1.61
                                          ========   ========   ========   ========
    Diluted ...........................   $    .18   $    .41   $    .60   $   1.61
                                          ========   ========   ========   ========

Weighted average shares used
 in the calculation of earnings
 per share:
      Basic ...........................     48,623     49,621     48,772     49,876
      Dilutive impact of stock options          58         84         85        153
                                          --------   --------   --------   --------

      Diluted .........................     48,681     49,705     48,857     50,029
                                          ========   ========   ========   ========






                      NL INDUSTRIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

                 CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME

                                 (In thousands)



                                                 Three months ended      Nine months ended
                                                    September 30,           September 30,
                                                 -------------------    --------------------
                                                  2002        2001        2002        2001
                                                 -------    --------    --------    --------

                                                                        
Net income ...................................   $ 8,782    $ 20,538    $ 29,214    $ 80,521
                                                 -------    --------    --------    --------

Other comprehensive income (loss), net of tax:
    Marketable securities adjustment:
        Unrealized holding gain (loss) arising
          during the period ..................    (2,890)     (5,258)        239      (1,669)
        Add:  reclassification adjustment for
          loss included in net income ........      --          --          --           736
                                                 -------    --------    --------    --------

                                                  (2,890)     (5,258)        239        (933)

    Currency translation adjustment ..........    (4,601)     13,161      31,755      (7,204)
                                                 -------    --------    --------    --------

        Total other comprehensive income
          (loss) .............................    (7,491)      7,903      31,994      (8,137)
                                                 -------    --------    --------    --------

            Comprehensive income .............   $ 1,291    $ 28,441    $ 61,208    $ 72,384
                                                 =======    ========    ========    ========







                      NL INDUSTRIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

                 CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY

                      Nine months ended September 30, 2002

                                 (In thousands)




                                                                                 Accumulated other
                                                                            comprehensive income (loss)
                                                      Additional         ---------------------------------
                                               Common  paid-in  Retained   Currency    Pension   Marketable Treasury
                                               stock   capital  earnings translation liabilities securities   stock     Total
                                           -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                                              
Balance at December 31, 2001                  $8,355 $ 777,597  $222,722  $(208,349)  $(6,352)     $8,350  $(415,380) $386,943

Net income                                      -         -       29,214       -          -           -         -       29,214
Other comprehensive income, net of tax          -         -         -        31,755       -           239       -       31,994
Dividends                                       -         -      (29,214)      -          -           -         -      (29,214)
Tax benefit of stock options exercised          -           41      -          -          -           -         -           41
Treasury stock:
    Acquired (719 shares)                       -         -         -          -          -           -      (10,559)  (10,559)
    Reissued (29 shares)                        -         -         -          -          -           -          354       354
                                              ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at September 30, 2002                 $8,355 $ 777,638  $222,722  $(176,594)  $(6,352)     $8,589  $(425,585) $408,773
                                              =================================================================================







                      NL INDUSTRIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

                     CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS

                  Nine months ended September 30, 2002 and 2001

                                 (In thousands)





                                                                         2002        2001
                                                                      --------    --------
Cash flows from operating activities:
                                                                            
    Net income ....................................................   $ 29,214    $ 80,521
    Depreciation, depletion and amortization ......................     24,590      22,335
    Deferred income taxes .........................................      3,549       7,340
    Distributions from TiO2 manufacturing joint venture ...........      6,350       5,513
    Litigation settlement gain, net included in restricted cash ...       --       (10,307)
    Net losses from securities transactions .......................         59       1,133
    Insurance recoveries, net .....................................       --        (5,829)
    Other, net ....................................................     (4,346)     (3,082)
                                                                      --------    --------

                                                                        59,416      97,624

    Change in assets and liabilities:
        Accounts and notes receivable .............................    (33,767)    (12,986)
        Insurance receivable ......................................     11,218      (2,508)
        Inventories ...............................................     72,532      15,676
        Prepaid expenses ..........................................     (5,208)     (3,891)
        Accounts payable and accrued liabilities ..................    (49,584)     (7,872)
        Income taxes ..............................................        377      12,018
        Other, net ................................................     13,125      (5,637)
                                                                      --------    --------

            Net cash provided by operating activities .............     68,109      92,424
                                                                      --------    --------

Cash flows from investing activities:
    Capital expenditures ..........................................    (18,070)    (32,391)
    Acquisition of business .......................................     (9,149)       --
    Loans to affiliates:
        Loans .....................................................       --       (33,400)
        Collections ...............................................        750         500
    Property damaged by fire:
        Insurance proceeds ........................................       --        10,500
        Other, net ................................................       --        (2,100)
    Change in restricted cash equivalents and restricted marketable
      debt securities, net ........................................        821         700
    Other, net ....................................................        848          84
                                                                      --------    --------

        Net cash used by investing activities .....................    (24,800)    (56,107)
                                                                      --------    --------






                      NL INDUSTRIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

                CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS (CONTINUED)

                  Nine months ended September 30, 2002 and 2001

                                 (In thousands)




                                                             2002         2001
                                                         ---------    ----------
Cash flows from financing activities:
                                                                
    Dividends paid ...................................   $ (29,214)   $ (29,897)
    Treasury stock:
        Purchased ....................................     (10,559)      (9,853)
        Reissued .....................................         354          619
    Indebtedness:
        Borrowings ...................................     330,800        1,437
        Principal payments ...........................    (271,939)     (22,132)
        Deferred financing costs .....................     (10,590)        --
    Other, net .......................................         (11)          (5)
                                                         ---------    ---------

    Net cash provided (used) by financing activities .       8,841      (59,831)
                                                         ---------    ---------

Cash and cash equivalents:
    Net change from:
        Operating, investing and financing activities       52,150      (23,514)
        Currency translation .........................       2,455          136
        Acquisition of business ......................         196         --
                                                         ---------    ---------
                                                            54,801      (23,378)

    Balance at beginning of period ...................     116,037      120,378
                                                         ---------    ---------

    Balance at end of period .........................   $ 170,838    $  97,000
                                                         =========    =========


Supplemental disclosures - cash paid for:
    Interest .........................................   $  19,354    $  14,239
    Income taxes, net ................................       7,837       19,538

    Acquisition of business:
        Cash and cash equivalents ....................   $     196    $    --
                                                         ---------    ---------
        Restricted cash ..............................       2,685         --
        Goodwill and other intangible assets .........       9,007         --
        Other noncash assets .........................       1,259         --
        Liabilities ..................................      (3,998)        --
                                                         ---------    ---------

            Cash paid ................................   $   9,149    $    --
                                                         =========    =========




                      NL INDUSTRIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


Note 1 - Organization and basis of presentation:

     NL  Industries,  Inc.  conducts  its  titanium  dioxide  pigments  ("TiO2")
operations  through its wholly owned subsidiary,  Kronos,  Inc.  ("Kronos").  At
September 30, 2002, Valhi, Inc. ("Valhi") and Tremont  Corporation  ("Tremont"),
each  affiliates  of  Contran  Corporation,  held  approximately  62%  and  21%,
respectively,  of NL's outstanding  common stock. At September 30, 2002, Contran
and its subsidiaries held approximately 93% of Valhi's outstanding common stock,
and Tremont Group, Inc. ("Tremont  Group"),  which is 80% owned by Valhi and 20%
owned by NL, held  approximately  80% of  Tremont's  outstanding  common  stock.
Substantially  all of  Contran's  outstanding  voting  stock  is held by  trusts
established for the benefit of certain  children and  grandchildren of Harold C.
Simmons, of which Mr. Simmons is sole trustee.  Mr. Simmons, the Chairman of the
Board of NL, Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive  Officer of Contran,  the
Chairman  of the  Board of Valhi and a  director  of  Tremont,  may be deemed to
control each of such companies. See Note 8.

     The  consolidated  balance sheet of NL  Industries,  Inc. and  Subsidiaries
(collectively,  the  "Company") at December 31, 2001 has been condensed from the
Company's  audited   consolidated   financial   statements  at  that  date.  The
consolidated balance sheet at September 30, 2002 and the consolidated statements
of income,  comprehensive  income,  shareholders'  equity and cash flows for the
interim  periods  ended  September  30, 2002 and 2001 have been  prepared by the
Company without audit. In the opinion of management all adjustments,  consisting
only  of  normal  recurring   adjustments,   necessary  to  present  fairly  the
consolidated financial position,  results of operations and cash flows have been
made.  The results of  operations  for the interim  periods are not  necessarily
indicative of the operating results for a full year or of future operations.

     Certain information and footnote disclosures normally included in financial
statements prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting  principles
in the U.S. ("GAAP") have been condensed or omitted.  Certain prior-year amounts
have  been  reclassified  to  conform  to the  current  year  presentation.  The
accompanying  consolidated  financial  statements  should be read in conjunction
with the  consolidated  financial  statements  included in the Company's  Annual
Report on Form 10-K for the year  ended  December  31,  2001 (the  "2001  Annual
Report").

     The Company adopted Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards  ("SFAS")
No. 142,  "Goodwill and Other  Intangible  Assets,"  effective  January 1, 2002.
Under SFAS No. 142,  goodwill,  including  goodwill  arising from the difference
between the cost of an  investment  accounted  for by the equity  method and the
amount of the  underlying  equity in net assets of such equity  method  investee
("equity method goodwill"),  will not be amortized on a periodic basis. Instead,
goodwill  (other than equity method  goodwill)  will be subject to an impairment
test to be performed at least on an annual  basis,  and  impairment  reviews may
result in  future  periodic  write-downs  charged  to  earnings.  Equity  method
goodwill  will not be tested for  impairment  in  accordance  with SFAS No. 142;
rather,  the overall  carrying amount of an equity method investee will continue
to be reviewed  for  impairment  in  accordance  with  existing  GAAP.  There is
currently no equity method goodwill  associated with the Company's equity method
investee.  All goodwill arising in a purchase  business  combination  (including
step acquisitions)  completed on or after July 1, 2001 would not be periodically
amortized  from the date of such  combination.  The Company had goodwill of $6.4
million at September 30, 2002. See Note 3.

     The  Company  adopted  SFAS No.  144,  "Accounting  for the  Impairment  or
Disposal of Long-Lived  Assets," effective January 1, 2002. SFAS No. 144 retains
the fundamental  provisions of existing GAAP with respect to the recognition and
measurement  of  long-lived  asset   impairment   contained  in  SFAS  No.  121,
"Accounting for the Impairment of Long-Lived Assets and for Long-Lived Assets to
be Disposed Of." However, SFAS No. 144 provides new guidance intended to address
certain  significant   implementation  issues  associated  with  SFAS  No.  121,
including expanded guidance with respect to appropriate cash flows to be used to
determine  whether  recognition of any long-lived  asset impairment is required,
and if required how to measure the amount of the  impairment.  SFAS No. 144 also
requires  that any net assets to be  disposed  of by sale to be  reported at the
lower of  carrying  value or fair  value  less  cost to sell,  and  expands  the
reporting of discontinued  operations to include any component of an entity with
operations and cash flows that can be clearly distinguished from the rest of the
entity.  The adoption of SFAS No. 144  effective  January 1, 2002 did not have a
material effect on the Company's  consolidated  financial  position,  results of
operations or liquidity.

     The Company adopted SFAS No. 145,  "Rescission of FASB Statements No. 4, 44
and 64, Amendment of FASB Statement No. 13 and Technical  Corrections" effective
April  1,  2002.  SFAS  No.  145,  among  other  things,  eliminated  the  prior
requirement that all gains and losses from the early extinguishment of debt were
to be classified as an extraordinary  item. Upon adoption of SFAS No. 145, gains
and  losses  from the  early  extinguishment  of debt are now  classified  as an
extraordinary  item  only if they meet the  "unusual  and  infrequent"  criteria
contained in Accounting  Principles  Board Opinion ("APBO") No. 30. In addition,
upon   adoption  of  SFAS  No.  145,   all  gains  and  losses  from  the  early
extinguishment  of debt that had previously been classified as an  extraordinary
item are to be  reassessed  to determine if they would have met the "unusual and
infrequent"  criteria  of APBO No. 30; any such gain or loss that would not have
met the APBO No. 30 criteria are  retroactively  reclassified  and reported as a
component of income before  extraordinary  item.  The Company has concluded that
all of its previously-recognized  gains and losses from the early extinguishment
of debt that  occurred  on or after  January 1, 1998 would not have met the APBO
No. 30 criteria for  classification  as an  extraordinary  item, and accordingly
such previously-reported  gains and losses from the early extinguishment of debt
have been  retroactively  reclassified  and  reported as a  component  of income
before  extraordinary  item.  The effect of adoption  for the nine months  ended
September 30, 2002 was a second-quarter 2002 reclassification of a first-quarter
2002 loss of $92,000  ($60,000,  net of income tax benefit)  from  extraordinary
item to income before extraordinary item under interest expense.

Note 2 - Earnings per share:

     Basic earnings per share is based on the weighted  average number of common
shares  outstanding  during each period.  Diluted earnings per share is based on
the weighted average number of common shares outstanding and the dilutive impact
of outstanding stock options.

Note 3 - Business combination

     In January 2002 the Company acquired all of the stock and limited liability
company  units  of  EWI  RE,  Inc.  and  EWI  RE,  Ltd.   (collectively  "EWI"),
respectively,  for an aggregate of $9.2 million in cash,  including  acquisition
costs  of $.2  million.  An  entity  controlled  by one of  Harold  C.  Simmons'
daughters  owned a majority of EWI,  and a wholly  owned  subsidiary  of Contran
owned the  remainder  of EWI. EWI provides  reinsurance  brokerage  services for
insurance  policies of the Company,  its joint  venture and other  affiliates of
Contran  as  well  as  external  third-party  customers.  In  addition,  EWI  is
attempting to obtain new third-party  customers in the future.  The purchase was
approved by a special  committee of the Company's Board of Directors  consisting
of two of its  directors  unrelated  to  Contran,  and the  purchase  price  was
negotiated by the special  committee  based upon its  consideration  of relevant
factors,  including  but not limited to due diligence  performed by  independent
consultants  and an appraisal of EWI  conducted  by an  independent  third party
selected by the special committee.

     EWI's  results of  operations  and cash flows are included in the Company's
consolidated  results of operations and cash flows  beginning  January 2002. The
pro forma effect on the Company's results of operations in the first nine months
of 2001,  assuming the acquisition of EWI had occurred as of January 1, 2001, is
not material.  The  aggregate  cash  purchase  price of $9.2 million  (including
acquisition  costs of $.2 million) has been allocated to the assets acquired and
liabilities  assumed,  consisting of a definite-lived,  customer list intangible
asset of $2.6  million and  goodwill  of $6.4  million,  based upon  preliminary
estimates of fair value.  Such  identifiable  intangible asset and goodwill were
included in other noncurrent assets at September 30, 2002. The actual allocation
may be different  from the  preliminary  allocation  due to  refinements  in the
estimates of fair values of the net assets acquired. The identifiable intangible
asset  will be  amortized  on a  straight-line  basis  over a period  of 7 years
(approximately  6.3 years  remaining  at  September  30,  2002)  with no assumed
residual  value.  Goodwill will not be amortized on a periodic basis but instead
will subject to periodic impairment tests in accordance with the requirements of
SFAS No. 142. See Note 1.

Note 4 - Business segment information:

     The Company's  operations are conducted by Kronos in one operating business
segment - the production and sale of TiO2.



                                                   Three months ended        Nine months ended
                                                     September 30,             September 30,
                                                 ----------------------    ----------------------
                                                    2002         2001         2002         2001
                                                    ----         ----         ----         ----
                                                                            (In thousands)

                                                                            
Net sales ....................................   $ 234,061    $ 206,952    $ 663,327    $ 653,117
Other income (expense),
 excluding corporate .........................       1,558         (337)       1,242        1,673
                                                 ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------
                                                   235,619      206,615      664,569      654,790

Cost of sales ................................     177,521      145,945      510,021      447,167
Selling, general and
 administrative, excluding corporate .........      28,479       24,448       78,105       74,315
                                                 ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------

        Operating income .....................      29,619       36,222       76,443      133,308

Insurance recoveries, net ....................        --          3,900         --          5,829
                                                 ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------

        Income before corporate items, income
          taxes and minority interest ........      29,619       40,122       76,443      139,137

General corporate income (expense):
    Securities earnings, net .................       1,752        2,145        4,300        5,937
    Litigation settlement gains, net and other
      income .................................       1,019        1,129        5,417       14,127
    Currency transaction gains (see Note 14) .        --           --          6,271         --
    Corporate expenses .......................     (10,664)      (6,228)     (28,272)     (18,019)
    Interest expense .........................      (7,554)      (6,949)     (22,167)     (20,812)
                                                 ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------

        Income before income taxes and
          minority interest ..................   $  14,172    $  30,219    $  41,992    $ 120,370
                                                 =========    =========    =========    =========


Note 5 - Accounts and notes receivable:



                                                    September 30,     December 31,
                                                        2002             2001
                                                    ------------      ------------
                                                             (In thousands)

                                                                
Trade receivables ..............................      $ 149,560       $  99,989
Insurance claims receivable ....................            287          11,505
Recoverable VAT and other receivables ..........         11,321          16,585
Allowance for doubtful accounts ................         (2,599)         (2,358)
                                                      ---------       ---------

                                                      $ 158,569       $ 125,721
                                                      =========       =========


Note 6 - Inventories:



                                                   September 30,      December 31,
                                                       2002               2001
                                                     --------          ---------
                                                            (In thousands)

                                                                  
Raw materials ............................           $ 33,835           $ 79,162
Work in process ..........................             11,304              9,675
Finished products ........................             96,788            117,201
Supplies .................................             28,914             25,018
                                                     --------           --------

                                                     $170,841           $231,056
                                                     ========           ========


Note 7 - Marketable equity securities:



                                                   September 30,      December 31,
                                                       2002              2001
                                                     --------         ----------
                                                             (In thousands)

Available-for-sale marketable equity securities:
                                                                 
Unrealized gains ...........................         $ 13,133          $ 14,917
Unrealized losses ..........................             (515)           (2,070)
Cost .......................................           32,380            32,380
                                                     --------          --------

    Aggregate fair value ...................         $ 44,998          $ 45,227
                                                     ========          ========


     Available-for-sale marketable equity securities are comprised substantially
of affiliate equity securities.  At September 30, 2002, the Company directly, or
indirectly  through  its 20%  ownership  interest  in  Tremont  Group,  owned an
aggregate of  approximately  1,036,000  shares of Tremont with an aggregate fair
value of approximately $33.2 million.  Further,  the Company also held 1,186,200
shares of Valhi with an aggregate fair value of  approximately  $11.6 million at
September 30, 2002. See Note 6 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
in the 2001 Annual Report.

     In November 2002 Valhi and Tremont and Valhi and Tremont Group entered into
definitive merger agreements  pursuant to which  stockholders of Tremont,  other
than Valhi (but  including the Company) would receive 3.4 shares of Valhi common
stock for each share of Tremont held (including the shares of Tremont indirectly
owned by the Company through its 20% ownership  interest in Tremont Group).  The
merger  between  Tremont  and Valhi was  approved by the board of  directors  of
Tremont  based upon the  recommendation  of a special  committee  of the Tremont
board  comprised of directors who are not affiliated  with Valhi,  is subject to
customary closing  conditions and will require the approval by a majority of the
outstanding  Tremont  shares.  Tremont Group,  which owns  approximately  80% of
Tremont,  has  indicated  that it  intends  to vote its  shares in favor of such
merger.  Upon completion of the mergers,  the Company would receive an aggregate
of  approximately  3.5 million  shares of Valhi  common  stock in return for its
shares of Tremont  Group and Tremont and would  account for such Valhi shares in
the same manner that it accounts for the 1.2 million Valhi shares currently held
by the Company  (available-for-sale  marketable  securities).  The Company would
recognize gain or loss equal to the  difference  between the market value of the
shares  of Valhi  common  stock  received  and the cost  basis of the  shares of
Tremont Group and Tremont exchanged.


Note 8 - Receivable from affiliates:

     A majority-owned  subsidiary of the Company,  NL  Environmental  Management
Services,  Inc. ("EMS"), loaned $13.4 million to Tremont, a related party, under
a reducing revolving loan agreement  ($250,000 per quarter) in the first quarter
of 2001 that matured in March 2003. See Note 1. The loan was approved by special
committees of the Company's and EMS' Boards of Directors. At September 30, 2002,
the  outstanding  loan  balance  was $11.9  million.  In October  2002 a special
committee of the Company's  Board of Directors  approved new loan terms proposed
by Tremont,  whereby  Tremont  repaid the  outstanding  principal  and  interest
balance on the EMS loan with  proceeds  from a new $15  million  revolving  loan
agreement  with  the  Company.  As  such,  the EMS  loan  was  extinguished  and
cancelled. Similar to the EMS loan, the Company's loan to Tremont bears interest
at prime plus 2% (6.75% at October 23, 2002 with  interest  payable  quarterly),
and is  collateralized  by 10.2  million  shares  of NL  common  stock  owned by
Tremont.  The loan is due December 31, 2004, with no principal payments required
prior to that date. The maximum amount  available to Tremont under the revolving
loan agreement is $15 million.  The  creditworthiness of Tremont is dependent in
part on the  value of the  Company  as  Tremont's  interest  in the  Company  is
Tremont's most substantial asset. Because of such refinancing, the $11.9 million
balance  due from  Tremont  at  September  30,  2002 has  been  classified  as a
noncurrent receivable from affiliate.

     In May 2001 a wholly  owned  subsidiary  of EMS loaned  $20  million to the
Harold  C.  Simmons  Family  Trust No. 2  ("Family  Trust"),  one of the  trusts
described in Note 1, under a $25 million  revolving credit  agreement.  The loan
was  approved  by  special  committees  of the  Company's  and  EMS'  Boards  of
Directors.  The loan bears  interest at prime (4.75% at September 30, 2002),  is
due on demand with sixty days notice and is  collateralized by 13,749 shares, or
approximately  35%, of  Contran's  outstanding  Class A voting  common stock and
5,000 shares, or 100%, of Contran's Series E Cumulative preferred stock, both of
which are owned by the Family Trust.  The value of this  collateral is dependent
in part on the  value of the  Company  as  Contran's  interest  in the  Company,
through its beneficial  ownership of Valhi, is one of Contran's more substantial
assets. At September 30, 2002, $5 million was available for additional borrowing
by the Family  Trust.  The loan was  classified  as  noncurrent at September 30,
2002, as the Company does not expect to demand repayment within one year.

Note 9 - Other noncurrent assets:



                                                         September 30,  December 31,
                                                             2002          2001
                                                            -------       ------
                                                                (In thousands)

                                                                    
Deferred financing costs (see Note 12) ..............       $10,054       $  848
Goodwill (see Note 3) ...............................         6,406         --
Intangible asset, net (see Note 3) ..................         2,323         --
Other ...............................................         3,573        5,669
                                                            -------       ------

                                                            $22,356       $6,517
                                                            =======       ======


Note 10 - Accounts payable and accrued liabilities:



                                                   September 30,      December 31,
                                                       2002               2001
                                                     --------           --------
                                                             (In thousands)

                                                                  
Accounts payable .........................           $ 61,572           $ 99,358
                                                     --------           --------
Accrued liabilities:
    Employee benefits ....................             31,156             29,722
    Interest .............................              6,545              4,980
    Deferred income ......................              1,333              4,000
    Other ................................             43,813             38,163
                                                     --------           --------

                                                       82,847             76,865
                                                     --------           --------

                                                     $144,419           $176,223
                                                     ========           ========


Note 11 - Other noncurrent liabilities:



                                                      September 30,     December 31,
                                                          2002             2001
                                                         -------         -------
                                                              (In thousands)

                                                                   
Insurance claims and expenses ..................         $ 8,408         $ 8,789
Employee benefits ..............................           3,762           3,476
Deferred income ................................            --               333
Other ..........................................           2,200           2,131
                                                         -------         -------

                                                         $14,370         $14,729
                                                         =======         =======


Note 12 - Notes payable and long-term debt:



                                                           September 30, December 31,
                                                               2002         2001
                                                           ------------  ------------
                                                                 (In thousands)

                                                                   
Notes payable - Kronos International, Inc. and subsidiaries   $   --     $ 46,201
                                                              ========   ========

Long-term debt:
    NL Industries, Inc.:
        11.75% Senior Secured Notes .......................   $   --     $194,000

    Kronos International, Inc. and subsidiaries:
        8.875% Senior Secured Notes .......................    278,673       --
        Revolving credit facility .........................     26,993       --
        Other .............................................      2,079      2,498
                                                              --------   --------
                                                               307,745    196,498
Less current maturities ...................................      1,221      1,033
                                                              --------   --------

                                                              $306,524   $195,465
                                                              ========   ========


     Notes payable at December 31, 2001,  consisted of (euro)27  million  ($24.0
million) and NOK 200 million  ($22.2  million).  Notes  payable  totaling  $53.2
million were repaid on June 28, 2002 with  proceeds  from the  revolving  credit
facility and available cash and the agreements were terminated.  See description
of revolving credit facility below.

     In June 2002 Kronos International,  Inc. ("KII"),  issued (euro)285 million
($280  million  when issued and $279 million at  September  30, 2002)  principal
amount of 8.875%  Senior  Secured  Notes (the  "Notes") due 2009.  The Notes are
collateralized  by  first  priority  liens on 65% of the  common  stock or other
equity  interests  of certain of KII's  first-tier  subsidiaries.  The Notes are
issued  pursuant  to an  indenture  which  contains  a number of  covenants  and
restrictions  which,  among other  things,  restricts the ability of KII and its
subsidiaries to incur debt,  incur liens,  pay dividends or merge or consolidate
with,  or sell or transfer all or  substantially  all of their assets to another
entity. In addition, the indenture contains customary  cross-default  provisions
with respect to other debt and obligations of KII or its subsidiaries. The Notes
are  redeemable,  at KII's option,  on or after  December 30, 2005 at redemption
prices  ranging from 104.437% of the principal  amount,  declining to 100% on or
after December 30, 2008. In addition, on or before June 30, 2005, KII may redeem
up to 35% of its  Notes  with the net  proceeds  of a  qualified  public  equity
offering  at  108.875%  of the  principal  amount.  In the  event of a change of
control of KII, as  defined,  KII would be required to make an offer to purchase
its Notes at 101% of the principal amount. KII would also be required to make an
offer to purchase a specified portion of its Notes at par value in the event KII
generates a certain  amount of net proceeds from the sale of assets  outside the
ordinary  course of business,  and such net proceeds are not otherwise  used for
specified  purposes  within a specified time period.  At September 30, 2002, KII
was in  compliance  with all the  covenants.  The Notes  require  cash  interest
payments on June 30 and  December  30,  commencing  on December  30,  2002.  KII
commenced  an  exchange  offer on October  18,  2002 to  exchange  the Notes for
registered publicly traded notes that have substantially  identical terms as the
Notes. The exchange offer ends November 18, 2002 unless extended by KII.

     In March 2002 the  Company  redeemed  $25 million  principal  amount of its
11.75% Senior Secured Notes due October 2003 at par value,  using available cash
on hand.  In addition,  the Company used a portion of the net proceeds  from the
issuance of the Notes to redeem in full the  remaining  $169  million  principal
amount of the Company's  11.75% Senior  Secured  Notes.  In accordance  with the
terms of the indenture  governing the 11.75% Senior Secured  Notes,  on June 28,
2002,  the Company  irrevocably  placed on deposit with the trustee  funds in an
amount  sufficient  to pay in full the  redemption  price plus all  accrued  and
unpaid  interest  due  on  the  July  28,  2002  redemption  date.   Immediately
thereafter,  the Company was released from its obligations under such indenture,
the indenture was  discharged  and all  collateral  was released to the Company.
Because  the Company had been  released as being the primary  obligor  under the
indenture as of June 30, 2002, the 11.75% Senior Secured Notes were derecognized
as of that date  along  with the funds  placed on  deposit  with the  trustee to
effect the July 28, 2002 redemption.  The Company recognized a loss on the early
extinguishment  of debt of  approximately  $2 million  in the second  quarter of
2002,  consisting  primarily of the interest on the 11.75% Senior  Secured Notes
for the  period  from July 1 to July 28,  2002.  Such loss was  recognized  as a
component of interest expense.

     In June 2002 KII's operating  subsidiaries  in Germany,  Belgium and Norway
(the "European  Borrowers"),  entered into a three-year (euro)80 million secured
revolving  credit facility  ("European  Credit  Facility").  The European Credit
Facility is available in multiple currencies,  including U.S. dollars, euros and
Norwegian  kroner.  In addition,  the European  Credit  Facility has a (euro)5.0
million sub limit  available for issuance of letters of credit.  As of September
30,  2002,  (euro)16.7  million  ($16.3  million)  and NOK 80.0  million  ($10.7
million) was  outstanding  under the  European  Credit  Facility  and  (euro)1.8
million  ($1.7  million)  of letters of credit were also  outstanding  under the
European Credit Facility. At September 30, 2002,  approximately (euro)51 million
was  available  for  additional  borrowings.  Borrowings  bear  interest  at the
applicable  interbank  market rate plus 1.75%.  As of September  30,  2002,  the
interest rate was 5.07% and 8.86% on the euro and Norwegian  kroner  borrowings,
respectively, and the weighted average interest rate was 6.57%.

     The European Credit Facility is collateralized  by accounts  receivable and
inventory  of the European  Borrowers,  plus a limited  pledge of certain  other
assets of the Belgian  borrower.  The European Credit Facility  contains,  among
others,  various  restrictive  covenants,  including  restrictions  on incurring
liens, asset sales, additional financial indebtedness,  mergers, investments and
acquisitions,  transactions  with  affiliates  and dividends.  In addition,  the
European  Credit  Facility  contains  customary  cross-default  provisions  with
respect to other debt and  obligations  of the European  Borrowers,  KII and its
other  subsidiaries.  The European  Borrowers  were in  compliance  with all the
covenants as of September 30, 2002.

     In September  2002 the Company's  U.S.  operating  subsidiaries  (the "U.S.
Borrowers") entered into a three-year $50 million  asset-based  revolving credit
facility ("U.S. Credit Facility").  Under the terms of the U.S. Credit Facility,
the amount available for borrowing is based on a formula-derived  borrowing base
using  eligible  accounts  receivable  and eligible  inventory and is subject to
maintaining   $5   million   of   minimum   excess   availability    ("Borrowing
Availability").  The maximum amount  available under the U.S. Credit Facility is
$45 million.  As of September  30, 2002,  there were no  outstanding  borrowings
under the U.S. Credit Facility. Borrowings bear interest at either prime rate or
eurodollar rates plus a margin spread based on average excess availability under
the U.S.  Credit  Facility  or  certain  levels of EBITDA  (as  defined)  of the
borrowers.  Margin  spreads range from 0.25% to 1.00% for prime rate  borrowings
and 2.00% to 2.75% for eurodollar rate  borrowings.  The U.S. Credit Facility is
available for future working capital requirements and general corporate purposes
of the U.S. Borrowers, including dividend distributions. The U.S. Borrowers were
in compliance  with all the covenants as of September 30, 2002. The U.S.  Credit
Facility is collateralized by accounts  receivable,  inventory and certain fixed
assets of the U.S.  Borrowers.  The U.S. Credit Facility  contains,  among other
things,  various restrictive and financial  covenants including  restrictions on
incurring liens,  asset sales,  mergers,  and minimum EBITDA (as defined) of the
U.S.  Borrowers  and Kronos.  As of  September  30,  2002,  no  borrowings  were
outstanding  under the U.S. Credit Facility and Borrowing  Availability  was $39
million.

     Deferred  financing  costs of $10.6  million  for the Notes,  the  European
Credit  Facility and the U.S.  Credit Facility are being amortized over the life
of the respective  agreements and are included in other noncurrent  assets as of
September 30, 2002.

     Unused lines of credit available for borrowing under the Company's non-U.S.
credit  facilities  approximated  $51 million at September  30, 2002  (including
approximately   $50  million  under  the  European   Credit  Facility  of  which
approximately $3.3 million is available for letters of credit).

Note 13 - Income taxes:

     The difference between the provision for income tax expense attributable to
income  before  income taxes and minority  interest and the amount that would be
expected using the U.S.  federal  statutory  income tax rate of 35% is presented
below.



                                                            Nine months ended
                                                              September 30,
                                                        ------------------------
                                                          2002           2001
                                                        ---------      ---------
                                                             (In thousands)

                                                                 
Expected tax expense .............................      $ 14,697       $ 42,130
Non-U.S. tax rates ...............................        (3,918)        (3,451)
Incremental tax on income of companies
 not included in NL's consolidated U.S. ..........
 federal income tax return .......................           403            416
Valuation allowance ..............................        (1,828)        (1,343)
U.S. state income taxes ..........................            38            444
Tax contingency reserve adjustments, net .........         2,214           --
Other, net .......................................            89            700
                                                        --------       --------

        Income tax expense .......................      $ 11,695       $ 38,896
                                                        ========       ========


Note 14 - Other income, net:



                                        Three months ended      Nine months ended
                                           September 30,           September 30,
                                        -------------------    --------------------
                                         2002        2001        2002        2001
                                        -------    --------    --------    --------
                                                        (In thousands)

Securities earnings:
                                                               
    Interest and dividends ..........   $ 1,799    $  2,145    $  4,359    $  7,070
    Securities transactions .........       (47)       --           (59)     (1,133)
                                        -------    --------    --------    --------
                                          1,752       2,145       4,300       5,937

Litigation settlement gains, net ....         5        --         2,360      10,582
Insurance recoveries, net ...........      --         3,900        --         5,829
Currency transactions, net ..........       648      (1,183)      5,468          98
Noncompete agreement income .........     1,000       1,000       3,000       3,000
Disposition of property and equipment      (146)          3         451        (416)
Trade interest income ...............       757         611       1,312       1,680
Other, net ..........................       313         350         339         845
                                        -------    --------    --------    --------

                                        $ 4,329    $  6,826    $ 17,230    $ 27,555
                                        =======    ========    ========    ========


  Litigation settlement gains, net

     In the  first  nine  months  of  2002  and  2001,  the  Company  recognized
litigation settlement gains with former insurance carrier groups of $2.4 million
and $10.6 million,  respectively,  to settle certain  insurance  coverage claims
related to environmental  remediation.  A majority of the proceeds from the 2001
settlement  was  transferred  to  special-purpose   trusts  established  by  the
insurance  carrier  group to pay  future  remediation  and  other  environmental
expenditures of the Company.

  Currency transactions, net

     Included in currency transactions, net, as a result of the debt refinancing
described in Note 12, the Company recognized a foreign currency transaction gain
of $6.3 million in the second quarter of 2002 related to the  extinguishment  of
certain intercompany indebtedness with KII.


Note 15 - Leverkusen fire and insurance claim:

     A fire on March 20,  2001  damaged a section of the  Company's  Leverkusen,
Germany 35,000 metric ton sulfate-process TiO2 plant ("Sulfate Plant") and, as a
result,  production of TiO2 at the Leverkusen  facility was halted. The fire did
not enter the Company's adjacent 125,000 metric ton chloride-process  TiO2 plant
("Chloride  Plant"),  but did damage  certain  support  equipment  necessary  to
operate that plant. The damage to the support equipment  resulted in a temporary
shutdown of the Chloride Plant.  The Chloride Plant became fully  operational in
April  2001 and the  Sulfate  Plant  became  approximately  50%  operational  in
September 2001 and fully operational in late October 2001.

     During the third quarter of 2001, the Company's insurance carriers approved
a partial payment of $8 million ($6.8 million received as of September 30, 2001)
for  property  damage  costs  and  business  interruption  losses  caused by the
Leverkusen  fire.  Three  million  dollars of this payment  represented  partial
compensation for business  interruption losses which was recorded as a reduction
of cost of sales to offset  unallocated  period  costs that  resulted  from lost
production.  The remaining $5 million  represented  property  damage  recoveries
against which the Company  recorded $1.1 million of expense  related to clean-up
costs,  resulting  in a net gain of $3.9  million.  In the first nine  months of
2001, the Company's  insurance carriers approved payment of $18.5 million ($17.3
million  received as of September 30, 2001) for losses caused by the  Leverkusen
fire,  including the $8 million  discussed above.  Eight million dollars of this
payment was for business interruption losses and the remaining $10.5 million was
for property  damage losses  against which the Company  recorded $4.7 million of
expenses  resulting  in a net gain of $5.8  million.  The  Company  settled  its
insurance  claim involving the Leverkusen fire during the fourth quarter of 2001
for an aggregate of $56.4 million (including amounts previously  received by the
Company),  of which $27.3  million  related to business  interruption  and $29.1
million  related to property  damages,  clean-up costs and other extra expenses.
The Company recognized $19.3 million of business interruption insurance proceeds
in the fourth  quarter of 2001,  of which  $16.6  million  was  attributable  to
unallocated period costs and lost margin related to the first,  second and third
quarters of 2001. No additional  insurance  recoveries related to the Leverkusen
fire are expected to be received in 2002.

Note 16 - Commitments and contingencies:

     For  descriptions  of  certain  legal  proceedings,  income  tax and  other
commitments and contingencies  related to the Company,  reference is made to (i)
Management's  Discussion  and  Analysis of  Financial  Condition  and Results of
Operations,  (ii) Part II, Item 1 - "Legal Proceedings," and (iii) the Company's
Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarters ended March 31, 2002 and June 30,
2002, and (iv) the 2001 Annual Report.

Note 17 - Accounting principles not yet adopted:

     The  Company  will  adopt SFAS No.  143,  Accounting  for Asset  Retirement
Obligations,  no later than January 1, 2003.  Under SFAS No. 143, the fair value
of a liability  for an asset  retirement  obligation  covered under the scope of
SFAS No.  143  would be  recognized  in the  period in which  the  liability  is
incurred,  with an  offsetting  increase in the  carrying  amount of the related
long-lived  asset.  Over time,  the  liability  would be accreted to its present
value, and the capitalized cost would be depreciated over the useful life of the
related asset.  Upon settlement of the liability,  an entity would either settle
the obligation for its recorded amount or incur a gain or loss upon  settlement.
The Company is studying this  newly-issued  standard to  determine,  among other
things,  whether it has any asset retirement obligations which are covered under
the scope of SFAS No. 143,  and the  effect,  if any, to the Company of adopting
this standard has not yet been determined.

     The Company will adopt SFAS No. 146,  Accounting for Costs  Associated with
Exit or Disposal Activities,  no later than January 1, 2003 for exit or disposal
activities initiated on or after the date of adoption. Under SFAS No. 146, costs
associated with exit  activities,  as defined,  that are covered by the scope of
SFAS No. 146 will be recognized and measured initially at fair value,  generally
in the period in which the liability is incurred.  Costs covered by the scope of
SFAS No. 146  include  termination  benefits  provided  to  employees,  costs to
consolidate  facilities or relocate employees,  and costs to terminate contracts
(other than a capital lease).  Under existing GAAP, a liability for such an exit
cost is recognized at the date an exit plan is adopted,  which may or may not be
the date at which the liability has been incurred.

Note 18 - Subsequent event:

     On October 22, 2002,  the Company's  Board of Directors  declared a regular
quarterly dividend of $.20 per share to shareholders of record as of December 9,
2002 to be paid on December 23, 2002. On November 14, 2002, the Company's  Board
of Directors declared an additional  dividend of $2.50 per share to shareholders
of record as of November  25,  2002 to be paid on December 5, 2002.  The Company
anticipates that $11.9 million of the additional  dividend to be paid to Tremont
would be used by  Tremont to repay,  in its  entirety,  Tremont's  loan with the
Company,  although the revolving loan agreement would remain in effect following
the repayment and would not be canceled.





MANAGEMENT'S  DISCUSSION  AND  ANALYSIS OF  FINANCIAL  CONDITION  AND RESULTS OF
OPERATIONS


RESULTS OF OPERATIONS



                                      Three months ended           %            Nine months ended           %
                                         September 30,           Change           September 30,           Change
                                   -------------------------- ------------- -------------------------- -------------
                                        2002          2001                       2002          2001
                                   ------------  ------------               ------------  ------------
                                                       (In millions, except percentages and metric tons)

Net sales and operating income
                                                                                          
    Net sales                         $  234.1       $207.0       +13%       $   663.3         $653.1        +2%
    Operating income                  $   29.6       $ 36.2       -18%       $    76.4         $133.3       -43%
    Operating income margin
      percentage                          13%          18%                        12%            20%

TiO2 operating statistics
    Percent change in average
      selling price (in billing
      currencies)                                                  -7%                                      -12%
    Sales volume (metric tons in
      thousands)                         117          103         +14%           352            311         +13%
    Production volume (metric
      tons in thousands)                 116          109          +7%           335            315          +6%


     Kronos'  operating  income  in the third  quarter  of 2002  decreased  $6.6
million  or 18% from the  third  quarter  of 2001 due to lower  average  selling
prices,  partially  offset by higher  sales and  production  volumes.  Operating
income  in  the  third  quarter  of  2001  included  $3.0  million  of  business
interruption  insurance proceeds related to the previously  reported fire at the
Company's Leverkusen, Germany plant in 2001. Compared with the second quarter of
2002,  operating  income in the third  quarter of 2002  increased  20% on higher
selling prices and higher  production  volume,  partially  offset by lower sales
volume.

     Kronos' operating income in the first nine months of 2002 was $76.4 million
and decreased $56.9 million or 43% from the first nine months of 2001 due to 12%
lower average selling prices, partially offset by 13% higher sales volume and 6%
higher  production  volume.  Operating  income in the first nine  months of 2001
included $8.0 million of business interruption insurance proceeds.

     Kronos'  average  selling price in billing  currencies  (which excludes the
effects of foreign currency translation) during the third quarter of 2002 was 7%
lower than the third quarter of 2001 and was 3% higher  compared with the second
quarter of 2002.  Compared with the second  quarter of 2002,  selling  prices in
billing currencies  increased in all major markets. The average selling price in
billing currencies for the first nine months of 2002 was 12% lower compared with
the first nine months of 2001.  September 2002 selling prices were flat compared
with the average  selling price for the quarter;  however,  the Company  expects
fourth-quarter  prices to be higher  than  third  quarter  prices as  previously
announced  price increases  continue to be implemented,  but the extent to which
the Company  will  realize  such price  increases  will  depend on economic  and
competitive  conditions.  The Company  expects a lower average selling price for
full-year 2002 compared to full-year 2001.

     Kronos'  third-quarter 2002 average selling price expressed in U.S. dollars
(computed using actual foreign  currency  exchange rates  prevailing  during the
respective  periods)  was 2% lower than the third  quarter of 2001 and 8% higher
than the second  quarter of 2002.  The  September  2002  average  selling  price
expressed in U.S.  dollars was flat compared with the average  selling price for
the third quarter.  Average selling prices expressed in U.S.  dollars  decreased
11% in the first nine  months of 2002  compared  with the first  nine  months of
2001.

     Third-quarter  2002 sales volume  increased  14% from the third  quarter of
2001 and decreased 4% from the record second quarter of 2002. European and North
American  volumes each increased over 16% from the third quarter of 2001,  while
export  volumes  decreased 3% from third quarter 2001.  Compared with the second
quarter of 2002,  sales volume  decreased 5%, 2% and 8% in the  European,  North
American and export markets, respectively. Sales volume in the first nine months
of 2002 was 41,000  metric tons  higher,  or 13%,  than the first nine months of
2001. Kronos believes that the sales volume increase in the first nine months of
2002 compared with the first nine months of 2001 was  attributable  to improving
economic conditions and customer restocking inventory levels ahead of previously
announced price increases and, in part, to the effects of the Leverkusen fire in
2001.  While Kronos  expects sales volume in the fourth quarter to be seasonally
lower than third quarter 2002, fourth quarter 2002 volumes should  significantly
exceed  fourth  quarter 2001 volumes.  Kronos'  sales volume for full-year  2002
should  be  significantly  higher  than  full-year  2001,  due  in  part  to the
Leverkusen fire.

     Third-quarter  2002 production  volume was 7% higher than the third quarter
of 2001 and increased 3% from the second  quarter of 2002 with  operating  rates
near full  capacity in the third  quarter of 2002.  The increase  from the prior
year  period  was due in part to lost  sulfate-process  production  in 2001 as a
result of the  Leverkusen  fire.  Production  volume in the first nine months of
2002  increased 6% compared with the first nine months of 2001.  Finished  goods
inventory  levels at the end of the third  quarter  decreased  2% from June 2002
levels and represented approximately two months of sales. Kronos anticipates its
production volume for full-year 2002 will be higher than that of full-year 2001,
due in part to the Leverkusen fire.

     A fire on March 20,  2001  damaged a section of the  Company's  Leverkusen,
Germany 35,000 metric ton sulfate-process TiO2 plant ("Sulfate Plant") and, as a
result,  production of TiO2 at the Leverkusen  facility was halted. The fire did
not enter the Company's adjacent 125,000 metric ton chloride-process  TiO2 plant
("Chloride  Plant"),  but did damage  certain  support  equipment  necessary  to
operate that plant. The damage to the support equipment  resulted in a temporary
shutdown of the Chloride Plant.  The Chloride Plant became fully  operational in
April  2001 and the  Sulfate  Plant  became  approximately  50%  operational  in
September 2001 and fully operational in late October 2001.

     During the third quarter of 2001, the Company's insurance carriers approved
a partial payment of $8 million ($6.8 million received as of September 30, 2001)
for  property  damage  costs  and  business  interruption  losses  caused by the
Leverkusen  fire.  Three  million  dollars of this payment  represented  partial
compensation for business  interruption losses which was recorded as a reduction
of cost of sales to offset  unallocated  period  costs that  resulted  from lost
production.  The remaining $5 million  represented  property  damage  recoveries
against which the Company  recorded $1.1 million of expense  related to clean-up
costs,  resulting  in a net gain of $3.9  million.  In the first nine  months of
2001, the Company's  insurance carriers approved payment of $18.5 ($17.3 million
received as of September  30, 2001) for losses  caused by the  Leverkusen  fire,
including the $8 million discussed above.  Eight million dollars of this payment
was for business  interruption  losses and the  remaining  $10.5 million was for
property  damage  losses  against  which the Company  recorded  $4.7  million of
expenses  resulting  in a net gain of $5.8  million.  The  Company  settled  its
insurance  claim involving the Leverkusen fire during the fourth quarter of 2001
for an aggregate of $56.4 million (including amounts previously  received by the
Company),  of which $27.3  million  related to business  interruption  and $29.1
million  related to property  damages,  clean-up costs and other extra expenses.
The Company recognized $19.3 million of business interruption insurance proceeds
in the fourth  quarter of 2001,  of which  $16.6  million  was  attributable  to
unallocated period costs and lost margin related to the first,  second and third
quarters of 2001. No additional  insurance  recoveries related to the Leverkusen
fire are expected to be received in 2002.

     The Company  believes  TiO2 industry  demand in the fourth  quarter of 2002
should be better than TiO2 industry  demand in the fourth quarter of 2001 due to
worldwide economic conditions.  Based on stronger than anticipated demand in the
first nine  months of 2002,  Kronos'  TiO2 sales  volume in 2002 is  expected to
exceed Kronos' 2002 TiO2  production  volume.  In January 2002 Kronos  announced
price  increases in all major markets of  approximately  5% to 8% above existing
December  2001  prices,  a portion of which was realized in the second and third
quarters.  In May 2002 Kronos announced a second round of price increases in all
major markets of approximately 7% to 11% above June 2002 prices. Assuming demand
for TiO2 remains at reasonable  levels,  Kronos  expects to realize a portion of
the announced May 2002 price  increases  during the fourth  quarter of 2002, but
the extent to which Kronos will realize price  increases will depend on economic
and  competitive  conditions.  Since TiO2 prices were  declining in 2001 and the
first quarter of 2002, the Company believes that its average 2002 prices will be
significantly  below its average 2001 prices.  Overall,  the Company expects its
TiO2 operating income in 2002 will be significantly  lower than 2001,  primarily
due to lower average TiO2 selling prices.  The Company's  expectations as to the
future prospects of the Company and the TiO2 industry are based upon a number of
factors  beyond  the  Company's  control,  including  worldwide  growth of gross
domestic    product,    competition   in   the   marketplace,    unexpected   or
earlier-than-expected  capacity additions and technological  advances. If actual
developments  differ from the Company's  expectations,  the Company's results of
operations could be unfavorably affected.

     Compared to the year-earlier  periods, cost of sales as a percentage of net
sales  increased  in both the  third  quarter  and  first  nine  months  of 2002
primarily due to lower average selling prices in billing  currencies,  partially
offset by higher  production  volume.  Excluding the effects of foreign currency
translation,  which  increased the  Company's  expenses in the third quarter and
first nine  months of 2002  compared  to  year-earlier  periods,  the  Company's
selling, general and administrative  expenses,  excluding corporate expenses, in
the third quarter and first nine months of 2002 were slightly higher compared to
the  year-earlier   periods  primarily  due  to  higher  distribution   expenses
associated with higher sales volume in the 2002 periods.

     A significant  amount of Kronos' sales and operating  costs are denominated
in currencies other than the U.S. dollar.  Fluctuations in the value of the U.S.
dollar relative to other  currencies,  primarily a stronger euro compared to the
U.S.  dollar in the third  quarter  and first  nine  months of 2002  versus  the
year-earlier  periods,  increased the dollar value of sales in the third quarter
and  first  nine  months  of  2002  by  a  net  $14  million  and  $10  million,
respectively, when compared to the year-earlier periods. Sales to export markets
are typically  denominated in U.S.  dollars and a weaker U.S.  dollar  decreases
margins on these sales at the Company's non-U.S. subsidiaries. The effect of the
stronger  euro on  Kronos'  operating  costs  that are not  denominated  in U.S.
dollars increased  operating costs in the third quarter and first nine months of
2002 compared to the year-earlier periods. In addition,  Kronos revalued certain
export trade  receivables and certain  monetary assets held by its  subsidiaries
whose  functional  currency is not the U.S.  dollar and based on the weaker U.S.
dollar  reported a  revaluation  gain in the third quarter of 2002. As a result,
the net impact of currency exchange rate fluctuations increased operating income
by $2.2 million in the third  quarter of 2002 and slightly  decreased  operating
income  in the first  nine  months of 2002  when  compared  to the  year-earlier
periods.

  General corporate

     The  following  table  sets forth  certain  information  regarding  general
corporate income (expense).



                                   Three months ended                         Nine months ended
                                     September 30,          Difference          September 30,           Difference
                               --------------------------- -------------  ---------------------------  -------------
                                   2002          2001                         2002          2001
                               ------------- -------------                ------------- -------------
                                                                  (In millions)

                                                                                     
Securities earnings            $       1.8   $       2.1   $      (.3)   $       4.3     $     6.0     $     (1.7)
Litigation settlement gains,
  net and other income                 1.0           1.1          (.1)           5.4          14.1           (8.7)
Currency transaction gains             -             -            -              6.3           -              6.3
Corporate expense                    (10.6)         (6.2)        (4.4)         (28.2)        (18.0)         (10.2)
Interest expense                      (7.6)         (6.9)         (.7)         (22.2)        (20.8)          (1.4)
                               ------------- ------------- -------------  ------------- -------------  -------------

                               $   (15.4)    $     (9.9)  $     (5.5)     $   (34.4)     $  (18.7)     $   (15.7)
                               ============= ============= =============  ============= =============  =============


     Securities  earnings in the third  quarter of 2002 were  comparable  to the
third quarter of 2001,  while  securities  earnings for the first nine months of
2002 were $1.7  million  lower  compared  with the  first  nine  months of 2001,
primarily due to lower average  interest  yields on invested  funds in the first
nine months of 2002. The Company expects  security  earnings to be lower in 2002
compared to 2001 due primarily to lower average yields.

     In the  first  nine  months  of  2002  and  2001,  the  Company  recognized
litigation settlement gains with former insurance carrier groups of $2.4 million
and $10.6 million,  respectively,  to settle certain  insurance  coverage claims
related to environmental  remediation.  A majority of the proceeds from the 2001
settlement  was  transferred  to  special-purpose   trusts  established  by  the
insurance  carrier  group to pay  future  remediation  and  other  environmental
expenditures  of the  Company.  No  further  material  settlements  relating  to
litigation concerning environmental remediation coverages are expected.

     In June  2002  Kronos  International,  Inc.  ("KII")  completed  a  private
placement  offering  of  (euro)285  million  8.875%  Senior  Secured  Notes (the
"Notes")  due 2009.  KII used the net  proceeds  of the Notes  offering to repay
certain  intercompany  indebtedness owed to the Company,  a portion of which the
Company used to redeem at par all of its outstanding 11.75% Senior Secured Notes
due 2003, plus accrued  interest.  As a result of the  refinancing,  the Company
recognized  a foreign  currency  transaction  gain of $6.3 million in the second
quarter  of  2002  related  to  the   extinguishment  of  certain   intercompany
indebtedness. See Note 12 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

     Corporate  expense  in the  third  quarter  and first  nine  months of 2002
increased $4.4 million and $10.2 million,  respectively,  from  comparable  2001
periods,  primarily due to higher environmental and legal expenses.  Compared to
the second quarter of this year,  corporate expense in the third quarter of 2002
increased $3.1 million  primarily due to higher legal  expenses  related to lead
paint defense costs. The Company expects  corporate expense in 2002 to be higher
than the full year 2001.  Furthermore,  four cases  regarding  lead  pigment are
scheduled for trial in 2003 and legal  expenses  associated  with the defense of
such cases are expected to be significantly higher than 2002.

     Interest  expense in the third quarter of 2002 was $.7 million  higher than
the  comparable  period in 2001  primarily due to higher  levels of  outstanding
debt,  partially offset by lower interest rates.  Interest expense in the second
quarter of 2002 included $2.0 million related to the early extinguishment of the
Company's 11.75% Senior Secured Notes, as the amount paid to extinguish the debt
in June 2002  included  interest  for the  month of July  2002.  Excluding  this
unusual item,  interest  expense in the first nine months of 2002 was comparable
to  the  year-earlier  period.  See  Note  12  to  the  Consolidated   Financial
Statements.

  Provision for income taxes

     The Company  reduced its deferred  income tax  valuation  allowance by $1.8
million  in the first  nine  months of 2002 and $1.3  million  in the first nine
months of 2001  primarily as a result of  utilization  of certain tax attributes
for  which  the  benefit   had  not  been   previously   recognized   under  the
"more-likely-than-not" recognition criteria.

  Accounting principles not yet adopted

         See Note 17 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

  Other

     Minority  interest  primarily  relates  to  the  Company's   majority-owned
environmental management subsidiary,  NL Environmental Management Services, Inc.
("EMS").

LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES

     The  Company's  consolidated  cash  flows  from  operating,  investing  and
financing  activities for the nine months ended  September 30, 2002 and 2001 are
presented below.



                                                              Nine months ended
                                                                 September 30,
                                                              ------------------
                                                              2002         2001
                                                             ------      -------
                                                                (In millions)

Net cash provided (used) by:
    Operating activities:
                                                                    
    Before changes in assets and liabilities .........       $59.4        $97.6
    Changes in assets and liabilities ................         8.7         (5.2)
                                                             -----        -----
                                                              68.1         92.4
Investing activities .................................       (24.8)       (56.1)
Financing activities .................................         8.8        (59.8)
                                                             -----        -----

  Net cash provided (used) by operating,
   investing, and financing activities ...............       $52.1       $(23.5)
                                                             =====       ======




  Operating activities

     The  TiO2   industry  is  cyclical  and  changes  in  economic   conditions
significantly affect the earnings and operating cash flows of the Company.  Cash
flow from  operations  is  considered  the primary  source of liquidity  for the
Company.  Changes in TiO2 pricing,  production volume and customer demand, among
other things, could significantly affect the liquidity of the Company. Cash flow
from  operations,  before changes in assets and  liabilities,  in the first nine
months of 2002  decreased  from the  comparable  period in 2001 primarily due to
$56.9 million of lower  operating  income and $10.2 million of higher  corporate
expenses  partially  offset by $31 million of lower income  taxes.  The net cash
provided  by changes in the  Company's  inventories,  receivables  and  payables
(excluding the effect of currency  translation) in the first nine months of 2002
was  approximately  $8 million  higher  than the net cash used in the first nine
months of 2001 with $41 million  lower  inventory  balances (net of raw material
accruals) and the collection of $11.2 million of insurance  proceeds,  offset by
decreases in accounts payable and accrued  liabilities and increases in accounts
and notes receivable in the first nine months of 2002.  Inventories and accounts
payable were  affected by certain  non-cash  accruals  for certain  titanium ore
contracts  of $31.6  million and $15.3  million at  December  31, 2001 and 2000,
respectively.  These non-cash items were reversed as raw materials were received
under the contracts in the first half of 2002 and 2001, respectively.

  Investing activities

     Capital  expenditures  of $18.1 million and $32.4 million in the first nine
months of 2002 and 2001,  respectively,  included approximately $2.6 million and
$11.7  million,   respectively,   related  to  ongoing   reconstruction  of  the
Leverkusen,   Germany  sulfate  plant.  The  Company  expects  to  complete  the
reconstruction  by December  31,  2002.  In the first nine  months of 2001,  the
Company  received  $10.5  million of  insurance  proceeds  for  property  damage
resulting from the Leverkusen fire and paid $2.1 million of expenses  related to
repairs and clean-up costs.

     In January 2002 the Company acquired all of the stock and limited liability
company  units  of  EWI  RE,  Inc.  and  EWI  RE,  Ltd.   (collectively  "EWI"),
respectively,  for an aggregate of $9.2 million in cash,  including  capitalized
acquisition  costs  of $.2  million.  See Note 3 to the  Consolidated  Financial
Statements.

     In the first quarter of 2001, a  majority-owned  subsidiary of the Company,
EMS, loaned $13.4 million to Tremont Corporation under a reducing revolving loan
agreement. See Notes 1 and 8 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

     In May 2001 a wholly  owned  subsidiary  of EMS loaned  $20  million to the
Harold C. Simmons Family Trust #2 ("Family Trust"),  one of the trusts described
in Note 1 to the  Consolidated  Financial  Statements,  under a new $25  million
revolving credit agreement. See Note 8 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

  Financing activities

     In March 2002 the  Company  redeemed  $25 million  principal  amount of its
11.75% Senior  Secured Notes using  available cash on hand, and in June 2002 the
Company  redeemed the  remaining  $169 million  principal  amount of such 11.75%
Senior Secured Notes using a portion of the proceeds from the June 2002 issuance
of the (euro)285 million principal amount of the KII 8.875% Senior Secured Notes
($280 million when issued).  Also in June 2002, KII's operating  subsidiaries in
Germany,  Belgium and Norway  entered  into a new  three-year  (euro)80  million
secured  revolving  credit facility  ("European  Credit  Facility") and borrowed
(euro)13  million ($13 million) and NOK 200 million ($26 million)  which,  along
with  available  cash,  was used to repay and  terminate  KII's short term notes
payable ($53.2  million when repaid).  In the third quarter of 2002, the Company
repaid a net  euro-equivalent  12.7 million  ($12.4  million when repaid) of the
European Credit Facility. See Note 12 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

     In September 2002 the Company's U.S. operating  subsidiaries entered into a
three-year $50 million  asset-based  revolving  credit  facility  ("U.S.  Credit
Facility").  As of September 30, 2002, no borrowings were outstanding  under the
U.S. Credit Facility and Borrowing  Availability was $39 million. See Note 12 to
the Consolidated Financial Statements.

     Deferred  financing  costs of $10.6  million  for the Notes,  the  European
Credit  Facility and the U.S.  Credit Facility are being amortized over the life
of the respective  agreements and are included in other noncurrent  assets as of
September 30, 2002.

     In the third quarter of 2002, the Company paid a regular quarterly dividend
to  shareholders  of $.20 per share,  aggregating  $9.7 million.  Dividends paid
during the first nine months of 2002 totaled $.60 per share,  or $29.2  million.
On  October  22,  2002,  the  Company's  Board of  Directors  declared a regular
quarterly dividend of $.20 per share to shareholders of record as of December 9,
2002 to be paid on December 23, 2002. On November 14, 2002, the Company's  Board
of Directors declared an additional  dividend of $2.50 per share to shareholders
of record as of November  25,  2002 to be paid on December 5, 2002.  The Company
anticipates that $11.9 million of the additional  dividend to be paid to Tremont
would be used by  Tremont to repay,  in its  entirety,  Tremont's  loan with the
Company,  although the revolving loan agreement would remain in effect following
the  repayment  and  would  not be  canceled.  See  Note  8 to the  Consolidated
Financial Statements.

     Pursuant  to  its  share   repurchase   program,   the  Company   purchased
approximately  491,000  shares  of its  common  stock in the open  market  at an
aggregate  cost of $7.3 million in the third quarter of 2002 and 719,000  shares
at an  aggregate  cost of  $10.6  million  in the  first  nine  months  of 2002.
Approximately  488,000  additional  shares are available for purchase  under the
Company's  repurchase  program  at  September  30,  2002.  In  October  2002 the
Company's Board of Directors  authorized the purchase of up to an additional 1.5
million shares.  Through November 13, 2002, the Company purchased 664,300 shares
of its common  stock in the open market at an aggregate  cost of $10.2  million.
Approximately 1.3 million additional shares are available for purchase under the
Company's  repurchase  program at November 14, 2002. The available shares may be
purchased  over  an  unspecified   period  of  time  and,  depending  on  market
conditions, applicable legal requirements, available cash and other factors, the
share  repurchase  program may be suspended at any time and could be  terminated
prior to completion.  The  repurchased  shares are to be held as treasury shares
available for general corporate purposes.

 Cash,  cash  equivalents,  restricted  cash and restricted  marketable debt
securities and borrowing availability

     At  September  30,  2002,  the  Company  had  cash  and  cash   equivalents
aggregating  $171 million ($22  million  held by non-U.S.  subsidiaries)  and an
additional $72 million of restricted cash equivalents and restricted  marketable
debt  securities  held by the Company,  of which $10 million was classified as a
noncurrent  asset.  Certain of the Company's  subsidiaries had approximately $90
million  available for borrowing at September  30, 2002 with  approximately  $51
million under non-U.S.  credit facilities  (including  approximately $50 million
under the European Credit Facility) and approximately $39 million under the U.S.
Credit Facility (based on Borrowing Availability).

  Income tax contingencies

     Certain  of  the  Company's  tax  returns  in  various  U.S.  and  non-U.S.
jurisdictions  are being  examined  and tax  authorities  have  proposed  or may
propose tax deficiencies, including penalties and interest.

     The Company's and EMS' 1998 U.S.  federal  income tax returns are currently
being examined by the U.S. Internal Revenue Service ("IRS"), and the Company and
EMS have each granted extensions of the statute of limitations for assessment of
such returns until September 30, 2003.  Based upon the course of the examination
to date,  the Company  anticipates  that the IRS may propose a  substantial  tax
deficiency.

     The Company has received  preliminary tax assessments for the years 1991 to
1997 from the Belgian tax  authorities  proposing  tax  deficiencies,  including
related  interest,  of  approximately   (euro)10.4  million  ($10.2  million  at
September 30, 2002).  The Company has filed protests to the  assessments for the
years  1991 to  1997.  The  Company  is in  discussions  with  the  Belgian  tax
authorities  and  believes  that a  significant  portion of the  assessments  is
without merit.

     No assurance  can be given that the Company's tax matters will be favorably
resolved  due  to  the  inherent   uncertainties   involved  in  court  and  tax
proceedings.  The Company  believes that it has provided  adequate  accruals for
additional taxes and related  interest expense which may ultimately  result from
all such  examinations  and  believes  that  the  ultimate  disposition  of such
examinations  should  not  have a  material  adverse  effect  on  the  Company's
consolidated financial position, results of operations or liquidity.

     At September 30, 2002, the Company had net deferred tax liabilities of $143
million. The Company operates in numerous tax jurisdictions, in certain of which
it has temporary  differences that net to deferred tax assets (before  valuation
allowance).  The Company has provided a deferred tax valuation allowance of $177
million  at  September  30,  2002,  principally  related to  Germany,  partially
offsetting  deferred tax assets which the Company believes do not currently meet
the "more-likely-than-not" recognition criteria.

     At September 30, 2002, NL had the equivalent of approximately  $371 million
of income tax loss carryforwards in Germany with no expiration date. However, NL
has provided a deferred tax valuation  allowance  against  substantially  all of
these income tax loss  carryforwards  because NL currently  believes they do not
meet  the  "more-likely-than-not"   recognition  criteria.  The  German  federal
government has proposed certain changes to its income tax law, including certain
changes  that  would  impose  limitations  on  utilization  of  income  tax loss
carryforwards, that as proposed would become effective January 1, 2003. Since NL
has  provided  a  deferred   income  tax  asset  valuation   allowance   against
substantially all of these German tax loss carryforwards, any limitation on NL's
ability to utilize such  carryforwards  resulting from enactment of any of these
proposals  would not have a  material  impact on NL's net  deferred  income  tax
liability.  However,  if enacted,  the  proposed  changes  could have a material
impact  on  NL's   ability  to  fully   utilize  its  German   income  tax  loss
carryforwards,  which would significantly affect the Company's future income tax
expense and future German income tax payments.  NL does not currently expect any
enactment of these proposals would occur prior to January 1, 2003.

  Environmental matters and litigation

     The Company has been named as a defendant,  potentially  responsible  party
("PRP"), or both, in a number of legal proceedings associated with environmental
matters,  including  waste  disposal  sites,  mining  locations  and  facilities
currently or previously owned, operated or used by the Company, certain of which
are on the U.S.  Environmental  Protection  Agency's (the "U.S.  EPA") Superfund
National  Priorities  List or similar  state lists.  On a quarterly  basis,  the
Company  evaluates  the  potential  range of its liability at sites where it has
been  named  as  a  PRP  or  defendant,   including  sites  for  which  EMS  has
contractually  assumed the  Company's  obligation.  The Company  believes it has
adequate accruals ($100 million at September 30, 2002) for reasonably  estimable
costs of such matters, but the Company's ultimate liability may be affected by a
number of factors, including changes in remedial alternatives and costs, and the
allocations  of such costs among PRPs.  It is not possible to estimate the range
of costs for certain  sites.  The upper end of the range of reasonably  possible
costs to the Company  for sites for which it is  possible  to estimate  costs is
approximately $140 million. The Company's estimates of such liabilities have not
been  discounted to present  value.  No assurance can be given that actual costs
will not exceed either  accrued  amounts or the upper end of the range for sites
for which  estimates  have been made,  and no assurance  can be given that costs
will not be incurred with respect to sites as to which no estimate presently can
be made.  The  imposition  of more  stringent  standards or  requirements  under
environmental  laws or regulations,  new developments or changes with respect to
site  cleanup  costs,  or  the  allocation  of  such  costs  among  PRPs,  or  a
determination  that the Company is  potentially  responsible  for the release of
hazardous  substances at other sites,  could result in expenditures in excess of
amounts  currently  estimated  by the Company to be required  for such  matters.
Furthermore, in view of the Company's historical operations, the Company expects
that additional environmental matters will arise in the future.

  Lead pigment litigation

     The Company is also a defendant  in a number of legal  proceedings  seeking
damages for personal  injury and property damage arising out of the sale of lead
pigments and lead-based paints.  There is no assurance that the Company will not
incur  future  liability in respect of this  pending  litigation  in view of the
inherent  uncertainties  involved  in court  and jury  rulings  in  pending  and
possible  future cases.  However,  based on, among other things,  the results of
such litigation to date, the Company  believes that the pending lead pigment and
paint  litigation is without merit.  The Company has not accrued any amounts for
such pending litigation. Liability that may result, if any, cannot reasonably be
estimated. In addition, various legislation and administrative regulations have,
from time to time,  been  enacted or  proposed  that seek to (a) impose  various
obligations on present and former  manufacturers  of lead pigment and lead-based
paint with respect to asserted health  concerns  associated with the use of such
products and (b)  effectively  overturn the precedent set by court  decisions in
which the Company and other pigment manufacturers have been successful. Examples
of such proposed  legislation  include bills which would permit civil  liability
for damages on the basis of market share,  rather than  requiring  plaintiffs to
prove that the defendant's  product caused the alleged  damage,  and bills which
would revive actions barred by the statute of limitations. The Company currently
believes the  disposition  of all claims and disputes,  individually  and in the
aggregate,   should  not  have  a  material  adverse  effect  on  the  Company's
consolidated financial position, results of operations or liquidity. The Company
expects that  additional  lead pigment and  lead-based  paint  litigation may be
filed  against the Company in the future  asserting  similar or different  legal
theories and seeking similar or different types of damages and relief.  See Item
1- "Legal Proceedings."

  Other

     The Company periodically evaluates its liquidity requirements,  alternative
uses of capital,  capital needs and  availability of resources in view of, among
other  things,  its  debt  service  and  capital  expenditure  requirements  and
estimated future operating cash flows. As a result of this process,  the Company
in the past has  sought,  and in the  future  may seek,  to  reduce,  refinance,
repurchase or restructure  indebtedness;  raise additional  capital;  repurchase
shares of its common stock;  modify its dividend policy;  restructure  ownership
interests; sell interests in subsidiaries or other assets; or take a combination
of such steps or other steps to manage its liquidity and capital  resources.  In
the normal course of its business,  the Company may review opportunities for the
acquisition,  divestiture,  joint venture or other business  combinations in the
chemicals or other  industries,  as well as the acquisition of interests in, and
loans to, related  companies.  In the event of any  acquisition or joint venture
transaction,  the Company may consider  using  available  cash,  issuing  equity
securities  or  increasing  its  indebtedness  to the  extent  permitted  by the
agreements governing the Company's existing debt.

  Special note regarding forward-looking statements

     The statements  contained in this Report on Form 10-Q ("Quarterly  Report")
which are not historical facts, including,  but not limited to, statements found
under the captions "Results of Operations" and "Liquidity and Capital Resources"
above, are forward-looking  statements that represent  management's  beliefs and
assumptions based on currently available information. Forward-looking statements
can be  identified  by the use of words such as  "believes,"  "intends,"  "may,"
"will," "should," "could,"  "anticipates,"  "expects," or comparable terminology
or by discussions of strategy or trends.  Although the Company believes that the
expectations  reflected in such  forward-looking  statements are reasonable,  it
cannot give any  assurances  that these  expectations  will prove to be correct.
Such statements by their nature involve risks and uncertainties,  including, but
not  limited  to, the  cyclicality  of the  titanium  dioxide  industry,  global
economic  and  political  conditions,   global  productive  capacity,   customer
inventory  levels,  changes in  product  pricing,  changes  in product  costing,
changes in foreign currency exchange rates,  competitive  technology  positions,
operating interruptions  (including,  but not limited to, labor disputes, leaks,
fires, explosions,  unscheduled downtime,  transportation interruptions, war and
terrorist  activities),  the ultimate  resolution of pending or possible  future
lead pigment litigation and legislative  developments  related to the lead paint
litigation,  the outcome of other litigation,  and other risks and uncertainties
included  in this  Quarterly  Report  and in the  2001  Annual  Report,  and the
uncertainties  set forth  from time to time in the  Company's  filings  with the
Securities  and  Exchange  Commission.   Should  one  or  more  of  these  risks
materialize (or the  consequences of such a development  worsen),  or should the
underlying  assumptions prove incorrect,  actual results could differ materially
from those  forecasted  or  expected.  The Company  disclaims  any  intention or
obligation to update publicly or revise such  statements  whether as a result of
new information, future events or otherwise.

CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES

     The Company maintains a system of disclosure  controls and procedures.  The
term  "disclosure  controls and  procedures,"  as defined by  regulations of the
Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"),  means controls and other procedures
that are  designed to ensure that  information  required to be  disclosed in the
reports  that the  Company  files or  submits  to the SEC under  the  Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "Act"), is recorded, processed, summarized
and  reported,  within the time periods  specified in the SEC's rules and forms.
Disclosure  controls and procedures include,  without  limitation,  controls and
procedures  designed to ensure that information  required to be disclosed by the
Company  in the  reports  that it files or  submits  to the SEC under the Act is
accumulated  and  communicated  to  the  Company's  management,   including  its
principal  executive officer and its principal financial officer, as appropriate
to allow timely decisions to be made regarding required  disclosure.  Each of J.
Landis Martin, the Company's Chief Executive  Officer,  and Robert D. Hardy, the
Company's  Chief  Financial  Officer,  have  evaluated the Company's  disclosure
controls and  procedures  as of a date within 90 days of the filing date of this
Form 10-Q. Based upon their evaluation,  these executive officers have concluded
that the Company's  disclosure  controls and  procedures are effective as of the
date of such evaluation.

     The  Company  also  maintains  a  system  of  internal  controls.  The term
"internal  controls," as defined by the American  Institute of Certified  Public
Accountants'  Codification of Statement on Auditing  Standards,  AU Section 319,
means controls and other  procedures  designed to provide  reasonable  assurance
regarding the  achievement  of objectives  in the  reliability  of the Company's
financial   reporting,   the  effectiveness  and  efficiency  of  the  Company's
operations and the Company's  compliance with  applicable laws and  regulations.
There have been no significant  changes in the Company's internal controls or in
other factors that could  significantly  affect such controls  subsequent to the
date of their last evaluation,  including any corrective  actions with regard to
significant deficiencies and material weaknesses.






                           PART II. OTHER INFORMATION


ITEM 1.      LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

     Reference  is made to the 2001 Annual  Report and the  Company's  Quarterly
Report on Form 10-Q for the quarters  ended March 31, 2002 and June 30, 2002 for
descriptions of certain previously reported legal proceedings.

     In September 2002 the Company was served with a complaint,  City of Chicago
v.  American  Cyanamid,  et al.  (Circuit  Court of Cook County,  Illinois,  No.
02CH16212).  The  City of  Chicago  seeks  damages  to  abate  lead  paint  in a
single-count  complaint  alleging public nuisance  against the Company and seven
other former manufacturers of lead pigment. The time to respond to the complaint
has not yet occurred.

     In October  2002 the  Company was served  with a  complaint,  Walters v. NL
Industries,  et al. (Kings County Supreme Court,  New York, No.  28087/2002).  A
single  individual seeks  compensatory and punitive damages from the Company and
five other former  manufacturers of lead pigment for childhood exposures to lead
paint.  The complaint  alleges causes of action in negligence and strict product
liability and seeks joint and several liability with claims of civil conspiracy,
concert  of  action,  enterprise  liability,  and  market  share or  alternative
liability. The time to respond to the complaint has not yet occurred.

     In re Lead Paint  Litigation  (Superior Court of New Jersey,  Law Division,
Middlesex  County  Civil Action  Docket No.  Mid-L-2754-01,  Case Code 247).  In
November 2002 the Court entered an order  dismissing  this  previously  reported
case with prejudice. The time for the filing of an appeal has not run.

     Jefferson  County School  District v. Lead Industries  Association,  et al.
(District Court of Jefferson County, Mississippi, Case No. 2001-69). In November
2002  plaintiffs  agreed to voluntarily  dismiss with prejudice this  previously
reported case.

     El Paso Independent School District v. Lead Industries Association,  et al.
(District Court of El Paso County,  Texas, No. 2002-2675).  In November 2002 the
plaintiff in this previously reported case dismissed its case without prejudice.

     State of Rhode  Island v. Lead  Industries  Association,  et al.  (Superior
Court of Rhode Island,  No. 99-5226).  Trial began in phase I of this previously
reported  case before a Rhode Island  state court jury on September 4, 2002.  On
October 29,  2002 the trial judge  declared a mistrial in the case when the jury
was unable to reach a verdict on the  question of whether  lead pigment in paint
on Rhode  Island  buildings is a public  nuisance.  No date has been set for any
further  proceedings,  including  any  possible  retrial of the public  nuisance
issue.  Other claims made by the Attorney  General,  including  violation of the
Rhode  Island  Unfair  Trade  Practices  and  Consumer  Protection  Act,  strict
liability,  negligence,   negligent  and  fraudulent  misrepresentation,   civil
conspiracy,  indemnity,  and unjust  enrichment  remain pending and were not the
subject of this  trial.  Post trial  motions by  plaintiff  and  defendants  for
judgment notwithstanding the mistrial are pending.

     Gaines, et al., v. The  Sherwin-Williams  Company, et al. (Circuit Court of
Jefferson  County,  Mississippi,  Civil Action No.  2000-0604).  In October 2002
plaintiffs  voluntarily  dismissed the Company with prejudice in this previously
reported case.

     Borden, et al. v. The  Sherwin-Williams  Company,  et al. (Circuit Court of
Jefferson County,  Mississippi,  Civil Action No. 2000-587). In October 2002 the
court set a June 2003 trial date in this previously reported case.

     Spring Branch Independent  School District v. Lead Industries  Association,
et al. (District Court of Harris County,  Texas, No. 2000-31175) . Plaintiff has
filed an appeal of the grant of summary judgment in favor of the Company in this
previously reported case.

     In the previously  reported cases of Houston  Independent  School District,
Harris County,  Brownsville Independent School District, and Liberty Independent
School District,  pending in various Texas state courts,  each court has entered
an order abating,  or staying,  the case pending the result of the appeal in the
Spring Branch Independent School District case.

     The Company  expects  that  additional  lead pigment and  lead-based  paint
litigation may be filed against the Company in the future  asserting  similar or
different  legal theories and seeking  similar or different types of damages and
relief.

     Since the  filing of the  Company's  Quarterly  Report on Form 10-Q for the
quarter  ended June 30,  2002,  the  Company  has been named as a  defendant  in
asbestos  and/or  silica  cases in  various  jurisdictions  brought on behalf of
approximately  2,700  additional  personal  injury  claimants.  Included  in the
foregoing total is one case in Mississippi  state court involving  approximately
2,100 plaintiffs  (Jones v. A. O. Smith, et al.,  Circuit Court,  First Judicial
District,  Jasper County,  Mississippi,  Civil Action No. 12-0148).  The Company
anticipates that various of these cases will be set for trial from  time-to-time
for the foreseeable future. In addition,  cases on behalf of approximately 2,500
such personal  injury  plaintiffs  have been dismissed or settled for immaterial
amounts.

ITEM 6.    EXHIBITS AND REPORTS ON FORM 8-K

         (a)        Exhibits

             10.1   Agreement   between   Sachtleben   Chemie  GmbH  and  Kronos
                    Titan-GmbH  effective  December  30, 1986,  incorporated  by
                    reference to Exhibit 10.1 of KII's Quarterly  Report on Form
                    10-Q (File No.  333-100047)  for the quarter ended September
                    30, 2002.

             10.2   Supplementary  Agreement  to the  Agreement  of December 30,
                    1986 between  Sachtleben  Chemie GmbH and Kronos  Titan-GmbH
                    dated May 3, 1996, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2
                    of KII's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q (File No. 333-100047)
                    for the quarter ended September 30, 2002.

             10.3   Second   Supplementary   Agreement  to  the  Contract  dated
                    December 30, 1986 between  Sachtleben Chemie GmbH and Kronos
                    Titan-GmbH dated January 8, 2002,  incorporated by reference
                    to Exhibit 10.3 of KII's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q (File
                    No. 333-100047) for the quarter ended September 30, 2002.

             10.4   Revolving  Loan Note  Agreement  dated October 22, 2002 with
                    Tremont  Corporation  as Maker and NL  Industries,  Inc.  as
                    Payee.

             10.5   Security  Agreement  dated  October  22, 2002 by and between
                    Tremont Corporation and NL Industries, Inc.

             99.1   Certification  of Chief  Executive  Officer  pursuant  to 18
                    U.S.C.  Section 1350, as adopted  pursuant to Section 906 of
                    the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.

             99.2   Certification  of Chief  Financial  Officer  pursuant  to 18
                    U.S.C.  Section 1350, as adopted  pursuant to Section 906 of
                    the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.


         (b)      Reports on Form 8-K

     Reports on Form 8-K for the quarter  ended  September  30, 2002 through the
date of this report:

                  September 9, 2002 - reported Item 9.

                  September 26, 2002 - reported Item 5.





                                   SIGNATURES


Pursuant  to the  requirements  of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of  1934,  the
Registrant  has duly  caused  this  report  to be  signed  on its  behalf by the
undersigned thereunto duly authorized.





                                               NL INDUSTRIES, INC.
                                    -------------------------------------------
                                                  (Registrant)



Date:  November 14, 2002          By  /s/ Robert D. Hardy
- ------------------------              --------------------------------------
                                      Robert D. Hardy
                                      Principal Financial and Accounting Officer




                                 CERTIFICATIONS

I, J. Landis Martin, the Chief Executive Officer of NL Industries, Inc., certify
that:

1)   I have reviewed this quarterly report on Form 10-Q of NL Industries, Inc.

2)   Based on my knowledge,  this  quarterly  report does not contain any untrue
     statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact  necessary to
     make the statements  made, in light of the  circumstances  under which such
     statements  were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by
     this quarterly report;

3)   Based on my  knowledge,  the  financial  statements,  and  other  financial
     information  included  in this  quarterly  report,  fairly  present  in all
     material respects the financial  condition,  results of operations and cash
     flows of the  registrant  as of, and for,  the  periods  presented  in this
     quarterly report;

4)   The  registrant's  other  certifying  officers  and I are  responsible  for
     establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined
     in Exchange Act Rules 13a-14 and 15d-14) for the registrant and we have:

     a)   designed  such  disclosure  controls  and  procedures  to ensure  that
          material  information  relating  to  the  registrant,   including  its
          consolidated subsidiaries,  is made known to us by others within those
          entities,  particularly  during  the  period in which  this  quarterly
          report is being prepared;

     b)   evaluated the  effectiveness of the registrant's  disclosure  controls
          and procedures as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing date of
          this quarterly report (the "Evaluation Date"); and

     c)   presented  in  this  quarterly   report  our  conclusions   about  the
          effectiveness  of the disclosure  controls and procedures based on our
          evaluation as of the Evaluation Date;

5)   The registrant's other certifying  officers and I have disclosed,  based on
     our most recent  evaluation,  to the  registrant's  auditors  and the audit
     committee of  registrant's  board of directors (or persons  performing  the
     equivalent function):

     a)   all  significant  deficiencies  in the design or operation of internal
          controls  which could  adversely  affect the  registrant's  ability to
          record,  process,   summarize  and  report  financial  data  and  have
          identified for the  registrant's  auditors any material  weaknesses in
          internal controls; and

     b)   any fraud, whether or not material,  that involves management or other
          employees who have a  significant  role in the  registrant's  internal
          controls; and

6)   The  registrant's  other  certifying  officers and I have indicated in this
     quarterly report whether or not there were significant  changes in internal
     controls  or in other  factors  that could  significantly  affect  internal
     controls  subsequent to the date of our most recent  evaluation,  including
     any corrective actions with regard to significant deficiencies and material
     weaknesses.




Date:  November 14, 2002


/s/ J. Landis Martin
- ---------------------------
J. Landis Martin
Chief Executive Officer





                                 CERTIFICATIONS

I, Robert D. Hardy, the Chief Financial Officer of NL Industries,  Inc., certify
that:

1)   I have reviewed this quarterly report on Form 10-Q of NL Industries, Inc.

2)   Based on my knowledge,  this  quarterly  report does not contain any untrue
     statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact  necessary to
     make the statements  made, in light of the  circumstances  under which such
     statements  were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by
     this quarterly report;

3)   Based on my  knowledge,  the  financial  statements,  and  other  financial
     information  included  in this  quarterly  report,  fairly  present  in all
     material respects the financial  condition,  results of operations and cash
     flows of the  registrant  as of, and for,  the  periods  presented  in this
     quarterly report;

4)   The  registrant's  other  certifying  officers  and I are  responsible  for
     establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined
     in Exchange Act Rules 13a-14 and 15d-14) for the registrant and we have:

     a)   designed  such  disclosure  controls  and  procedures  to ensure  that
          material  information  relating  to  the  registrant,   including  its
          consolidated subsidiaries,  is made known to us by others within those
          entities,  particularly  during  the  period in which  this  quarterly
          report is being prepared;

     b)   evaluated the  effectiveness of the registrant's  disclosure  controls
          and procedures as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing date of
          this quarterly report (the "Evaluation Date"); and

     c)   presented  in  this  quarterly   report  our  conclusions   about  the
          effectiveness  of the disclosure  controls and procedures based on our
          evaluation as of the Evaluation Date;

5)   The registrant's other certifying  officers and I have disclosed,  based on
     our most recent  evaluation,  to the  registrant's  auditors  and the audit
     committee of  registrant's  board of directors (or persons  performing  the
     equivalent function):

     a)   all  significant  deficiencies  in the design or operation of internal
          controls  which could  adversely  affect the  registrant's  ability to
          record,  process,   summarize  and  report  financial  data  and  have
          identified for the  registrant's  auditors any material  weaknesses in
          internal controls; and

     b)   any fraud, whether or not material,  that involves management or other
          employees who have a  significant  role in the  registrant's  internal
          controls; and

6)   The  registrant's  other  certifying  officers and I have indicated in this
     quarterly report whether or not there were significant  changes in internal
     controls  or in other  factors  that could  significantly  affect  internal
     controls  subsequent to the date of our most recent  evaluation,  including
     any corrective actions with regard to significant deficiencies and material
     weaknesses.




Date:  November 14, 2002


/s/ Robert D. Hardy
- ---------------------------
Robert D. Hardy
Chief Financial Officer