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


                                 FORM 10-K


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

For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1995         Commission File No. 1-2960


                          Newpark Resources, Inc.
           (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

                  Delaware                          72-1123385
       (State or other jurisdiction of           (I.R.S. Employer
       incorporation or organization)           Identification No.)

        3850 N. Causeway, Suite 1770
            Metairie, Louisiana                        70002
  (Address of principal executive offices)           (Zip Code)

                              (504) 838-8222
                       (Registrant's telephone number)

        Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

                            Title of each class
                            ___________________

                       Common Stock, $.01 par value

     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  (or  for  such  shorter  period that 
the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been  subject 
to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.    Yes  X   No
                                                         ---      ---

     Indicate  by  check  mark  if  disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant 
to  Item 405 of Regulations S-K is not contained herein,  and  will  not  be  
contained, to  the best of registrant's  knowledge,  in  definitive proxy of 
information  statements incorporated  by  reference in Part III of this Form 
10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K [    ].

     At  March 4, 1996, the aggregate  market  value  of  the  voting  stock
held by non-affiliates of the registrant  is  $242,707,025.   The  aggregate 
market value has been computed by reference to the price at which  the stock 
was sold,  as  reported  by The New York Stock Exchange.

     As  of  March  4,  1996, a total of 10,658,453 shares of Common  Stock, 
$.01 par value, were outstanding.

                    Documents Incorporated by Reference

     Portions  of  the  registrant's  Proxy  Statement for the upcoming 1996 
Annual Meeting of Shareholders are incorporated by  reference  into Part III 
hereof.


                                Page 1 of 65
                       Exhibit Index Appears on Page 60

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                               NEWPARK RESOURCES, INC.
                                  INDEX TO FORM 10-K
                     FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995




          Item                                                                          Page
          Number      Description                                                       Number
          ______      ___________                                                       ______

                                                                                  
                      PART I
                      ______

             1        Business                                                              3

             2        Properties                                                           29

             3        Legal Proceedings                                                    30

             4        Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders                  31

                      PART II
                      _______

             5        Market for the Registrant's Common Equity and
                         Related Stockholder Matters                                       32

             6        Selected Financial Data                                              33

             7        Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
                         Condition and Results of Operations                               34

             8        Financial Statements and Supplementary Data                          41

             9        Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants
                         on Accounting and Financial Disclosure                            58

                      PART III
                      ________

             10       Directors and Executive Officers of the Registrant                   59

             11       Executive Compensation                                               59

             12       Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners
                         and Management                                                    59

             13       Certain Relationships and Related Transactions                       59

                      PART IV
                      _______

             14       Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules, and Reports
                         on Form 8-K                                                       60

             Signatures                                                                    64

                                          
                                          2



                                        PART I

        ITEM 1.  Business

        The Company

             Newpark  Resources,  Inc.  ("Newpark"  or the "Company") provides

        integrated environmental services to the oil  and  gas exploration and

        production industry in the Gulf Coast area, principally  in  Louisiana

        and  Texas.   Those  services  are  concentrated  in three key product

        lines:   (i)  mat  rental  servicesDthe use of patented  prefabricated

        wooden mats as temporary worksites  in oilfield and other construction

        applications; (ii) processing and disposal  of  nonhazardous  oilfield

        waste  ("NOW');  and  (iii)  processing  and  disposal of NOW which is

        contaminated with naturally occurring radioactive  material  ("NORM").

        In  its  waste  disposal  operations, the Company utilizes proprietary

        technology.



             The Company's mat rental services have been provided primarily to

        the oil and gas exploration and production industry.  The mats provide

        temporary worksites in unstable  soil conditions typically found along

        the Gulf Coast. In addition to the  installation  and  rental of mats,

        the  Company  also  provides  for  the  management  and  treatment  of

        nonhazardous oilfield waste on the well site, the remediation of waste

        pits,  and  general  oilfield  services.   In 1994, the Company  began

        marketing these temporary worksites to other  industries.   Increasing

        environmental  regulation  affecting  the  construction  of pipelines,

        electrical  distribution systems and highways in and through  wetlands

        environments  has   provided  a  substantial  and  rapidly growing new

        market  for  these  services and have broadened the geographic  market

        served by the Company to include the coastal areas of the Southeastern

        states,  particularly   Florida   and  Georgia,  in  addition  to  its

        traditional Gulf Coast market. The  Company  believes  that heightened

        environmental  concern in other markets and other countries,  such  as

        that developing  in  Venezuela, will continue to provide opportunities

        for the mat rental business.



              In its NOW processing  and disposal business,  Newpark processes

        the majority of the NOW received  at its facilities for injection into

        geologically secure formations deep  underground  and creates from the

        remainder  a reuse product which is used as intermediate  daily  cover

        material or  cell  liner material at municipal waste landfills.  Since

        the fourth quarter of  1994,  the  Company has provided processing and

        disposal of NOW waste that is contaminated  with  NORM, processing the

        waste  for  injection  disposal  in  wells owned by the  Company.   In

                                        3



        addition, the Company provides laboratory  and consulting services for

        its customers in connection with its NOW and NORM services.



             The  Company  offers  these  services  individually   and  as  an

        integrated package.  The recent trend toward more strict environmental

        regulation of both drilling and production operations conducted by the

        Company's  customers  has  resulted  in  greater  synergy between  the

        Company's  mat rental and oilfield general construction  services  and

        its   other  environmental   services.    The   Company   provides   a

        comprehensive  integrated  combination of in-situ waste management and

        construction services for both  the  drilling  of  new  sites  and the

        remediation  of  existing  sites.   This  integration  provides  it  a

        competitive  advantage in an era of downsizing by its major customers,

        which has made those customers more reliant upon outside suppliers for

        many services.   By  providing  a  broad array of integrated services,

        Newpark reduces the number of contractors  necessary  to provide these

        services, decreasing the customer's administrative workload.



             Newpark's   offsite   waste   processing  operations  utilize   a

        combination of proprietary preparation  technology  to blend the waste

        into an injectible slurry and specific underground geology  into which

        injection  is  effected,  and  patent applications have been filed  to

        protect  this  proprietary  methodology.   The  Company's  mat  rental

        business  uses  a  patented interlocking  wooden  mat  system,  patent

        protection of which  extends  to the year 2003.  Newpark believes that

        the  proprietary  aspects  of  these   businesses   cannot  be  easily

        duplicated, thereby providing a competitive advantage.



             In anticipation of increased demand for hardwood  lumber  used in

        construction  of  its rental mats, the Company purchased a sawmill  in

        Batson, Texas, in October  1992.     Newpark  has  since  doubled  the

        capacity  of  the facility, and expects to fully utilize such capacity

        in serving its mat rental business.




                                        4



             The following  table  sets forth for the years ended December 31,

        1995, 1994, and 1993, respectively,  the  amount  of revenues for each

        class of similar products and services.


                                                   Year ended December 31, 
                                                   _______________________
                                                   1995    1994      1993  
                                                   ____    ____      ____
                                                    (Dollars in thousands)  
       
             Revenues:                                                        
               Offsite waste processing          $31,126   $20,738  $11,354
               Mat rental                         30,775    23,048   21,042
               General oilfield services          14,511    13,452   11,358
              Wood products sales                 12,609    13,105    7,947
              Onsite environmental management      7,361     7,689    4,629
              Other                                1,600     1,600        -
                                                  ______    ______   ______   
            Total revenues                       $97,982   $79,632  $56,330  
                                                  ======    ======   ======

             Newpark  was  organized  in 1932 as a Nevada corporation  and  in

        April  1991  changed  its state of  incorporation  to  Delaware.   The

        Company's  principal executive  offices  are  located  at  3850  North

        Causeway Boulevard,  Suite  1770,  Metairie,  Louisiana 70002, and its

        telephone number is (504) 838-8222.



        Development of  the Business



             Since 1990, the Company has concentrated on expanding and further

        integrating   its   environmental   service   capabilities.    Through

        acquisitions  in  1990  and 1991, Newpark extended  its  environmental

        services into the Texas Gulf  Coast  region.  In May 1991, the Company

        expanded its processing capacity by constructing  a new NOW processing

        plant  in  Port  Arthur,  Texas,  replacing  a smaller facility.   The

        Company  has  further  increased  plant  capacity  through  subsequent

        equipment  additions  and  improvements  in  process  technology   and

        procedures.    Beginning   in   1992,   the  Company  accelerated  the

        development of its deep well injection program  and, in November 1993,

        opened  its first facility for underground disposal  of  NOW,  at  Big

        Hill, Texas.



             Significant developments in 1995 included:



           .   The  Company's  license  to  process  NORM waste was amended to

                  increase  the  maximum  level  of radioactive  contamination

                  permitted and to increase the capacity of the facility.

                                        5





           .   The trend toward a more strict regulation of NOW and NORM waste

                  continued.  NORM regulations were adopted in several states,

                  most importantly New Mexico and Texas.  The NORM regulations

                  were  revised in Louisiana and are  under  revision  in  the

                  state of Mississippi.  Draft regulations have been prepared,

                  but are not yet proposed in Oklahoma.



           .   The volume  of  NOW processed by the Company grew by 25% to 2.9

                  million barrels  despite lower drilling activity as measured

                  by the rig count.



           .   A second NOW facility,  located near Fannett, Texas, was opened

                  in the third quarter of  1995,  and  additional  wells  were

                  drilled  at  the  Big  Hill  facility,  providing  a further

                  increase in waste disposal capacity.



           .   The  market  for  the  Company's  mat  rental  services in non-

                  oilfield markets expanded into Florida and Georgia.



           .   The   Company   initiated  a  joint  venture  to  provide   its

                  proprietary mat  rental  services  to  the  exploration  and

                  production market in Venezuela.



           .   The effect on the Company's services of a decline in the number

                  of  active  drilling rigs was substantially offset by deeper

                  drilling by the Company's customers.



             NOW and NORM are defined as follows:



               NOW - Nonhazardous  Oilfield Waste or NOW is waste generated in

        the exploration or production  of  oil and gas. These wastes typically

        contain levels of oil and grease, salts or chlorides, and heavy metals

        in excess of concentration limits defined  by  state  regulators.  NOW

        also includes soils which have become contaminated by these materials.

        In  the  environment,  oil  and  grease and chlorides disrupt the food

        chain and have been determined by regulatory authorities to be harmful

        to  plant and animal life.  Heavy metals  are  toxic  and  can  become

        concentrated in living tissues.



               NORM  -  Naturally  Occurring  Radioactive  Material or NORM is

        present  throughout  the earth's crust at very low levels.  Among  the

        radioactive elements,  only  Radium  226  and  Radium 228 are slightly

        soluble in water.  Because of their solubility,  which  can carry them

        into living plant and animal tissues, these elements present a hazard.


                                        6



        Radium  226  and Radium 228 can be leached out of hydrocarbon  bearing

        strata deep underground  by  salt  water  which  is  produced with the

        hydrocarbons.   Radium  generally  precipitates out of the  production

        stream as it is drawn to the surface  and  encounters  a  pressure  or

        temperature change in the well tubing or production equipment, forming

        a  rust-like  scale.   This scale contains radioactive elements which,

        over many years, can become  concentrated  on tank bottoms or at water

        discharge points at production facilities.   Thus,  NORM  waste is NOW

        that  has  become  contaminated with these radioactive elements  above

        concentration levels defined by state regulatory authorities.



             Amendment to NORM  waste  license - During 1994, Newpark became a

        licensed NORM contractor in Louisiana  and Texas.  The Company built a

        NORM waste treatment plant adjacent to its NOW treatment plant in Port

        Arthur,  Texas, at which the Company uses  a  proprietary  process  to

        slurry the  material and reduce the NORM concentration below the level

        at which it is  regulated  as  NORM  in  preparation  for  underground

        injection.  Newpark applied for U.S. patents on certain aspects of its

        treatment  and  disposal  processes.  The facility began operations in

        October 1994, and is one of only four commercial offsite facilities in

        the United States that is licensed  to  process  and  dispose  of NORM

        waste.   The  license was modified during 1995 to increase the maximum

        permitted concentration of Radium 226 present in the waste received at

        the facility from  400  picocuries  per  gram  to 6,000, and the total

        concentration of radioactive isotopes from 2,000  picocuries  per gram

        to 30,000.



             Developments   related   to  NOW -   The  Company  processed  and

        disposed of 2,905,000 barrels of  NOW  in  1995,  of  which  2,364,000

        barrels were generated from current drilling and production operations

        and  541,000  barrels were generated from the remediation of old  pits

        and production facilities, compared with 2,329,000 barrels in 1994, of

        which 1,974,000  were  from current drilling and production operations

        and 355,000 were from remediation  activities.  The  increase resulted

        principally   from   the  further  tightening  of  state  and  federal

        regulations limiting the  discharge of waste into inland waterways and

        offshore and, to a lesser extent,  from changes in the type and mix of

        drilling activity.



             During 1995, Newpark further expanded its NOW injection facility,

        located at Big Hill, Texas, drilling  two  additional  injection wells

        and  constructing  a  grinding  mill  at  the site to more efficiently

        handle  the  large  quantities  of waste resulting  from  the  growing

        remediation market.  The mill is  used  to reduce and make uniform the

        size of the particles in the waste stream  to  maintain  desired  flow

                                        7



        characteristics  in the Company's injection wells.  In September 1995,

        the Company  opened  its  second  injection  site,  at Fannett, Texas,

        drilling  two  wells  at  that  facility,  and in the fourth  quarter,

        completed  a bulk barge unloading facility adjacent  to  the  original

        Port Arthur  processing  plant.   Together with additions to personnel

        and  equipment at its receiving facilities,  this  increased  its  NOW

        processing capacity to approximately 500,000 barrels per month.



             Services   to  wetlands  construction  projects  -  Many  of  the

        environmental  concerns   that   have   affected   drilling   in   the

        environmentally  sensitive marshes of the Gulf Coast are now beginning

        to affect other construction  activities  in  the Gulf Coast and other

        geographic areas.  Federal and state regulatory agencies have begun to

        require  increased precautions to prevent construction-related  damage

        to the environment  in  wetlands  areas  throughout the United States.

        Newpark believes that its prefabricated mat  technology is well-suited

        for use in construction projects in wetlands areas.  During  1995, the

        Company  performed  projects  in  connection with pipeline, electrical

        utility and highway construction projects  in  Georgia, Florida, Texas

        and  Louisiana.   The  Company anticipates that similar  opportunities

        will allow it to continue  to diversify its geographic base, following

        the wetlands activity to construction related markets in other states.



             Venezuela joint venture  -  During the first quarter of 1995, the

        Company invested in a joint venture  providing  mat rental services in

        Venezuela  in  support  of  oil  and  gas  exploration and  production

        activities.  A total of 7,000 mats were shipped  to  the market during

        the year and, by year end, substantially all were under  contract to a

        customer.  The government of Venezuela has made increasing  its output

        of oil over the next several years a national priority, and has  begun

        attracting  outside  investment  partners from among the international

        oil companies, many of which are Newpark's  customers  in the domestic

        market.   Subsequent to December 31, 1995, the joint venture  arranged

        shipment of  an  additional  5,000 mats to Venezuela, and expects that

        activity  there  will  continue to  increase  as  further  exploration

        concessions are granted.   Newpark  holds  a  38.8%  interest  in  the

        venture.



             Drilling  activity  - The level of drilling activity in Newpark's

        key market declined 4% to  an  average  of  195  rigs  running in 1995

        compared to 202 during 1994.  This mirrored the decline  in  the  U.S.

        rig  count,  which  averaged 723 in 1995 compared to 774 in 1994.  The

        1995 activity level was the second lowest since 1940, after an average

        of 717 recorded in 1992.   In  much  of  the  coastal marsh and inland

        waters, termed the "transition zone," the high  cost  associated  with

        access  to  the  site and lack of seismic data has been an obstacle to

                                        8



        development, and as  a result, the area has been less actively drilled

        compared to the offshore  and  land  areas.  High quality seismic data

        has become available only through recent  improvements  in technology.

        The  increased  use of advanced seismic data and the computer-enhanced

        interpretation of  that data has enabled Newpark's customers to select

        exploratory drilling  sites  with greater likelihood of success.  This

        enables them to undertake more expensive projects, such as drilling in

        the transition zone along the Gulf Coast region.



               Such projects rely heavily  on  services  such as the Company's

        integrated   environmental   services.   Deeper   wells  require   the

        construction of larger locations to accommodate the drilling equipment

        and the equipment for handling drilling fluids and  associated wastes;

        such  locations  generally  are  in  service for significantly  longer

        periods  and generate additional mat rental  revenues.   Deeper  wells

        also require  more  chemically complex drilling fluids programs, which

        are more difficult and  costly  to dispose of than the simpler systems

        used in shallower wells. The Company  believes  that,  in 1995, deeper

        drilling  contributed  significantly to the increased demand  for  the

        Company's services.



        Regulatory Background



             The oilfield market  for  environmental services has increased as

        regulations have increased.  Louisiana,  Texas,  and other states have

        enacted  comprehensive  laws  and  regulations  governing  the  proper

        handling of NOW and NORM.  This has also heightened  the  awareness of

        both  the  generators  of waste and landowners of the need for  proper

        treatment and disposal of such waste in both the drilling of new wells

        and the remediation of production facilities.



             For many years, prior  to  current  regulation, industry practice

        was to allow NOW to remain in the environment.   Onshore, surface pits

        were  used  for  the  disposal  of  NOW; offshore, NOW was  discharged

        directly into the water.  As a result  of  increasing  public  concern

        over the environment, NOW has in recent years become subject to public

        scrutiny  and  governmental regulation.  Operators of exploration  and

        production facilities,  including major and independent oil companies,

        have  found  themselves  subject   to   a  multiplicity  of  laws  and

        regulations issued by numerous jurisdictions  and agencies. These laws

        and regulations have imposed strict requirements  for ongoing drilling

        and production activities in certain geographic areas,  as well as for

        the remediation of sites contaminated by past disposal practices  and,

        in  many  respects,  have prohibited the prior disposal practices.  In

                                        9



        addition, operators have  become increasingly concerned about possible

        long-term liability for remediation,  and  landowners have become more

        aggressive about land restoration.  For these  reasons,  operators are

        increasingly retaining service companies, such as Newpark,  to  devise

        and  implement  comprehensive  waste  management  techniques to handle

        waste on an ongoing basis and to remediate past contamination  of  oil

        and gas properties.



             Late  in  1992, the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality

        ("DEQ") began to  promulgate  and  enforce new, stricter limits on the

        level of radium concentration above  which  NOW  became categorized as

        NORM.   NORM  regulations  require  more stringent worker  protection,

        handling  and storage procedures than  those  required  of  NOW  under

        Louisiana Statewide  Executive  Order  29-B.  Uncertainty in measuring

        NORM  concentration  was created by apparent  inconsistencies  in  the

        results produced by alternative  testing methodologies allowed in then

        current  regulations.   Early  in  1994,   DEQ  published  draft  NORM

        regulations which, with minor modification,  became  effective January

        20, 1995, as LAC 33:XV.1401-1420, Chapter 14.  In Texas,  the Railroad

        Commission adopted final rules ("Rule 94") effective February 1, 1995.

        Adoption  of these regulations has resolved the regulatory uncertainty

        associated with NORM.



             The primary  laws  that  have  helped  to  create  the market for

        Newpark's environmental services in the Gulf Coast region,  and  which

        apply  to  Newpark  in  the conduct of its business,  are the Resource

        Conservation and Recovery  Act  of  1976, as amended in 1984 ("RCRA"),

        the Comprehensive Environmental Response,  Compensation, and Liability

        Act,  as  amended  in  1986  ("CERCLA"),  the  laws   and  regulations

        promulgated by the states of Louisiana, Texas and Alabama, the Federal

        Water Pollution Control Act, as amended (the "Clean Water  Act"),  and

        the  Federal  Oil  Pollution  Act  of  1990  ("OPA").   These laws are

        discussed under "Environmental Regulation".



        Description of Business



             The principal services and products provided  by  the Company are

        classified as follows:


                                        10



             Offsite Waste Processing



             NOW Waste Processing.  Under state regulation, if NOW  cannot  be

        treated  for discharge or disposed of on the oil or gas lease location

        where it is  generated,  it  must  be  transported  to  a licensed NOW

        disposal or treatment facility.  There are three primary  alternatives

        for offsite disposal of NOW available to generators in the Gulf Coast:

        (i)   land-farming,   provided  by  the  Company's  competitors;  (ii)

        processing and conversion  of  the NOW into a reuse product; and (iii)

        underground injection (See "Injection  Wells").  The Company processes

        NOW  waste  at a facility located at Port  Arthur,  Texas,  which  was

        opened  in 1991.   Newpark  also  operates  six  other  receiving  and

        transfer   facilities  located  along  the  Gulf  Coast  from  Venice,

        Louisiana, to  Corpus Christi, Texas.  Waste products are collected at

        the  transfer  facilities   from   three  distinct  markets:  offshore

        exploration and production; land and  inland  waters  exploration  and

        production;  and  remediation  of  existing or inactive well sites and

        production facilities.  These facilities  are  supported by a fleet of

        42  double-skinned  barges  certified  by  the U. S.  Coast  Guard  to

        transport NOW.  Waste received is transported  by  barge  through  the

        Gulf  Intracoastal  Waterway  to  the Company's processing facility at

        Port Arthur, Texas, or trucked to facilities at  Fannett  or Big Hill,

        Texas.



             The  Company  has  historically converted the waste stream  to  a

        commercial reuse product  meeting  the specifications under applicable

        federal and state regulations for reuse as a covering material or cell

        liner  material  at  sanitary  landfills.   Under  these  regulations,

        landfills must cover the solid waste  deposited  daily  with  earth or

        other  inert  material.   The Company's reuse product is deposited  at

        either the City of Port Arthur  Municipal  Landfill  or  the  City  of

        Beaumont Municipal Landfill for use as such cover material pursuant to

        contracts  with  the respective cities.  This reuse is conducted under

        authorization from the Texas Natural Resources Conservation Commission

        and is permitted by the Texas Railroad Commission, under a permit that

        was renewed in January 1994, for a three year period.  The Company has

        also developed alternative  uses  for the product as roadbase material

        or construction fill material.



             Currently, only a portion of  the  waste received by the Company
        
        is processed into a reuse product.  Since  November 1994, the Company 

        has disposed of a majority of the waste received  at  its  processing

        facility by injection of the waste into disposal wells at its Big Hill

        facility and, since the third quarter of 1995, its Fannett Facility.



                                        11



             NORM Processing and Disposal.     Newpark's entry into the onsite

        remediation  (1993) and disposal (1994) of  NORM  waste  is  discussed

        under "Business - Development of the Business."  Many alternatives are

        available to the  generator  for  the  treatment and disposal of NORM.

        These include both chemical and mechanical methods designed to achieve

        volume reduction, in-situ burial of encapsulated NORM  within old well

        bores,  and  soil  washing  and  other  techniques  of dissolving  and

        suspending  the  radium  in  solution  for  onsite injection  of  NORM

        liquids.  When the application of these techniques are insufficient to

        bring the site into compliance with applicable  regulations,  the NORM

        must be transported to a licensed storage or disposal facility.



             Newpark's NORM processing facility was licensed in September 1994

        and  began  operations  October  21, 1994.  The facility receives NORM

        waste from production operations and  remediation  sites, generally by

        barge,  truck, in drums or other containers.  The material,  which  is

        similar to NOW in virtually all respects other than its elevated level

        of Radium  226  or  Radium  228,  is  processed  to  achieve a uniform

        particle  size  and,  through  the  introduction  of viscosifiers  and

        carrying agents, is suspended in a liquid stream suitable for disposal

        in Class II injection wells operated by the Company.   Such processing

        also reduces the concentration of radioactive material to  a  level at

        which the material is no longer regulated as NORM, but reverts  to NOW

        characteristics.  The processed waste meets the criteria for injection

        disposal  under  Texas  Railroad  Commission Rule 9 and Rule 94 and is

        transported by truck to the Company's injection well facility.  During

        1995, the facility license was modified to increase the level of total

        radioactive contamination permitted  in  the  waste  received  at  the

        facility  from  2,000  picocuries per gram to 30,000, and the level of

        Radium 226, upon which most  regulation is primarily focused, from 400

        to 6,000 picocuries per gram.



             During  1995,  the  Company   received  70,000  barrels  of  NORM

        contaminated  waste.   Much  of  the  growth  in  the  market  can  be

        attributed to increased litigation on the part of landowners concerned

        over  the  past  practices  of the oil and  gas  industry  which  have

        resulted in numerous instances  of  radioactive  contamination  of the

        surface.  In some cases, settlement of the litigation has mandated the

        remediation of such sites.



             Injection  Wells.    In  February  1993, upon receipt of a permit

        from the Texas Railroad Commission, the Company began development of a

        50 acre injection well facility in the Big  Hill  Field  in  Jefferson

        County,  Texas.  Newpark's injection technology is distinguished  from

        conventional  methods in that it utilizes very low pressure, typically

                                        12



        under 100 pounds per square inch, to move the waste into the injection

        zone.  Conventional  wells  typically  use  pressures as high as 2,000

        pounds  per  square  inch.   In the event of a formation  failure   or

        blockage of the face of the injection  zone,  such  pressure can force

        waste  material  beyond  the  intended  zone, posing a hazard  to  the

        environment.  The low pressure used by Newpark  is inadequate to drive

        the injected waste from its intended injection zone.



              Three wells were initially installed at this  facility  and  two

        additional  wells  were  successfully completed during 1995.  Disposal

        operations began at this site  in  November  1993.   During  1995, the

        Company  licensed  and  constructed a new injection well facility at a

        400 acre site near Fannett,  Texas,  which  was  placed  in service in

        September  1995.   Because  of  differences  between  the geology  and

        physical  size  of  the  two  sites,  the Fannett site is expected  to

        provide greater capacity than the Big Hill site.



             The injection wells at Big Hill and  Fannett  receive  NOW  waste

        from  the  Company's  processing facilities at Port Arthur, as well as

        from customers in the surrounding  area.   Newpark anticipates that it

        will open additional injection facilities for  both NOW and NORM waste

        in Louisiana and Texas over the next two to three  years.  The Company

        has identified a number of sites in the Gulf Coast region  as suitable

        for development of such disposal facilities, has received permits  for

        one  additional site in Texas, and plans to file for additional permit

        authority in Louisiana.



             The  Company  believes  that its proprietary injection technology

        has application to other markets  and  waste  streams,  and  has begun

        preliminary  work  and  analysis  to enter the nonhazardous industrial

        waste market in the future.



             The Company also operates an analytical  laboratory in Lafayette,

        Louisiana, which supports all phases of its environmental services and

        provides independent laboratory services to the  oil and gas industry.

        These  services  include analytical laboratory and sampling  services,

        permit application  and  maintenance  services  and environmental site

        assessment and audit services.



             Mat Rental



             In 1988, the Company acquired the right to use,  in Louisiana and

        Texas,  a  patented  prefabricated  interlocking  mat system  for  the

        construction of drilling and work sites, which has  displaced  use  of

        individual  hardwood  boards.   This  system is quicker to install and

                                        13



        remove,  substantially reducing labor costs.   It  is  also  stronger,

        easier to  repair  and  maintain,  and  generates  less waste material

        during  construction  and removal than conventional board  roads.   In

        1994, the Company acquired  the  exclusive right to use this system in

        the Continental U.S. for the life  of  the  patent,  which  expires in

        2003.  Newpark provides this service to two markets:



             Oilfield market:  Newpark provides this patented interlocking mat

        system  to  the  oil and gas industry to ensure all-weather access  to

        exploration and production  sites  in  the  unstable  soil  conditions

        common  along  the  onshore Gulf of Mexico.  These sites are generally

        rented to the customer  for  an  initial period of 60 days; after that

        time, additional rentals are earned  on a monthly basis until the mats

        are released by the customer.



             Wetlands market:  Beginning in 1994,  the  Company recognized the

        development of another market for its patented mat system in providing

        access  roads  and  temporary  work sites to the pipeline,  electrical

        utility  and  highway  construction   industries.   Demand  for  these

        services was spurred by Federal Energy  Regulatory  Commission  orders

        requiring  compliance  with  environmental  protection rules under the

        Clean Water Act in the pipeline construction  business.   In 1994, the

        Company  received  approximately  $2.4  million  in revenue from  this

        source.   During  1995,  approximately $7.0 million in  revenues  were

        received in this market.



             Rerentals.  Drilling  and  work sites are typically rented by the

        customer  for  an initial period of  60  days.   Often,  the  customer

        extends the rental  term  for  additional 30 day periods, resulting in

        additional revenues to the Company.   These  rerental revenues provide

        high  margins  because  only  minimal  incremental   depreciation  and

        maintenance costs accrue to each rerental period.  Factors  which  may

        increase  rerental  revenue  include:   (i) the trend toward increased

        activity in the "transition zone" along the Gulf of Mexico, an area in

        which the Company's mat system provides the  primary  means of access;

        (ii) a trend toward deeper drilling, taking a longer time to reach the

        desired  target;  and,  (iii)  the  increased  frequency of commercial

        success,   requiring  logging,  testing,  and  completion   (hook-up),

        extending the  period during which access to the site is required.  In

        the   opinion   of  industry   analysts,   application   of   advanced

        technologies, particularly the use of three- dimensional seismic data,

        has contributed to these trends.


                                        14



             Onsite Environmental Management



             Promulgation    and   enforcement   of   increasingly   stringent

        environmental regulations affecting  drilling and production sites has

        increased the scope of services required  by the oil companies.  Often

        it is more efficient for the site operator  to  contract with a single

        company  that  can  provide all-weather site access  and  provide  the

        required  onsite  and  offsite   environmental  services  on  a  fully

        integrated  basis.   The Company provides  a  comprehensive  range  of

        environmental services  necessary  for  its  customers'  oil  and  gas

        exploration and production activities.  These services include:



             Site   Assessment:    Site   assessment   work  begins  prior  to

        installation of mats on a drilling site, and generally  begins  with a

        study  of  the  proposed  well  site, which includes site photography,

        background soil sampling, laboratory  analysis  and  investigation  of

        flood  hazards and other native conditions.  The assessment determines

        whether  the  site  has  previously  been  contaminated and provides a

        baseline for later restoration to pre-drilling condition.



             Pit  Design, Construction and Drilling Waste  Management.   Under

        its  Environmentally   Managed   Pit   ("EMP")  Program,  the  Company

        constructs waste pits at drilling sites  and monitors the waste stream

        produced in drilling operations and the contents  and condition of the

        pits with the objective of minimizing the amount of waste generated on

        the  site.  Where possible, the Company disposes of  waste  onsite  by

        land-farming,  through  chemical  and  mechanical  treatment of liquid

        waste  and by annular injection into a suitably permitted  underground

        formation.   Waste  water treated onsite may be reused in the drilling

        process or, where permitted, discharged into adjacent surface waters.



             Regulatory Compliance.   Throughout  the  drilling  process,  the

        Company  assists  the  operator  in interfacing with the landowner and

        regulatory authorities.  The Company  also  assists  the  operator  in

        obtaining  necessary  permits and in complying with record maintenance

        and reporting requirements.



             Site Remediation.



                  NOW (Drilling).   At the completion of the drilling process,

        under  applicable  regulations,   waste  water  on  the  site  may  be


                                        15



        chemically or mechanically treated and discharged into surface waters.

        Other waste that may not remain on  the  surface  of  the  site may be

        land-farmed  on  the  site  or  injected  under  permit  into geologic

        formations to minimize the need for offsite disposal.  Any  waste that

        cannot,  under regulations, remain onsite is manifested (in Louisiana)

        and transported  to an authorized facility for processing and disposal

        at the direction of  the  generator  or  customer (See "Description of

        Business- NOW Waste Processing").



                  NOW  (Production).  The Company also  provides  services  to

        remediate production pits and inactive waste pits including those from

        past oil and gas  drilling  and  production  operations.   The Company

        provides  the  following  remediation  services:  (i) analysis of  the

        contaminants  present  in  the  pit  and  a determination  of  whether

        remediation is required by applicable state regulation; (ii) treatment

        of waste onsite, and where permitted, reintroduction  of that material

        into    the   environment,   (iii)   removal,   containerization   and

        transportation  to  the Company's processing facility of NOW waste not

        treated onsite.



                  NORM.  In January  1994,  Newpark  became  a  licensed  NORM

        contractor,  allowing  the Company to perform site remediation work at

        NORM contaminated facilities  in  Louisiana and Texas.  Because of the

        need    for   increased   worker-protective    equipment,    extensive

        decontamination  procedures  and other regulatory compliance issues at

        NORM sites, the cost of providing such services are materially greater

        than at NOW facilities, and generates  proportionately higher revenues

        than similar work at a NOW facility.



             Site  Closure.  The  location  is restored  to  its  pre-drilling

        condition  and reseeded with native grasses.   Closure  also  involves

        delivery of test results indicating that closure has been completed in

        compliance with applicable regulations.  This information is important

        to the customer  because  the operator is subject to future regulatory

        review and audits.  In addition,  the information may be required on a

        current  basis  if the operator is subject  to  a  pending  regulatory

        compliance order.



             Wood Product Sales



             By the  end  of  1991, the Company had become aware of increasing

        environmental regulation affecting  wetlands areas.  These regulations

        have affected the oil and gas drilling  industry  as well as pipeline,

        electrical  distribution  and  highway  projects.  In anticipation  of

        increased demand for hardwood lumber used  in providing access to such

                                        16




        wetlands sites, the Company purchased a sawmill  in  Batson, Texas, in

        October  1992.  The mill's products include lumber, timber,  and  wood

        chips, as  well  as bark and sawdust.  Pulp and paper companies in the

        area supply a large  proportion  of the hardwood logs processed at the

        sawmill and, in turn, are the primary customers for wood chips created

        in the milling process.  During 1993,  Newpark  invested approximately

        $1.0 million in expansion of the sawmill to increase  its capacity for

        producing wood chips.  During 1995, the Company invested an additional

        $750,000 to:  (i) install a log watering system to maintain  the level

        of  moisture  in the wood chips produced, as desired by its customers,

        and; (ii) for expanded  and  improved  sawing capacity, which improved

        both production and efficiency.



             General Oilfield Services



             The  Company performs general oilfield  services  throughout  the

        Gulf Coast  area between Corpus Christi, Texas and Pensacola, Florida.

        General oilfield services performed by the Company include preparation

        of work sites  for installations of mats, connecting wells and placing

        them in production,  laying flow lines and infield pipelines, building

        permanent  roads, grading,  lease  maintenance  (the  maintenance  and

        repair  of producing  well  sites),  cleanup  and  general  roustabout

        services.   General  oilfield  services  are typically performed under

        short-term time and material contracts, which  are  obtained by direct

        negotiation or bid.



             The  Company manufactures and sells a line of American  Petroleum

        Institute certified  wellheads  and  valves (flow and pressure control

        equipment,  principally  installed  above   ground)  to  oil  and  gas

        exploration and production companies.  Most of  the Company's wellhead

        sales  include installation and service for which  the  Company  earns

        additional   revenues.   The  Company  also  repairs  and  refurbishes

        customer-owned  wellheads.   Newpark  has entered into an agreement to

        sell this operating unit to an unrelated  third  party, and expects to

        consummate that transaction before mid-1996.



        International Expansion



             During  the  first  quarter  of  1995,  the   Company   initiated

        participation  in  a venture which provides mat rental services to the

        oil and gas industry  in  Venezuela.   Revenue from foreign operations

        has been immaterial in each of the past three years.

                                        17



        Sources and Availability of Raw Materials and Equipment



             Newpark believes that its sources of  supply for any materials or

        equipment used in its businesses are adequate  for  its needs and that

        it  is not dependent upon any one supplier.  No serious  shortages  or

        delays have been encountered in obtaining any raw materials.



        Patents and Licenses



             Newpark  seeks  patents and licenses on new developments whenever

        feasible, and has recently applied for U.S. patents on its new NOW and

        NORM waste processing and injection  disposal system.  Newpark has the

        exclusive license for the life of the  patent  (which expires in 2003)

        to  use,  sell  and  lease  the  prefabricated mats that  it  uses  in

        connection with its site preparation  business  in  the  48 contiguous

        states of the United States.  The licensor has the right to  sell mats

        in  states  where  Newpark  is not engaged in business, but only after

        giving Newpark the opportunity  to  take  advantage of the opportunity

        itself.  The license is subject to a royalty which Newpark can satisfy

        by purchasing specified quantities of mats annually from the licensor.



             The  utilization of proprietary  technology  and  systems  is  an

        important aspect of the Company's business strategy.  For example, the

        Company relies on a variety of unpatented proprietary technologies and

        know-how in the processing of NOW.  Although the Company believes that

        this technology and  know-how  provide it with significant competitive

        advantages  in  the  environmental   services   business,  competitive

        products and services have been successfully developed and marketed by

        others.  The Company believes that its reputation in its industry, the

        range of services offered, ongoing technical development and know-how,

        responsiveness   to   customers   and   understanding  of   regulatory

        requirements are of equal or greater competitive significance than its

        existing proprietary rights.



        Working Capital Practice



             Newpark does not have any special working capital practices which

        differ significantly from those generally practiced in the oil and gas

        or environmental services industries.  For  additional  information on

        Newpark's current borrowings see "Management's Discussion and Analysis

                                        18

      

        of Results of Operations and Financial Condition-Liquidity and Capital

        Resources," and "Note E. Credit Arrangements and Long-Term  Debt,"  in

        the "Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements."



        Dependence Upon Limited Number of Customers



             The Company's customers are principally major and independent oil

        and  gas  exploration  and production companies operating in the  Gulf

        Coast  area,  with  the  vast  majority  of  the  Company's  customers

        concentrated in Louisiana and Texas.



             During the year ended December 31, 1995, approximately 30% of the

        Company's revenues were derived  from  14 major oil companies, and one

        other  customer  accounted  for  approximately   16%  of  consolidated

        revenues.   Given  current  market conditions and the  nature  of  the

        products involved, management  does  not believe that the loss of this

        customer would have a material adverse effect upon the Company.



             The  Company  performs  services  either   pursuant  to  standard

        contracts or under longer term negotiated agreements.   As most of the

        Company's  agreements  with its customers are cancelable upon  limited

        notice, the Company's backlog  is not significant.  For the year ended

        December  31,  1995,  approximately   half  of  the  revenues  of  the

        environmental services segment were obtained  on a bid basis, and half

        of its revenues were derived on a negotiated or contractual basis.



             Newpark  does not derive a significant portion  of  its  revenues

        from government contracts of any kind.



        Competition



             The Company  operates  in  highly  competitive industry segments.

        The  Company believes that the principal competitive  factors  in  its

        businesses are reputation, technical proficiency, reliability, quality

        and breadth of services offered, managerial experience and price.  The

        Company  believes  that  it effectively competes on the basis of these

        factors,  and  that  its  competitive   position   benefits  from  its

        proprietary position with respect to the patented mat  system  used in

        its  site preparation business, its proprietary treatment and disposal

        methods for both NOW and NORM waste streams and its ability to provide

        its  customers   with  an  integrated  well  site  management  program

        including environmental and general oilfield services.

                                        19




             It is often more efficient for the site operator to contract with

        a single company that  can  prepare  the  well  site  and  provide the

        required  onsite  and  offsite  environmental  services.   The Company

        believes that its ability to provide a number of services as part of a

        comprehensive  program  enables  the  Company  to  price  its services

        competitively.



             The Company believes that there are certain barriers to  entry in

        the  environmental  and  oilfield  services industry in the Gulf Coast

        region.   These barriers include formalized  procedures  for  customer

        acceptance, licenses, and permits, and the need for specially equipped

        facilities  and  trained  personnel.   Facilities disposing of NOW are

        subject to permitting and regulatory requirements which pose a barrier

        to entry into the market.  The market, however, is very large.  Only a

        small portion of the total waste generated  is  taken  to a commercial

        disposal  facility and many other methods exist for dealing  with  the

        waste stream.   In the market served by the Company there are over one

        hundred  permitted   commercial   facilities,   including   landfarms,

        landfills, and injection facilities authorized to dispose of NOW.



             For  additional  information  concerning the markets that Newpark

        serves and the effects of competition,  see  "Description of Business"

        and "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Results of Operations and

        Financial Condition."



        Environmental Disclosures



             Newpark  has  sought  to  comply  with all applicable  regulatory

        requirements concerning environmental quality.   The Company has made,

        and  expects  to continue to make, the necessary capital  expenditures

        for environmental  protection  at  its facilities, but does not expect

        that  these  will  become  material  in the  foreseeable  future.   No

        material capital expenditures for environmental  protection  were made

        during 1995.



             Newpark  derives  a  significant  portion  of  its  revenue  from

        providing  environmental  services  to  its customers.  These services

        have  become necessary in order for these  customers  to  comply  with

        regulations governing the discharge of materials into the environment.

        Substantially  all  of Newpark's capital expenditures made during 1994

        and 1995, and those planned  for  1996, are directly or indirectly the

        result of such regulation.


                                        20



        Employees

             At February 16, 1996, Newpark employed approximately 565 full and

        part-time personnel, none of which are represented by unions.  Newpark

        considers its relations with its employees to be satisfactory.



        Environmental Regulation



             The Company's business is affected  both  directly and indirectly

        by governmental regulations relating to the oil  and  gas  industry in

        general, as well as environmental, health and safety regulations  that

        have  specific  application  to  the Company's business.  The Company,

        through  the routine course of providing  its  services,  handles  and

        profiles hazardous regulated material for its customers.  Newpark also

        handles, processes  and  disposes of nonhazardous regulated materials.

        This section discusses various federal and state pollution control and

        health and safety programs  that  are  administered  and  enforced  by

        regulatory   agencies,   including,  without  limitation,  the  U.  S.

        Environmental Protection Agency  ("EPA"),  the  U.S.  Coast Guard, the

        Department of the Interior's Office of Surface Mining,  the  U.S. Army

        Corps   of   Engineers,   the   Texas  Natural  Resource  Conservation

        Commission,  the  Texas  Department  of  Health,  the  Texas  Railroad

        Commission, the Louisiana  Department of Environmental Quality and the

        Louisiana  Department  of  Natural   Resources.   These  programs  are

        applicable  or  potentially  applicable  to   the   Company's  current

        operations.  Although the Company intends to make capital expenditures

        to  expand  its  environmental  services  capabilities,  the   Company

        believes  that  it  is not presently required to make material capital

        expenditures to remain  in  compliance  with  federal, state and local

        provisions relating to the protection of the environment.



             RCRA.  The Resource Conservation and Recovery  Act  of  1976,  as

        amended  in 1984, ("RCRA"), is the principal federal statute governing

        hazardous waste generation, treatment, storage and disposal.  RCRA and

        EPA-approved  state  hazardous  waste  management  programs govern the

        handling of "hazardous wastes".  Under RCRA, liability  and  stringent

        operating  requirements  are  imposed  on  a  person  who  is either a

        "generator"  or  "transporter"  of  hazardous  waste or an "owner"  or

        "operator"  of  a  hazardous  waste  treatment,  storage  or  disposal

        facility.  The EPA and the states have issued regulations  pursuant to

        RCRA  for  hazardous  waste  generators,  transporters and owners  and

        operators   of   hazardous  waste  treatment,  storage   or   disposal

        facilities. These  regulations  impose detailed operating, inspection,

        training  and  emergency  preparedness   and  response  standards  and

        requirements   for   closure,  continuing  financial   responsibility,

                                        21




        manifesting  of waste,  record-keeping  and   reporting,  as  well  as

        treatment  standards   for  any  hazardous  waste  intended  for  land

        disposal.



             The Company's primary  operations  involve  NOW,  which is exempt

        from  classification  as  a  RCRA-regulated hazardous waste.  However,

        extensive state regulatory programs  govern  the  management  of  such

        waste.  In  addition,  in performing other services for its customers,

        the Company is subject to  both  federal  (RCRA)  and  state  solid or

        hazardous  waste management regulations as contractor to the generator

        of such waste.



             Proposals  have  been  made  to rescind the exemption of NOW from

        regulation as hazardous waste under  RCRA.   Repeal or modification of

        this  exemption  by administrative, legislative  or  judicial  process

        could require the  Company to change significantly its method of doing

        business.  There is  no  assurance  that  the  Company  would have the

        capital  resources  available  to do so, or that it would be  able  to

        adapt its operations.



             Subtitle I of RCRA regulates  underground  storage tanks in which

        liquid  petroleum  or  hazardous substances are stored.   States  have

        similar regulations, many of which are more stringent in some respects

        than federal programs.  The implementing regulations require that each

        owner or operator of an  underground  tank  notify  a designated state

        agency of the existence of such underground tank, specifying  the age,

        size, type, location and use of each such tank.  The regulations  also

        impose  design,  construction  and  installation  requirements for new

        tanks,  tank  testing  and  inspection  requirements, leak  detection,

        prevention,  reporting  and  cleanup requirements,  as  well  as  tank

        closure and removal requirements.



             The Company has a number  of  underground  storage tanks that are

        subject  to  the requirements of RCRA and applicable  state  programs.

        Violators of any of the federal or state regulations may be subject to

        enforcement  orders  or  significant  penalties  by  the  EPA  or  the

        applicable state agency.  The Company is not aware of any instances in

        which it has incurred  liability  under  RCRA.  Cleanup costs or costs

        associated with changes in environmental laws  or regulations could be

        substantial and could have a material adverse effect on the Company.



             CERCLA.   The Comprehensive Environmental Response,  Compensation

        and Liability Act,  as  amended  in  1986,  ("CERCLA"),  provides  for

        immediate  response  and  removal  actions  coordinated by the EPA for

                                        22




        releases of hazardous substances into the environment  and  authorizes

        the  government,  or  private  parties,  to respond to the release  or

        threatened release of hazardous substances.   The  government may also

        order  persons  responsible for the release to perform  any  necessary

        cleanup. Liability  extends  to  the  present  owners and operators of

        waste  disposal  facilities from which a release occurs,  persons  who

        owned or operated such facilities at the time the hazardous substances

        were released, persons  who  arranged  for  disposal  or  treatment of

        hazardous   substances   and  waste  transporters  who  selected  such

        facilities for treatment or  disposal of hazardous substances.  CERCLA

        has been interpreted to create strict, joint and several liability for

        the costs of removal and remediation,  other  necessary response costs

        and damages for injury to natural resources.



             Among  other  things,  CERCLA  requires the EPA  to  establish  a

        National  Priorities  List  ("NPL")  of  sites   at   which  hazardous

        substances have been or are threatened to be released and that require

        investigation  or  cleanup.   The  NPL  is  constantly expanding.   In

        addition,  the  states in which the Company conducts  operations  have

        enacted similar laws  and  keep similar lists of sites which may be in

        need of remediation.



             Although Newpark primarily  handles  oilfield waste classified as

        NOW  under relevant laws, this waste typically  contains  constituents

        designated  by the EPA as hazardous substances under RCRA, despite the

        current exemption  of  NOW  from  hazardous substance  classification.

        Where the Company's operations result  in  the  release  of  hazardous

        substances, including releases at sites owned by other entities  where

        the  Company  performs  its  services,  the Company could incur CERCLA

        liability.   Previously owned businesses also  may  have  disposed  or

        arranged for disposal of hazardous substances that could result in the

        imposition of  CERCLA  liability  on  the  Company  in the future.  In

        particular, divisions and subsidiaries previously owned by the Company

        were involved in extensive mining operations at facilities in Utah and

        Nevada.  In addition, divisions and subsidiaries previously  owned  by

        the   Company   were  involved  in  waste  generation  and  management

        activities in numerous  states.   These activities involved substances

        that may be classified as RCRA hazardous  substances.   Any  of  those

        sites  or activities potentially could be the subject of future CERCLA

        damage claims.



             With the exception of the sites discussed in "Legal Proceedings -

        Environmental  Proceedings"  below,  the  Company  is not aware of any

        instances   in   which   it   has  incurred  liability  under  CERCLA.

        Nonetheless, the identification  of additional sites at which clean-up


                                        23



        action  is required could subject the  Company  to  liabilities  which

        could have a material adverse effect on the Company.



             The Clean Water Act.  The Clean Water Act regulates the discharge

        of pollutants,  including  NOW,  into  waters.   The  Clean  Water Act

        establishes  a system of standards, permits and enforcement procedures

        for the discharge  of  pollutants  from industrial and municipal waste

        water sources.  The law sets treatment  standards  for  industries and

        waste  water  treatment plants and provides federal grants  to  assist

        municipalities  in  complying  with the new standards.  In addition to

        requiring permits for industrial  and  municipal  discharges  directly

        into  waters  of  the United States, the Clean Water Act also requires

        pretreatment of industrial waste water before discharge into municipal

        systems.  The Clean  Water  Act  gives  the  EPA  the authority to set

        pretreatment limits for direct and indirect industrial discharges.



             In addition, the Clean Water Act prohibits certain  discharges of

        oil  or hazardous substances and authorizes the federal government  to

        remove or arrange for removal of such oil or hazardous substances. The

        Clean Water Act also requires the adoption of the National Contingency

        Plan to  cover  removal  of such materials. Under the Clean Water Act,

        the owner or operator of a  vessel  or  facility  may  be  liable  for

        penalties  and  costs incurred by the federal government in responding

        to a discharge of oil or hazardous substances.



             The Company  treats and discharges waste waters at certain of its

        facilities. These activities  are  subject  to the requirements of the

        Clean   Water  Act  and  federal  and  state  enforcement   of   these

        regulations.



             The  EPA Region 6 Outer Continental Shelf ("OCS") permit covering

        oil and gas  operations  in federal waters in the Gulf (seaward of the

        Louisiana and Texas territorial  seas)  was reissued in November, 1992

        and modified in December, 1993.  This permit includes  stricter limits

        for oil and grease concentrations in produced waters to be discharged.

        These  limits  are  based  on  the  Best Available  Treatment  ("BAT")

        requirements  contained  in  the  Oil  and  Gas  Offshore  Subcategory

        national guidelines which were published  March  3,  1993.  Additional

        requirements  include toxicity testing and bioaccumulation  monitoring

        studies of proposed discharges.

                                        24




             EPA Region  6,  which includes the Company's market, continues to

        issue new and amended  National Pollution Discharge Elimination System

        ("NPDES")   general   permits    further   limiting   or   restricting

        substantially all discharges of produced  water  from  the Oil and Gas

        Extraction  Point  Source  Category into Waters of the United  States.

        These permits include:



        1)   Onshore subcategory permits  for  Texas,  Louisiana, Oklahoma and

        New Mexico issued in February, 1991 (56 Fed. Reg.  7698).  This permit

        completely prohibits the discharge of drilling fluids, drill cuttings,

        produced water or sand, and various other oilfield wastes generated by

        onshore  operations  into waters of the U.S.  This provision  has  the

        effect of requiring that most oilfield wastes follow established state

        disposal programs.



        2)   Permits for produced  water  and  produced  sand  discharges into

        coastal waters of Louisiana and Texas issued on January  9,  1995  (60

        Fed. Reg. 2387).  Coastal means "any water landward of the territorial

        seas... or any wetlands adjacent to such waters".  All such discharges

        must cease by January 1, 1997.



        3)   The  Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) permit for the western Gulf of

        Mexico, covering  oil and gas operations in federal waters (seaward of

        the Louisiana and Texas  territorial  seas)  was  reissued in November

        1992  and modified in December 1993.  It is expected  to  be  combined

        with an OCS general permit covering new sources at its next revision.



        4)   Permits  for  the  territorial  seas  of Louisiana and Texas were

        scheduled  to  be  proposed in the spring of 1995.   The  most  recent

        information from the  EPA  indicates the permits should be proposed in

        the  spring  of  1996.  The territorial  seas  part  of  the  Offshore

        Subcategory begins at the line of ordinary low water along the part of

        the coast which is  in  direct  contact with the open sea, and extends

        out three nautical miles.  These  permits  will  cover  both  existing

        sources  and  new sources.  All discharges in state waters must comply

        with any more stringent  requirements  contained  in  Louisiana  Water

        Quality Regulations, LAC 33.IX.7.708.



             The  combined  effect  of  all  these  regulations  will  closely

        approach a "zero discharge standard" affecting all waters except those

        of  the OCS.  The Company and many industry participants believe  that

        these  permits may ultimately lead to a total prohibition of overboard

        discharge in the Gulf of Mexico.


                                        25



             The Clean Air Act.  The Clean Air Act provides for federal, state

        and  local   regulation  of  emissions  of  air  pollutants  into  the

        atmosphere.  Any  modification  or  construction  of  a  facility with

        regulated  air  emissions must be a permitted or authorized  activity.

        The Clean Air Act provides for administrative and judicial enforcement

        against  owners  and  operators  of  regulated  facilities,  including

        substantial penalties.   In  1990,  the Clean Air Act was reauthorized

        and amended, substantially increasing  the scope and stringency of the

        Clean Air Act's regulations.  The Clean Air Act has very little impact

        on the Company's operations.



             Oil  Pollution  Act  of  1990.  The Oil  Pollution  Act  of  1990

        contains  liability provisions for  cleanup  costs,  natural  resource

        damages  and   property   damages   as  well  as  substantial  penalty

        provisions.  The OPA also requires double hulls on all new oil tankers

        and barges operating in waters subject  to  the  jurisdiction  of  the

        United  States.   All  marine  vessels operated by the Company already

        meet this requirement.



             State Regulation.  In 1986,  the  Louisiana Department of Natural

        Resources promulgated Order 29-B.  Order 29-B contains extensive rules

        governing  pit  closure  and  the  generation,   treatment,   storage,

        transportation and disposal of NOW.  Under Order 29-B, onsite disposal

        of  NOW  is  limited and is subject to stringent guidelines.  If these

        guidelines cannot  be  met,  NOW  must  be transported and disposed of

        offsite in accordance with the provisions  of  Order  29-B.  Moreover,

        under Order 29-B, most, if not all, active waste pits must  be  closed

        or modified to meet regulatory standards; those pits that continue  to

        be  allowed may be used only for a limited time.  A material number of

        these  pits  may  contain  sufficient concentrations of NORM to become

        subject to regulation by the  DEQ.   Rule  8  of  the  Texas  Railroad

        Commission also contains detailed requirements for the management  and

        disposal  of  NOW  and  Rule 94 governs the management and disposal of

        NORM.  In addition, the  Texas Legislature recently enacted a law that

        has established an Oilfield  Cleanup  Fund  to  be administered by the

        Texas Railroad Commission to plug abandoned wells  if  the  Commission

        deems  it  necessary to prevent pollution, and to control or clean  up

        certain oil and gas wastes that cause or are likely to cause pollution

        of surface or subsurface water.



             The Railroad  Commission  of  Texas  Rule 91 (16 TAC 3.91) became

        effective November 1, 1993.  This rule regulates the cleanup of spills

        of crude oil and gas exploration and production  activities  including

        transportation  by  pipeline.  In general, contaminated soils must  be

        remediated to oil and grease content of less than 1%.


                                        26



             Many states maintain  licensing and permitting procedures for the

        construction and operation of facilities that emit pollutants into the

        air.   In Texas, the Texas Natural  Resource  Conservation  Commission

        (the "TNRCC")  requires companies that emit pollutants into the air to

        apply for an air permit or to satisfy the conditions for an exemption.

        The Company has  obtained  certain air permits and believes that it is

        exempt from obtaining other  air  permits  at its facilities including

        its Port Arthur, Texas, NOW processing facility.  The Company met with

        the  TNRCC  and  filed  for  an  exemption  in  the fall of  1991.   A

        subsequent renewal letter was filed in 1995.  Based  upon its feedback

        from  the TNRCC, the Company expects that it will continue  to  remain

        exempt.  However,  should  it  not remain exempt, the Company believes

        that any remedial actions that the  TNRCC  may  require with regard to

        non-exempt air emissions would not have a material  adverse  effect on

        the financial position or operation of the Company.



             Other  Environmental  Laws.   Newpark  may  be  subject  to other

        federal  and  state  environmental  protection laws, including without

        limitation,  the  Toxic Substances Control  Act,  the  Surface  Mining

        Control and Reclamation  Act  ("SMCRA")  and the Super Fund Amendments

        and  Reauthorization  Act,  including  the  Emergency   Planning   and

        Community  Right-To-Know-Act.   In  particular,  SMCRA  established  a

        nationwide program to regulate surface mining and reclamation, and the

        surface  effects  of  underground  mining.  It sets strict reclamation

        standards and a mandatory enforcement  system.  While the Company does

        not   currently   conduct   mining   activities,   SMCRA   reclamation

        responsibility and corresponding state regulatory programs could apply

        to any of the facilities in which the  Company  participated in mining

        activities  in  the past.In addition, the Company is  subject  to  the

        Occupation  Safety  and  Health  Act  that  imposes  requirements  for

        employee safety  and  health  and applicable state provisions adopting

        worker health and safety requirements.   Moreover, it is possible that

        other  developments,  such  as  increasingly  stricter  environmental,

        safety  and  health  laws,  and  regulations and enforcement  policies

        thereunder, could result in substantial  additional  regulation of the

        Company and  could subject to further scrutiny the Company's handling,

        manufacture, use or disposal of substances or pollutants.  The Company

        cannot predict the extent to which its operations may  be  affected by

        future  enforcement  policies  as  applied to existing laws or by  the

        enactment of new statutes and regulations.


                                        27



        Risk Management



             The Company's business exposes  it  to  substantial  risks.   For

        example,  the  Company's  environmental services routinely involve the

        handling, storage and disposal of nonhazardous regulated materials and

        waste, and in some cases, handling  of  hazardous  regulated materials

        and waste for its customers which are generators of  such  waste.  The

        Company could be held liable for improper cleanup and disposal,  which

        liability  could  be based upon statute, negligence, strict liability,

        contract or otherwise.  As  is common in the oil and gas industry, the

        Company often is required to  indemnify  its customers or other third-

        parties against certain risks related to the services performed by the

        Company, including damages stemming from environmental contamination.



             The Company has implemented various procedures designed to ensure

        compliance with applicable regulations and  reduce  the risk of damage

        or loss.  These include specified handling procedures  and  guidelines

        for regulated waste, ongoing training and monitoring of employees  and

        maintenance of its insurance coverage.



             The  Company  carries  a  broad range of insurance coverages that

        management considers adequate for  the  protection  of  its assets and

        operations.  This  coverage  includes general liability, comprehensive

        property damage, workers' compensation and other coverage customary in

        its industries; however, this insurance is subject to coverage limits.

        The Company could be materially  adversely affected by a claim that is

        not  covered or only partially covered  by  insurance.   There  is  no

        assurance that insurance will continue to be available to the Company,

        that the  possible  types  of  liabilities that may be incurred by the

        Company will be covered by its insurance, that the Company's insurance

        carriers will meet their obligations or that the dollar amount of such

        liabilities will not exceed the Company's policy limits.






                                        28



        ITEM 2.  Properties

        Lease of Principal Facilities

             With  few exceptions, the Company leases its principal facilities
        and certain equipment.

             Newpark's  corporate offices in Metairie, Louisiana, are occupied
        at an annual rental  of  approximately $127,000 under a lease expiring
        in December 1997.

             Its NOW processing facility in Port Arthur, Texas, is occupied at
        a current annual rental of $168,000 under a lease of which the Company
        entered, during 1995, the  first of three 4-year renewal options.  The
        facility,  which  is  located  on  2.9  acres  near  the  Intracoastal
        Waterway,  was  constructed  by  the   landowner   to   the  Company's
        specifications  beginning  late  in 1990 and began operations  in  mid
        1991.

             The Company's NORM processing  facility  is  also located in Port
        Arthur,  Texas  on  3.0  acres  of  leased land adjacent  to  the  NOW
        facility.  Annual property rentals are  currently  $37,000.  The lease
        expires in July of 1997 and has two 5-year renewal options  available.
        The Company constructed the processing facility during 1994.

             The  Company  owns  two  injection  disposal  sites  in Jefferson
        County,  Texas,  one  on 50 acres of land and the other on 400  acres.
        Seven wells are currently operational at these sites.

             The Company maintains  a  fleet  of  forty-two  barges  of  which
        twenty-one  are  owned  by  the  Company,  fifteen are on daily rental
        agreements, six are under 10-year lease terms,  and  four are under 7-
        year  terms.   The  barges  are used to transport waste to  processing
        stations and are certified for  this purpose by the U. S. Coast Guard.
        Annual rentals under the barge leases totaled approximately $1,500,000
        during 1995.

             Additional  facilities  are held  under  short-term  leases  with
        annual rentals aggregating approximately  $800,000  during  1995.  The
        Company believes that its facilities are suitable for their respective
        uses and adequate for current needs.

             The  Company owns property leased to others and used as a  marine
        repair facility  occupying  approximately 23 acres on an island in the
        Houston Ship Channel.  In December  1993, the property was leased to a
        third party that also obtained the option  to purchase the facility as
        part of the lease agreement.  Early in 1994,  the Company entered into
        a new financing of the property.

             The Company also owns 80 acres  occupied as  a  sawmill  facility
        near  Batson,  Texas.  The Company believes this facility is  adequate
        for current production needs.




                                                   29



        ITEM 3.  Legal Proceedings

            Newpark  and its subsidiaries are involved in litigation and other
        claims or assessments  on  matters  arising  in  the  normal course of
        business.  In the opinion of management, any recovery or  liability in
        these   matters  should  not  have  a  material  effect  on  Newpark's
        consolidated financial statements.


        Environmental Proceedings

            In the  ordinary  course  of  conducting its business, the Company
        becomes involved in judicial and administrative  proceedings involving
        governmental authorities at the federal, state and  local  levels,  as
        well  as  private party actions.  Pending proceedings that may involve
        liability for  violation of environmental matters are described below.
        The Company believes  that  none  of  these  matters involves material
        exposure.  There is no assurance, however, that such exposure does not
        exist  or will not arise in other matters relating  to  the  Company's
        past or present operations.

            The  Company  was identified by the EPA as a minor or "de minimus"
        contributor of waste  to  a  disposal  site  requiring  cleanup  under
        CERCLA,  as  amended in 1986.  That facility, the French Limited site,
        located  in Southeast  Texas,  is  currently  undergoing  a  voluntary
        cleanup by  those  parties  identified  as  waste  contributors.  Five
        related private party suits have been filed against  the  Company  and
        the  other potentially responsible parties at the French Limited site.
        The Company  has  settled  its  potential  liability  in four of those
        suits.   Management  does  not  anticipate  that  the outcome  of  the
        remaining suit will have a material adverse impact  upon  the Company,
        and  anticipates  either  a  nominal settlement or dismissal from  the
        action.

            The  Company has been identified  by  the  EPA  as  a  potentially
        responsible   party   in  two  other  CERCLA  actions,  based  on  its
        contribution of oilfield  waste to three disposal sites.  In the first
        case, the Company was the largest  volume  contributor of waste to the
        Disposal  Services,  Inc.  Clay  Point  site,  located   in   southern
        Mississippi.   The Company has resolved its liability by its voluntary
        participation in  a  consent  decree  with  the  EPA,  and  payment of
        $158,900  in  1992  as  its pro rata share of the removal costs.   Two
        other facilities operated  by  the  same  company,  the Lee Street and
        Woolmarket  sites,  are  not subject to any enforcement  action  by  a
        federal regulatory agency,  and  the  EPA  has  specifically  declined
        pursuing  an action for remediation of these two facilities.  However,
        the Mississippi  Department  of  Environmental Quality is overseeing a
        continued, voluntary cleanup at the three sites.

            In the second CERCLA action, the  Company  has  taken the position
        that  it has been incorrectly identified by the EPA as  a  potentially
        responsible  Ode  minimus'  party  for  the  cleanup  of an abandoned
        oilfield site in Louisiana referred to as the PAB site.   The  Company
        settled its potential liability on a "de minimus" buy-out.

                                        30


            The  Company  has  been  identified  as one of 600 contributors of
        material  to  the  MAR Services facility,  a state  voluntary  cleanup
        site.  Because the Company  delivered only processed solid meeting the
        requirements of Louisiana Statewide  Executive Order 29-B to the site,
        it does not believe it has material financial  liability  for the site
        cleanup  cost.  The Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality  is
        overseeing voluntary cleanup at the site.

            Recourse  against  its  insurers under general liability insurance
        policies for reimbursement of cost and expense in the foregoing CERCLA
        actions is uncertain as a result  of  conflicting  court  decisions in
        similar  cases.   In addition, certain insurance policies under  which
        coverage may be afforded contain self-insurance levels that may exceed
        the Company's ultimate liability.

            The Company believes  that any liability incurred in the foregoing
        matters  will not have a material  adverse  effect  on  the  Company's
        consolidated   financial  statements.   However,  a  material  adverse
        outcome in any of  the  foregoing matters could have an adverse effect
        on the Company.


        ITEM 4.  Submission of Matters to a Vote of Shareholders



             None






                                        31



                                       PART II

        ITEM 5.  Market   for  the  Registrant's  Common  Equity  and  Related
        Stockholder Matters

             Newpark's common stock traded on The Nasdaq Stock Market under the
        symbol "NPRS" through  December  5,  1995, and commenced trading on the
        New York Stock Exchange on December 6, 1995 under the symbol "NR".

             The following table sets forth the range of the high and low sales
        prices for the periods indicated.


               Period                                 High      Low

          1994

          1st Quarter                                $14.50    $ 8.25
          2nd Quarter                                $16.75    $13.50
          3rd Quarter                                $19.75    $15.75
          4th Quarter                                $25.00    $18.25


          1995

          1st Quarter                                $26.00    $14.75
          2nd Quarter                                $24.25    $20.25
          3rd Quarter                                $23.25    $17.00
          4th Quarter                                $22.86    $15.50

             At  December  31, 1995, the Company  had  4,230  stockholders  of
        record.  Newpark paid  a  5%  stock  dividend  on the Common Stock  on
        December 30, 1995 to shareholders of record on November 30, 1995.




                                        32




        ITEM 6.  SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA

        selected consolidated financial information

             The  following tables set forth selected  consolidated  financial
        information  with  respect   to  Newpark  for  the  five  years  ended
        December 31, 1995.  The selected  consolidated  financial  information
        for the five years ended December 31, 1995 is derived from the audited
        consolidated   financial  statements  of  Newpark.   Information  with
        respect to this item can also be found in "Management's Discussion and
        Analysis of Results  of Operations and Financial Condition" and "Notes
        to Consolidated Financial Statements."


             For information regarding dispositions, see "Note B. Discontinued
        Operations," in the "Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements."



                                                                  Years Ended December 31,
                                             ____________________________________________________________
                                                 1995        1994        1993         1992        1991
                                             ____________________________________________________________
                                                       (Dollars in thousands, except Per Share data)

                                                                              
          Consolidated Statements of Income
             Data:

          Revenues                           $  97,982  $   79,632  $  56,330  $    49,457  $    44,635
          Cost of services provided             64,467      56,259     42,581       36,860       34,703
          Operating costs                        9,414       7,277      6,557        5,519        3,799
          General and administrative expenses    2,658       3,231      2,129        1,963        1,305
          Provision for uncollectible accounts
             and notes receivable                  463        974         671          154           94
                                              ________   ________    ________   __________   __________ 
          Operating income from continuing
             operations                         20,980     11,891       4,392        4,961        4,734
          Interest income                         (183)       (78)        -            (18)         (47)
          Interest expense                       3,740      2,660       1,274          847        1,562
          Non-recurring expense                    436         -           -           -            -
          Financial restructure costs              -           -           -           -            155
                                              ________   ________    ________   __________   __________ 
          Income from continuing operations
             before provision for income taxes  16,987      9,309       3,118        4,132        3,064
          Provision (benefit) for income taxes   4,751        (85)     (1,670)          51           73
                                              ________   ________    ________   __________   __________ 
          Income from continuing operations     12,236      9,394       4,788        4,081        2,991
          Income (loss) from discontinued 
            operations                             -          -        (2,366)       1,205          877
                                              ________   ________    ________   __________   __________ 
          Income before extraordinary items     12,236      9,394       2,422        5,286        3,868
          Extraordinary items                      -           -           -           -          1,365
                                              ________   ________    ________   __________   __________ 
          Net income                          $ 12,236  $   9,394   $   2,422    $   5,286   $    2,503
                                              ========   ========    ========   ==========   ==========

          Income (loss):
             Continuing operations            $   1.16  $     .90   $     .49    $     .43   $      .46
             Discontinued operations               -          -          (.24)         .12          .13
             Extraordinary items                   -          -            -            -          (.21)
                                              ________   ________    ________   __________   __________ 
          Net income per common share         $   1.16  $     .90   $     .25    $     .55   $      .38
                                              ========   ========    ========   ==========   ==========
          Weighted average shares outstanding   10,568     10,422       9,690        9,564        6,521
                                              ========   ========    ========   ==========   ==========


                                       






                                                                    December 31,
          _____________________________________________________________________________________________
          (In thousands)                        1995        1994       1993         1992         1991
          _____________________________________________________________________________________________
          Consolidated Balance Sheet Data:
                                                                               
          Working capital                     $ 32,108  $  13,585   $   5,361    $   4,900   $   12,121
          Total assets                         152,747    110,756      90,316       75,478       53,454
          Short-term debt                        7,911     10,032      14,928       12,212        1,377
          Long-term debt                        46,724     28,892      12,446       10,432        3,774
          Shareholders' equity                  77,518     63,699      53,353       45,658       40,239



                                                  33

          


        ITEM 7.  Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition
                 and Results of Operations

             The  following  discussion  of the Company's financial condition,
        results of operations, liquidity and  capital resources should be read
        in conjunction with the "Consolidated Financial  Statements"  and  the
        "Notes  to  Consolidated  Financial  Statements" included elsewhere in
        this report.

        Overview

             Since 1990, Newpark has concentrated  on  expanding  and  further
        integrating  its environmental service capabilities.  The Company  has
        made  several acquisitions  to  extend  its  integrated  environmental
        services  into  the Texas Gulf Coast region.  During 1991, the Company
        completed  a  NOW processing  plant  and  in  1993  opened  its  first
        injection well facility for underground disposal of NOW.  During 1994,
        Newpark obtained  a permit to process NORM waste for disposal and thus
        became a participant in the NORM disposal business.

             In  1994,  the  Company   began   to   offer  temporary  worksite
        installation  and  mat  rental  services  utilizing   its  proprietary
        prefabricated  mat  system  outside  of  the  oil and gas industry  in
        connection with pipeline construction, electrical  power  distribution
        and   highway  construction  projects,  in  environmentally  sensitive
        "wetlands" and other areas where unstable soil conditions exist.

             The Baker-Hughes Rotary Rig Count has historically been viewed as
        the most significant single indicator of oil and gas drilling activity
        in the domestic market.  In 1993, the United States rig count averaged
        754 rigs in operation, and increased to 774 in 1994.  In 1995, the rig
        count averaged  723,  the  second lowest on record since the advent of
        the indicator in the early 1940's.

             Newpark's key market area  includes the (i) South Louisiana Land,
        (ii) Texas Railroad Commission Districts  2 and 3, (iii) Louisiana and
        Texas Inland Waters and (iv) the Offshore Gulf  of  Mexico  rig  count
        measurement  areas.   The  rig  count  trend  in the Company's primary
        market has tracked these national trends as set  forth  in  the  table
        below:




                                    1995    1994   1993        1Q95    2Q95   3Q95   4Q95
                                    ____    ____   ____        ____    ____   ____   ____
                                                                 
        U.S. Rig Count               723     774    754         705     677    745    765
        Newpark's key market         195     202    176         191     187    201    199
        Newpark's key market 
          to total                  27.0%   26.1%  23.3%       27.1%  27.6%   27.0%  26.0%
          

             Management  believes  that  the  improved  natural  gas  drilling
        activity,  as  evidenced  by  the rig count in its key market, was  an
        important factor which allowed  a  trend  of  increasing prices in its
        site preparation and mat rerental business to continue  through  1994.
        The  upward  trend in pricing abated with the decline in the rig count
        within the Company's key market during 1995.

                                        34


             Despite this  decline  in  rig  activity,  the  volume  of  waste
        received  by Newpark increased at a compound rate of 44% from 1993  to
        1995, primarily  due  to:  (i)  the recovery of the remediation market
        following implementation  of  NORM  regulations;  and,  (ii) new, more
        stringent   regulations  governing  the  discharge  of  drilling   and
        production waste  in the coastal and inland waters and in the offshore
        Gulf of Mexico.  Since  1993,  the  total volume of waste in Newpark's
        key market has grown at a compound rate of 24% for the same reasons.

             The Company's financial statements  do  not include any provision
        for possible contingent liabilities, such as liability  for  violation
        of  environmental  laws  or  other  risks noted under "Business - Risk
        Management."  To the best of the Company's knowledge, it has conducted
        its business in compliance with applicable  laws  and, except as noted
        under "Legal Proceedings," is not involved in any material  litigation
        with respect to violations of such laws.

        Results of Operations

             The following table represents revenue by product line,  for each
        of  the  three  years  ended  December  31,  1995, 1994 and 1993.  The
        product line data has been reclassified from prior years' presentation
        in order to more effectively distinguish the offsite  waste processing
        and  mat  rental  services,  in  which  the Company maintains  certain
        proprietary advantages, from its other service offerings.



                                                       Years Ended December 31,
                                                        (Dollars in thousands)

                                                1995              1994              1993
                                          ______________    _______________   _______________
                                                                       
           Revenues by product line:
             Offsite waste processing     31,126    31.8%   $ 20,738   26.0%  $ 11,354   20.2%
             Mat rental services          30,775    31.4      23,048   28.9     21,042   37.4
             General oilfield services    14,511    14.8      13,452   16.9     11,358   20.1
             Wood product sales           12,609    12.9      13,105   16.5      7,947   14.1
             Onsite environmental 
               management                  7,361     7.5       7,689    9.7      4,629    8.2
             Other                         1,600     1.6       1,600    2.0          -      -
                                         _______   _____    ________  _____   ________  _____
                  Total revenues         $97,982   100.0%   $ 79,632  100.0%  $ 56,330  100.0%
                                         =======   =====    ========  =====   ========  =====


                                        35




        Year Ended December 31, 1995 Compared to Year Ended December 31, 1994

        Revenues

             Total  revenues increased to $98.0 million  in  1995  from  $79.6
        million in 1994, an increase of $18.4 million or 23.0%. The components
        of the increase  by  product  line  are as follows:  (i) offsite waste
        processing revenues increased $10.4 million,  as NOW revenue increased
        $5.5 million, due almost exclusively to additional  volume,  and  NORM
        processing  revenue  increased to $6.0 million on approximately 70,000
        barrels in 1995 from $1.2 million and 15,000 barrels in 1994; (ii) mat
        rental revenue increased $7.7 million, or 34% due to two factors:  (a)
        increased volume installed  at  similar  pricing compared to the prior
        year,  and, (b) an increase in revenues  from  extended  rerentals  of
        $3.6 million  resulting  from the longer use of sites, consistent with
        the trend toward deeper drilling.   The  size  of the average location
        installed in 1995 grew 17% from the prior year,  primarily  the result
        of  the  trend  toward  deeper  drilling  in  more  remote  locations,
        requiring larger sites to accommodate increased equipment and supplies
        on  the  site;  (iii) general oilfield service revenue increased  $1.1
        million or 7.9%.   The  increase resulted primarily from the increased
        level of site preparation  work  incident to the rental of mats in the
        oilfield  segment  of  that  business;   (iv)   onsite   environmental
        management service revenue declined approximately $300,000  or 4% with
        the  reduced  level  of  current  drilling-related  projects more than
        offsetting increased activity in the remediation of old sites; and (v)
        revenue from wood product sales decreased approximately  $500,000  due
        in  part  to  production  inefficiency  during  the  start-up of a new
        processing  line and the inclusion of a large non-recurring  order  in
        prior year revenue.

        Operating Income from Continuing Operations

             Operating  income  from  continuing  operations increased by $9.1
        million or 76.4% to total $21.0 million in the 1995 period compared to
        $11.9  million  in  the  prior year, representing  an  improvement  in
        operating margin to 21.4% in 1995 compared to 14.9% in 1994.

             Primary components of  the  increase  included: (i) approximately
        $2.9 million related to the effect of volume increases in both NOW and
        NORM processing; (ii) $3.6 million from increased  mat rerentals, and,
        (iii) $1.3 million resulting from the increase in the  volume  of mats
        rented,  to  approximately  220  million  board  feet  compared to 157
        million in 1994, at similar margins, and, (iv) an approximate $200,000
        increase  in  operating  profit on better gross margin mix  from  wood
        product sales.

             The decline of $573,000  in  general  and administrative expenses
        reflects,  primarily, the impact of approximately  $600,000  of  prior
        year charges for legal costs incurred in an appeal of an expropriation
        matter. Additionally,  the  provision  for  uncollectible accounts was
        $511,000 less in the 1995 period as compared to the 1994 period.



                                        36




        Interest Expense

             Interest  expense increased to $3.7 million  in  1995  from  $2.7
        million  in 1994.   The  increase  is  a  result  of  an  increase  in
        borrowings, proceeds of which were used to fund continued additions to
        productive   capacity,   including   the  Company's  waste  processing
        facilities,  its  prefabricated  board road  mats,  and  additions  to
        inventory, primarily at the sawmill facility.

        Non-recurring Expense

             Results for the current period  include $436,000 of non-recurring
        cost associated with a proposed merger which was not completed.

        Provision for Income Taxes

             During 1995, the Company recorded an income tax provision of $4.8
        million  equal  to 28% of pre-tax income.   While  the  Company's  net
        operating loss carryforwards  remain  to be used for income tax return
        purposes, for financial reporting purposes,  substantially  all of the
        remaining  net  operating loss and tax credit carryforwards applicable
        to federal taxes  were recognized in the first half of the year, which
        reduced the effective  tax  rate for that portion of the year.  During
        1994, the Company recorded a tax benefit of $85,000 as a result of the
        availability of net operating loss carryforwards.

        Net Income

             Net income increased by  $2.8  million or 30% to $12.2 million in
        1995 compared to $9.4 million in 1994.


        Year Ended December 31,  1994 Compared to Year Ended December 31, 1993

        Revenues

             Total revenues increased from $56.3  million  in  1993  to  $79.6
        million in 1994, an increase of $23.3 million or 41.4%.  Components of
        the increase by product line included: (i)  a $9.4 million increase in
        offsite  waste processing, composed of (a) an increase of $8.2 million
        the result  of  a 72.5% increase in the number of barrels of NOW waste
        received, which grew  to 2.3 million in 1994 from 1.3 million in 1993;
        and (b) $1.2 million from  NORM  processing  which began in the fourth
        quarter  of  1994; (ii) an increase of $5.2 million  of  wood  product
        sales revenue due to an increase in the total tonnage of products sold
        at  similar  pricing;   (iii)   a  $3.0  million  increase  in  onsite
        environmental  management revenue  reflecting  the  recovery  of  this
        market during 1994  once  definitive NORM regulations were effected in
        both Louisiana and Texas.   A  total of 355,000 barrels of remediation
        waste was handled in 1994 compared  to  only  22,000  in 1993;  (iv) a
        $2.0 million increase in mat rental revenue, the net effect  of  a 29%
        increase  in  average  pricing to approximately $93 per thousand board
        feet installed and a 4%  decline  in total volume to 157 million board
      
                                        37




        feet in 1994 compared to 164 million  board  feet in 1993; and, (v) an
        increase  of  approximately $2.1 million in general  oilfield  service
        revenue, which  primarily  reflects  the  increased  site construction
        services  related  to  the  increased  volume  of  mats  installed  on
        customer's  sites.  Other revenue included $1.6 million in  1994  from
        the lease of the facility formerly operated as a marine repair yard in
        Houston, Texas.

        Operating Income from Continuing Operations

             Operating   income  from  continuing  operations  increased  $7.5
        million from $4.4  million or 7.8% of revenue in 1993 to $11.9 million
        or 14.9% of revenue in the current period. Factors contributing to the
        increase included: (i)  a  $3.1  million  increase in operating income
        from offsite waste processing, of which approximately $600,000 relates
        to receipt of 14,711 barrels of NORM waste,  solely  during the fourth
        quarter  of 1994, with the remainder attributable to increased  volume
        and substantially  unchanged  profit  contribution  per  barrel of NOW
        processed; (ii) $2.7 million from increased mat rental revenue,  (iii)
        a  $2.5 million increase resulting from the increase in the volume  of
        mats  rented;  and,  (iv)  a  profit of approximately $800,000 (before
        related interest expense) from  the  lease  of  the  Company's  former
        marine  repair  facility;  net of (v) a $258,000 decrease in operating
        income from wood products sales due to higher inventory costs relative
        to 1993; (vi) a $1.1 million  increase  in  general and administrative
        expenses  and  (vii)  a  $300,000  increase  in  the   provision   for
        uncollectible accounts and notes receivable.

             General  and  administrative  expenses as a proportion of revenue
        rose to 4.1% in 1994 from 3.8% in 1993,  while rising in total by $1.1
        million  to  $3.2  million in 1994 from $2.1  million  in  1993.   The
        principal items associated  with  the  increase  included a charge for
        legal costs of approximately $600,000 incurred due to the appeal of an
        expropriation matter and a $130,000 provision for additional franchise
        taxes, as a result of a recently completed audit.

        Interest Expense

             Interest expense increased $1.4 million  to  $2.7 million in 1994
        compared  to  $1.3 million in 1993, as the Company added approximately
        $17.5  million  in   net   borrowings  to  finance  new  and  existing
        facilities and equipment during 1994.

        Income from Continuing Operations

             Income from continuing operations increased 96.2% or $4.6 million
        to $9.4 million in the 1994  period  from  $4.8  million  in  the 1993
        period.

        Provision for Income Taxes

             During  1994, the Company recorded a net deferred tax benefit  of
        $200,000 as a  result  of recognizing the future benefit of the income
        tax carryforwards available  to  offset  the estimated future earnings
        (See "Note F. Income Taxes", in the "Notes  to  Consolidated Financial
       
                                        38





        Statements").   The net deferred tax benefit was partially  offset  by
        current tax expense of $115,000.

        Net Income

             Net income increased to $9.4 million in 1994 from $2.4 million in
        1993,  an  increase  of  $7.0  million  or  288%  equal  to  29.9%  of
        incremental revenues.

        Liquidity and Capital Resources

             The Company's working capital position increased by $18.5 million
        during the year  ended December 31, 1995.  Key working capital data is
        provided below:

                                               Year Ended December 31,
                                               ______________________
                                                 1995           1994
                                                 ____           ____
                Working Capital (000's)        $32,108        $13,585
                Current Ratio                      2.3            1.8

             During  1995,  the  Company's  working  capital  needs  were  met
        primarily from operating cash flow.

             Throughout  1995,  the company invested heavily to provide future
        capacity  within  key  product  lines.   These  improvements  included
        addition of two additional  injection wells and a grinding mill at the
        Big  Hill  plant, construction  of  a  new  injection  facility  which
        includes two  injection  wells  at the Fannett site, construction of a
        bulk waste unloading facility adjacent  to  the  existing  Port Arthur
        plants, and additions to its inventory of rental mats in the  domestic
        market  and  in  the  expansion  into Venezuela.  As a result of these
        asset additions, long term debt increased  to  $46.7  million  at year
        end, representing 36.3% of total long-term capital.  A total of  $43.4
        million  of  the debt was funded within a $50 million commitment which
        was completed during the second quarter of the year.

             On June 29, 1995, the Company entered into a new credit agreement
        with a group of three banks, providing a total of up to $50 million of
        term financing.  This facility included the refinancing of $25 million
        of existing debt  amortized  over  a five year term.  At the Company's
        option, these borrowings bear interest  at  either  a  specified prime
        rate or LIBOR rate, plus a spread which is determined quarterly  based
        upon the ratio of the Company's funded debt to cash flow.

             In  addition,  up  to  $25 million is available under a revolving
        line of credit which matures  December  31,  1998.  Availability under
        this  facility  is  tied  to  the  level  of  the  Company's  accounts
        receivable  and  certain  inventory.   Advances  under the  line  bear
        interest, at the Company's  option, at either a specified  prime  rate
        or  the  LIBOR rate, plus a spread calculated quarterly based upon the
        ratio of the  Company's  funded debt to cash flow; interest is payable
        monthly.  At December 31, 1995, $6.3 million of letters of credit were
        issued and outstanding within  the facility and $18.4 million had been
       
                                        39



        borrowed.  The credit agreement  requires  that  the  Company maintain
        certain  specified  financial ratios and comply with other  usual  and
        customary requirements.   The  Company  was  in  compliance  with  the
        agreement at December 31, 1995.

             Subsequent  to  December 31, 1995, the banks providing the credit
        facility approved an increase  of $10 million in the term note portion
        of the facility, which will be used  initially to reduce borrowings on
        the revolving line of credit of the credit facility.

             Potential  sources  of  additional  funds,  if  required  by  the
        Company, would include additional borrowings  and  the  sale of equity
        securities.  The Company presently has no commitments beyond  its bank
        lines  of credit by which it could obtain additional funds for current
        operations;   however,  it  regularly  evaluates  potential  borrowing
        arrangements which may be utilized to fund future expansion plans.

            Inflation has  not  materially  impacted the Company's revenues or
        income.

        Deferred Tax Asset

            The Company accounts for income taxes in accordance with Statement
        of Financial Accounting Standards ("SFAS")  No.  109,  "Accounting for
        Income   Taxes."    This   standard   requires,  among  other  things,
        recognition  of future tax benefits measured  by  enacted  tax  rates,
        attributable to deductible temporary differences between the financial
        statement and  income  tax  basis of assets and liabilities and to tax
        net  operating  loss  and credit  carryforwards  to  the  extent  that
        realization of such benefits is more likely than not.  The Company has
        provided a valuation allowance  ($236,000  at  December  31, 1995) for
        deferred tax assets which cannot be realized through future  reversals
        of  existing taxable temporary differences.  Management believes  that
        remaining  deferred  tax assets ($10,450,000 at December 31, 1995) are
        realizable   through   reversals   of   existing   taxable   temporary
        differences.  Management  will  continue to assess the adequacy of the
        valuation allowance on a quarterly basis.



                                        40




        Item 8.  Financial Statements and Supplementary Data

        INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT

        The Board of Directors and Shareholders
        Newpark Resources, Inc.

        We  have  audited  the  accompanying  consolidated  balance  sheets of
        Newpark  Resources, Inc. and subsidiaries as of December 31, 1995  and
        1994, and the related consolidated statements of income, shareholders'
        equity, and cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended
        December 31,  1995.   Our audits also included the financial statement
        schedule for the years  ended  December 31, 1995, 1994 and 1993 listed
        in the Index at Item 14.  These  financial  statements  and  financial
        statement schedule are the responsibility of the Company's management.
        Our   responsibility  is  to  express  an  opinion  on  the  financial
        statements and financial statement schedule based on our audits.

        We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
        standards.  Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit
        to obtain  reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements
        are free of  material misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a
        test basis, evidence  supporting  the  amounts  and disclosures in the
        financial statements.  An audit also includes assessing the accounting
        principles used and significant estimates made by  management, as well
        as  evaluating  the  overall  financial  statement  presentation.   We
        believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

        In our opinion, such consolidated financial statements present fairly,
        in all material respects, the financial position of Newpark Resources,
        Inc. and subsidiaries at December 31, 1995 and 1994,  and  the results
        of  their operations and their cash flows for each of the three  years
        in the  period  ended  December 31, 1995  in conformity with generally
        accepted accounting principles.   Also, in our opinion, such financial
        statement schedule for the years ended  December  31,  1995,  1994 and
        1993,  when considered in relation to the basic consolidated financial
        statements  taken as a whole, presents fairly in all material respects
        the information set forth therein.


        DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP

        New Orleans, Louisiana
        March 1, 1996
                                        41





Newpark Resources, Inc.
Consolidated Balance Sheets
December 31
_______________________________________________________________________________
(In thousands, except share data)                      1995                1994
_______________________________________________________________________________
  



ASSETS
                                                         
Current assets:
  Cash and cash equivalents                $          1,018    $          1,404
  Accounts and notes receivable, less 
    allowance of $768 in 1995 and 
    $455 in 1994                                     39,208              21,450
  Inventories                                        11,996               7,099
  Other current assets                                4,088               1,544
                                                    _______             _______
          Total current assets                       56,310              31,497


Property, plant and equipment, at cost, 
  net of accumulated depreciation                    85,461              67,630
Cost in excess of net assets of purchased
  businesses, net of accumulated amortization         4,340               4,403
Deferred tax assets                                       -               2,271
Investment in joint venture                           1,094                   -
Other assets                                          5,542               4,955
                                                    _______             _______
                                           $        152,747    $        110,756
                                                    =======             =======

LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY

Current liabilities:
  Notes payable                            $            169    $          1,796
  Current maturities of long-term debt                7,742               8,236
  Accounts payable                                   11,664               5,022
  Accrued liabilities                                 3,462               2,858
  Current taxes payable                               1,165                   -
                                                    _______             _______
          Total current liabilities                  24,202              17,912


Long-term debt                                       46,724              28,892
Other non-current liabilities                           285                 253
Deferred taxes payable                                4,018                   -
Commitments and contingencies (Note J.)                   -                   -

Shareholders' equity:
  Preferred Stock, $.01 par value, 
    1,000,000 shares authorized, no 
    shares outstanding                                    -                   -
  Common Stock, $.01 par value, 
    20,000,000 shares authorized, 
    10,634,177 shares outstanding 
    in 1995 and 10,485,074 in 1994                      105                  99
  Paid-in capital                                   144,553             134,252
  Retained earnings (deficit)                       (67,140)            (70,652)
                                                    _______             _______
          Total shareholders' equity                 77,518              63,699
                                                    _______             _______
                                           $        152,747    $        110,756
                                                    =======             =======

                                      

             See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
 
                                        42







Newpark Resources, Inc.
Consolidated Statements of Income
Years Ended December 31
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
(In thousands, except per share data)             1995                1994                1993
_________________________________________________________________________________________________

                                                                                     
Revenues                              $         97,982    $         79,632    $         56,330
                           
Operating costs and expenses:
  Cost of services provided                     64,467              56,259              42,581
  Operating costs                                9,414               7,277               6,557
                                               _______             _______             _______
                                                73,881              63,536              49,138

General and administrative expenses              2,658               3,231               2,129
Provision for uncollectible accounts 
  and notes receivable                             463                 974                 671
                                               _______             _______             _______
Operating income from continuing 
  operations                                    20,980              11,891               4,392
Interest income                                   (183)                (78)                  -
Interest expense                                 3,740               2,660               1,274
Non-recurring expense                              436                   -                   -
                                               _______             _______             _______
Income from continuing operations
  before provision for income taxes             16,987               9,309               3,118
Provision (benefit) for income taxes             4,751                 (85)             (1,670)
                                               _______             _______             _______
Income from continuing operations               12,236               9,394               4,788
Loss from discontinued operations                    -                   -              (2,366)
                                               _______             _______             _______
Net income                            $         12,236    $          9,394    $          2,422
                                               =======             =======             =======


Weighted average shares outstanding             10,568              10,422               9,690
                                               =======             =======             =======


Income (loss) per common share:
  Continuing operations               $           1.16    $           0.90    $           0.49
  Discontinued operations                            -                   -               (0.24)
                                               _______             _______             _______
  Net income                          $           1.16    $           0.90    $           0.25
                                               =======             =======             =======

                       
               See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

                                        43






Newpark Resources, Inc.
Consolidated Statements of Shareholders' Equity
Years Ended December 31, 1993, 1994 and 1995
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
                                                                                 Retained
                                          Common              Paid-In            Earnings
(In thousands)                             Stock              Capital            (Deficit)             Total
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
                                                                                    
Balance, January 1, 1993            $             91    $        128,035    $        (82,468)   $         45,658

  Employee stock options                           -                 136                   -                 136
  Stock sale                                       7               5,130                   -               5,137
  Net income                                       -                   -               2,422               2,422
                                     ____________________________________________________________________________

Balance, December 31, 1993                        98             133,301             (80,046)             53,353

  Employee stock options                           1                 950                   -                 951
  Other                                            -                   1                   -                   1
  Net income                                       -                   -               9,394               9,394
                                     ____________________________________________________________________________
                                                    
Balance, December 31, 1994                        99             134,252             (70,652)             63,699

  Employee stock options                           1               1,582                   -               1,583
  Stock dividend                                   5               8,719              (8,724)                  -
  Net income                                       -                   -              12,236              12,236
                                     ____________________________________________________________________________


Balance, December 31, 1995          $            105    $        144,553    $        (67,140)   $         77,518
                                     ============================================================================
                 

               See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

                                        44






Newpark Resources, Inc.
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
Years Ended December 31
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
(In thousands)                                                      1995                   1994                   1993
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
                                                                                            

Cash flows from operating activities:
Net income                                              $         12,236       $          9,394       $          2,422
Adjustments to reconcile net income 
  to net cash provided by
  continuing operations:
  Depreciation and amortization                                    9,967                  7,370                  5,929
  Provision for doubtful accounts                                    463                    974                    671
  Provision (benefit) from deferred 
    income taxes                                                   3,217                   (200)                (1,700)
  Loss (gain) on sales of assets                                      80                     (9)                  (237)
Change in assets and liabilities 
  net of effects of acquisitions:
  Increase in accounts and notes 
    receivable                                                   (17,129)                (3,723)                (2,513)
  (Increase) decrease in inventories                              (4,897)                   739                 (3,418)
  Increase in other assets                                        (1,536)                (1,839)                  (211)
  Increase (decrease) in accounts payable                          2,577                   (677)                   282 
  Increase (decrease) in accrued 
    liabilities and other                                          2,096                   (937)                 1,413
                                                                ________              _________              _________
        Net cash provided by operating 
          activities                                               7,074                 11,092                  2,638
                                                                ________              _________              _________
Cash flows from investing activities:
  Capital expenditures                                           (23,989)               (23,149)                (9,690)
  Disposal of property, plant and equipment                          564                     97                    124
  Investment in joint venture                                     (1,094)                     -                      -
  Payments received on notes receivable                              249                     30                    144
  Advances on notes receivable                                      (227)                (1,000)                     -
  Proceeds from sale of net assets of 
    discontinued operations                                            -                    661                      -
  Other                                                                -                      -                    (79)
  Decrease in net assets of discontinued 
    operations                                                         -                      -                    722
                                                                ________              _________              _________
        Net cash used in investing activities                    (24,497)               (23,361)                (8,779)
                                                                ________              _________              _________

Cash flows from financing activities:
  Net borrowings on lines of credit                               20,796                    492                  1,720
  Principal payments on notes payable, 
    capital lease obligations and 
    long-term debt                                               (20,170)               (10,109)                (4,825)
  Proceeds from issuance of debt                                  14,828                 21,167                  9,728
  Proceeds from conversion of stock options                        1,266                    897                    136
  Other                                                              317                     55                      -
                                                                ________              _________              _________
        Net cash provided by financing 
          activities                                              17,037                 12,502                  6,759
                                                                ________              _________              _________
Net (decrease) increase in cash and cash 
  equivalents                                                       (386)                   233                    618

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year                     1,404                  1,171                    553
                                                                ________              _________              _________

Cash and cash equivalents at end of year                $          1,018       $          1,404       $          1,171
                                                                ========              =========              =========




                 See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.


                                        45




                               NEWPARK RESOURCES, INC.
                      NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


        A.  Summary of Significant Accounting Policies

        Organization  and  Principles  of consolidation.    Newpark Resources,
        Inc. ("Newpark" or the "Company") provides comprehensive environmental
        management and oilfield construction  services  to  the  oil  and  gas
        industry  in  the  Gulf Coast region, principally Louisiana and Texas.
        The consolidated financial  statements  include  the  accounts  of the
        Company  and its wholly-owned subsidiaries.  All material intercompany
        transactions are eliminated in consolidation.

        Use  of Estimates.     The  preparation  of  financial  statements  in
        conformity  with  generally  accepted  accounting  principles requires
        management to make estimates and assumptions that affect  the reported
        amounts of assets and liabilities, the disclosure of contingent assets
        and  liabilities  at  the  date  of  the financial statements and  the
        reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period.
        Actual results could differ from those estimates.

        Cash equivalents.    All highly liquid  investments  with  a remaining
        maturity  of  three  months  or  less  at the date of acquisition  are
        classified as cash equivalents.

        Fair Value Disclosures.    Statement of Financial Accounting Standards
        ("SFAS")  No.  107,  "Disclosures  about  Fair   Value   of  Financial
        Instruments",  requires  the  disclosure  of  the  fair  value of  all
        significant  financial instruments.  The estimated fair value  amounts
        have  been  developed   based  on  available  market  information  and
        appropriate valuation methodologies.   However,  considerable judgment
        is  required  in  developing the estimates of fair value.   Therefore,
        such estimates are  not  necessarily  indicative  of  the amounts that
        could be realized in a current market exchange.  After  such analysis,
        management  believes the carrying values of the Company's  significant
        financial  instruments  (consisting  of  cash  and  cash  equivalents,
        receivables,  payables  and long-term debt) approximate fair values at
        December 31, 1995.

        Inventories.     Inventories   are   stated   at  the  lower  of  cost
        (principally average and first-in, first-out) or  market.  The cost of
        lumber  and  related  supplies  for  board roads is amortized  on  the
        straight-line method over their estimated useful life of approximately
        one year.

        Depreciation and amortization.    Depreciation  of property, plant and
        equipment,  including interlocking board road mats,  is  provided  for
        financial reporting  purposes  on  the  straight-line  method over the
        estimated useful lives of the individual assets which range from three
        to  thirty  years.   For  income tax purposes, accelerated methods  of
        depreciation are used.

            During the year ended December 31, 1993, the Company made a change
        in the estimated service lives  of its board road mats from five years
        to seven years.  The new lives were  adopted  to  recognize the longer
        service life provided by the mats.  The effect of the  change  for the

                                        46


        year  ended  December  31, 1993 was to increase income from continuing
        operations $1,175,000 ($0.12 per share).

            The cost in excess of  net assets of purchased businesses ("excess
        cost") is being amortized on  a  straight-line basis over forty years,
        except for $2,211,000 relating to  acquisitions  prior to 1971 that is
        not  being amortized.  Management of the Company periodically  reviews
        the carrying  value  of the excess cost in relation to the current and
        expected operating results  of  the businesses which benefit therefrom
        in order to assess whether there  has  been  a permanent impairment of
        the excess cost of the net purchased assets.  Accumulated amortization
        on  excess  cost was $437,000 and $374,000 at December  31,  1995  and
        1994, respectively.

        Revenue recognition.     Revenues  from  certain  contracts, which are
        typically of short duration, are reported as income  on  a percentage-
        of-completion  method.   Contract  revenues  are  recognized  in   the
        proportion  that  costs  incurred bear to the estimated total costs of
        the contract.  When an ultimate loss is anticipated on a contract, the
        entire estimated loss is recorded.   Included  in  accounts receivable
        are unbilled revenues in the amounts of $8,600,000 and  $2,674,000  at
        December  31, 1995 and 1994, respectively, all of which are due within
        a one year period.

        Income Taxes.     Income taxes are provided using the liability method
        in accordance with SFAS No. 109, "Accounting for Income Taxes."  Under
        this method, deferred income taxes are recorded based upon differences
        between the financial  reporting  and  income  tax basis of assets and
        liabilities and are measured using the enacted income  tax  rates  and
        laws  that  will  be  in  effect  when the differences are expected to
        reverse.

        Non-recurring  Expense.     Results for  the  current  period  include
        $436,000 of non-recurring cost associated with a proposed merger which
        was not completed.

        Interest Capitalization.    For  the  years  ended  December 31, 1995,
        1994  and  1993  the  Company  incurred  interest  cost of $4,198,000,
        $2,805,000,  and $1,359,000 of which $458,000, $145,000,  and  $85,000
        was capitalized, respectively, on qualifying construction projects.

        Income per share.     Income  per  share  amounts  are  based  on  the
        weighted  average  number  of shares outstanding during the respective
        year and exclude the negligible  dilutive effect of shares issuable in
        connection with all stock plans.   All  per share and weighted average
        share amounts have been restated to give  retroactive  effect  to a 5%
        stock dividend declared and paid during 1995.

        New Accounting Standards.    During 1995, SFAS No. 121 "Accounting for
        the  Impairment  of Long-Lived Assets and for Long-Lived Assets to  be
        Disposed  of"  was  issued.    SFAS  No.  121  establishes  accounting
        standards for recording the impairment  of  long-lived assets, certain
        identifiable intangibles, goodwill, and assets to be disposed of.  The
        Company is required to adopt SFAS No. 121 effective for fiscal 1996.

                                        47




            During   1995,   SFAS   No.   123   "Accounting  for   Stock-Based
        Compensation" was also issued.  SFAS No.  123,  which  the  Company is
        required  to  adopt  effective  for  fiscal  1996,  provides  guidance
        relating to the recognition, measurement and disclosure of stock-based
        compensation.

            Management believes that the implementation of SFAS No.'s 121  and
        123  will  not  have  a  material impact on the Company's consolidated
        financial statements.

        Reclassifications.   Certain  reclassifications  of prior year amounts
        have been made to conform to the current year presentation.

        B.  Discontinued Operations

            On  December  30,  1993, the operations of  the  Company's  marine
        service subsidiary were sold to  an  unrelated  third  party for their
        estimated net book value of $1,135,000 of which $661,000  was received
        in  cash  during  1994  and  a  short  term  note  was  issued for the
        remainder.   The Company leased the facility and certain equipment  to
        the new operator  through  June  30,  1996, with an option to purchase
        these  assets  at specified times during  the  lease  term.   The  new
        operator has notified  the  Company  of  their  intent to exercise the
        purchase option before the expiration of the lease  term.  The Company
        also agreed to make available certain short-term financing  of  up  to
        $1.6  million  through  June  30,  1996,  with  annual interest at 7%;
        secured by, among other items, certain assets of  the  third party and
        the personal guarantee of one of its principals.  Advances  related to
        this  financing  arrangement amounted to $1.6 million at December  31,
        1995 and $1.4 million  at  December  31,  1994.  Revenue of the marine
        repair business was $16,251,000 for the year ended December 31, 1993.

        C.  Inventories

            The  Company's  inventories  at December 31,  1995  and  1994  are
        summarized as follows:
        ______________________________________________________________________
        (In thousands)                                 1995            1994
        ______________________________________________________________________
        Raw materials and supplies
           (including logs and board road lumber)    $11,641         $ 6,752
        Finished goods                                   355             347
                                                     _______         _______
                                                     $11,996         $ 7,099
        ======================================================================

                                        48



        D.  Property, Plant and Equipment

            The  Company's  investment in property,  plant  and  equipment  at
        December 31, 1995 and 1994 is summarized as follows:

        ______________________________________________________________________
        (In thousands)                               1995             1994
        ______________________________________________________________________
        Land                                        $ 5,072         $ 4,273
        Buildings and improvements                   30,172          19,554
        Machinery and equipment                      90,448          77,353
        Other                                         2,537           2,208
                                                     ______          ______
                                                    128,229         103,388
        Less accumulated depreciation               (42,768)        (35,758)
                                                    _______         _______
                                                    $85,461         $67,630
        ======================================================================

            As further discussed in Note B., the former marine repair facility
        is currently held for lease and included in the above table.  The cost
        of this facility totaled  $19.9 million at December 31, 1995 and 1994,
        with  related  accumulated  depreciation  at  $6.3  million  and  $5.6
        million, respectively.  The principal  components  of the cost of this
        facility include land of $3.1 million, buildings and  improvements  of
        $9.8  million,  and  machinery and equipment of $6.4 million.  Rentals
        received during 1995 and 1994 amounted to $1.6 million annually.


                                        49



        E.  Credit Arrangements and Long-Term Debt

            Credit arrangements and long-term debt consisted of the following
        at December 31, 1995 and 1994:
        ______________________________________________________________________
        (In thousands)                                 1995             1994
        ______________________________________________________________________

        Bank - line of credit                        $18,378         $ 8,767
        Bank - term note                              25,000               -
        Assets subject to lease, financed through
          2001 with an interest rate of 10.1%          8,075           8,558
        Interim construction credit agreement            482               -
        Acquisition financing due in 1996 with an
           interest rate of 8%                           327             743
        Bank - inventory line of credit                   -            1,796
        Term financing of board road mats                 -            8,730
        Term financing of barges                          -            2,814
        Other, principally installment notes secured 
          by machinery and equipment, payable through
          2000 with interest at 3.3% to 13.5%          2,373           7,516
                                                      ______          ______
                                                      54,635          38,924

        Less: current maturities of long-term debt    (7,911)         (8,236)
              current maturities of lines of credit        -          (1,796)
                                                      ______          ______
        Long-term portion                            $46,724         $28,892
        ======================================================================

            The Company maintains  a  $50.0  million bank credit facility with
        $25.0 million in the form of a revolving line of credit commitment and
        the remaining $25.0 million in a term  note.   The  line  of credit is
        secured by a pledge of accounts receivable and certain inventory.   It
        bears  interest at either a specified prime rate (8.5% at December 31,
        1995) or  the  LIBOR  rate  (5.63% at December 31, 1995) plus a spread
        which is determined quarterly  based  upon  the ratio of the Company's
        funded  debt to cash flow.  The average interest  rate  for  the  year
        ended December  31,  1995  was  8.56%.   The  line  of credit requires
        monthly  interest  payments  and  matures  on December 31,  1998.   At
        December 31, 1995, $6.3 million of letters of  credit  were issued and
        outstanding  and $18.4 million had been borrowed.  The term  note  was
        used  to  refinance   existing  debt  and  requires  monthly  interest
        installments  and  seventeen   equal   quarterly   principal  payments
        commencing  March  31,  1996.   The  term note bears interest  at  the
        Company's option of either a specified  prime rate or LIBOR rate, plus
        a spread which is determined quarterly based  upon  the  ratio  of the
        Company's funded debt to cash flow.  The average interest rate for the
        year  ended December 31, 1995 was 8.40%.  The credit facility requires
        that the  Company  maintain  certain  specified  financial  ratios and
        comply  with other usual and customary requirements.  The Company  was
        in compliance with the agreement at December 31, 1995.

                                        50




             Subsequent  to  December 31, 1995, the banks providing the credit
        facility approved an increase  of $10 million in the term note portion
        of the facility, which will be used  initially to reduce borrowings on
        the revolving line of credit of the credit facility.

            On  December  1,  1995,  the  Company  entered   into  an  interim
        construction  credit  agreement in an aggregate amount not  to  exceed
        $1,840,000 for the construction  of  an office building for two of its
        subsidiaries.  The outstanding balance  of  this  credit agreement was
        $482,000 at December 31, 1995.  The agreement provides for an interest
        rate of 8.75% during construction.  At the completion of construction,
        the interim construction credit agreement will be converted  to a term
        loan.   The  term  loan  will  require  monthly principal and interest
        payments to fully amortize the amount over  10  years.   The term note
        will  bear a fixed interest rate of 2.25% per annum in excess  of  the
        treasury rate in effect on the date the term loan is signed.

            Maturities of Long-Term Debt are $7,911,000 in 1996, $7,438,000 in
        1997, $26,067,000 in 1998, $7,638,000 in 1999, $4,941,000 in 2000 and
        $640,000 thereafter.

        F.  Income Taxes

            The  provision  for  income taxes charged to continuing operations
        (income taxes related to discontinued  operations  for  1993  were not
        segregated as the amounts were immaterial) is almost exclusively U. S.
        Federal tax as follows:

                                             Year Ended December 31,
        ______________________________________________________________________
        (In thousands)                      1995        1994      1993
        ______________________________________________________________________
        Current tax expense               $ 1,534     $  115    $    30
        Deferred tax expense (benefit)      3,217       (200)    (1,700)
                                           ______      _____     ______
        Total provision (benefit)         $ 4,751     $  (85)   $(1,670)
        ======================================================================

            The  deferred  tax  expense  (benefit)  includes a decrease in the
        valuation allowance for deferred tax assets of $1,700,000, $3,129,000,
        and $2,407,000 for 1995, 1994 and 1993, respectively.

        The effective income tax rate is reconciled to  the  statutory federal
        income tax rate as follows:
                                                     Year Ended December 31,
        ______________________________________________________________________
                                                      1995     1994   1993
        ______________________________________________________________________
        Income tax expense at statutory rate          34.0%   34.0%   34.0%
        Non-deductible portion of business expenses    1.4    (2.5)    1.6
        Tax benefit of NOL utilization               (10.0)  (33.6)  (90.1)
        Other                                          2.6     1.2     0.9
                                                     ______________________
        Total income tax expense (benefit)            28.0%   (0.9%) (53.6%)
        ======================================================================

                                        51



            For  federal  income  tax  return  purposes, the Company  has  net
        operating loss carryforwards ("NOLs") of  $22,835,000  (net of amounts
        disallowed pursuant to IRC Section 382) that, if not used, will expire
        in 1998 through 2009.  The Company also has $1,592,000 of  alternative
        minimum  tax  credit carryforwards available to offset future  regular
        income taxes subject  to  certain  limitations.   Substantially all of
        these  carryforwards  have  been  recognized  for financial  reporting
        purposes.

            Temporary differences and carryforwards which give rise to a
        significant portion of deferred tax assets and liabilities at December
        31, 1995  and 1994 are as follows:

        ______________________________________________________________________
        (In thousands)                                  1995            1994
        ______________________________________________________________________
        Deferred tax assets:
            Net operating losses                      $  8,696       $  9,893
            Alternative minimum tax credits              1,592            295
            All other                                      398            444
                                                       _______        _______
                
                Total deferred tax assets               10,686         10,632
            Valuation allowance                           (236)          (967)
                                                       _______        _______

                Net deferred tax assets               $ 10,450       $  9,665
                                                       _______        _______
        Deferred tax liabilities:
            Depreciation                              $  8,767       $  6,244
            Amortization                                 1,823          1,074
            All other                                    1,177            447
                                                       _______       ________

              Total deferred tax liabilities            11,767          7,765
                                                       _______       ________

              Total net deferred tax (liabilities) 
                assets                                $ (1,317)      $  1,900
        ======================================================================

            Under SFAS No. 109 a valuation allowance must  be  established  to
        offset  a  deferred  tax  asset  if,  based on the weight of available
        evidence, it is more likely than not that  some  portion or all of the
        deferred tax asset will not be realized.  At December  31,  1994,  the
        Company evaluated the available evidence and believed that it was more
        likely  than not that a portion of the deferred tax asset would not be
        realized.   A  valuation  allowance  was  recorded  in  the  financial
        statements  to  offset  NOLs  which the Company believed would not  be
        utilized.  At December 31, 1994,  the  Company recorded a net deferred
        tax  asset of $1,900,000, of which $2,271,000  was  recorded  in  non-
        current   assets   and   $371,000  was  recorded  in  current  accrued
        liabilities, the realization  of  which was dependent on the Company's
        ability to generate taxable income  in  future  periods.   The Company
        believed  that  its estimate of future earnings based on contracts  in
        place, the overall  improved  gas market, and its prior earnings trend
        supported the recorded net deferred tax asset.


                                        52




              At  December  31, 1995, the  deferred  tax  liabilities  of  the
        consolidated group exceeded  the  deferred  tax  assets,  therefore  a
        deferred tax benefit was recorded for the full amount of the remaining
        federal  NOLs.   The valuation allowance recorded at December 31, 1995
        relates to certain  state  NOLs which have not to date been recognized
        for financial reporting purposes.   At  December 31, 1995, the Company
        has  recorded a net deferred tax liability  of  $1,317,000,  of  which
        $2,701,000  has  been  recorded in other current assets and $4,018,000
        has been recorded as long-term deferred taxes payable.

        G.  Preferred Stock

             The Company  has been  authorized  to  issue  up  to  1,000,000 
        shares of Preferred  Stock,  $.01  par  value,  none  of  which  are
        issued  or outstanding at December 31, 1995.

        H.  Common Stock and Stock Options

             Changes  in  outstanding  Common  Stock  for  the  three  years 
        ended December 31, 1995, 1994, and 1993 were as follows:
        ______________________________________________________________________
        (In Thousands of Shares)                    1995       1994     1993
        ______________________________________________________________________
        Outstanding, beginning of year             9,986      9,858    9,130
        Shares issued in exchange for 
          extinguishment of debt                       -          -      700
        Dividend shares issued                       505          -        -
        Shares issued upon exercise of Options       143        128       28
                                                   _____      _____    _____
        Outstanding, end of year                  10,634      9,986    9,858
        ======================================================================

            The Amended and Restated  Newpark  Resources,  Inc. 1988 Incentive
        Stock  Option  Plan  (the  "1988  Plan") was adopted by the  Board  of
        Directors  on  June  22,  1988  and thereafter  was  approved  by  the
        shareholders.  The 1988 Plan was  amended and restated by the Board of
        Directors and shareholders in 1992 to increase the number of shares of
        Common Stock issuable thereunder from  100,000 to 450,000; was further
        amended by the Board of Directors and shareholders in 1994 to increase
        the number of shares of Common Stock issuable  thereunder from 450,000
        to  650,000,  and was further amended by the Board  of  Directors  and
        shareholders in  1995 to increase the number of shares of Common Stock
        issuable thereunder  from 650,000 to one million shares. An option may
        not be granted for an  exercise  price less than the fair market value
        on the date of grant and may have a term of up to ten years.

                                        53




            Stock option transactions for  the  1988  Plan for the three years
        ended December 31, 1995, 1994 and 1993 are summarized below:
        
        ______________________________________________________________________
        Years Ended December 31,           1995          1994         1993
        ______________________________________________________________________
        Outstanding, beginning of year    374,981       303,149      215,191
        Options granted                   387,000       191,000      117,500
        Dividend options granted           32,610             -            -
        Options exercised                 (87,667)     (119,168)     (27,542)
        Options canceled                  (22,166)            -       (2,000)
                                          _______       _______      _______  
        Outstanding, end of year          684,758       374,981      303,149
                                          =======       =======      =======
        Option price per share:
           Outstanding, end-of-year    $3.80-$18.88  $3.00-$18.75  $3.00-$9.25
        ======================================================================

            At  December  31, 1995 and 1994, the total number  of  outstanding
        exercisable options were 145,979 and 54,144, respectively.

            The 1992 Directors' Stock Option Plan (the "1992 Directors' Plan")
        was adopted on October  21,  1992  by  the Compensation Committee and,
        thereafter, was approved by the shareholders in 1993.

            The  purpose  of  the  1992 Directors' Plan  was  to  provide  two
        directors ("Optionees") additional  compensation for their services to
        Newpark and to promote an increased incentive and personal interest in
        the welfare of Newpark by such directors.   The  Optionees  were  each
        granted a stock option to purchase 50,000 shares of Common Stock at an
        exercise price of $8.75 per share, the fair market value of the Common
        Stock  on  the  date  of grant for a term of ten years.  No additional
        options may be granted  under  the  Directors"  Plan.  At December 31,
        1995, 50,000 options had been exercised under this plan.

            The 1993 Non-Employee Directors' Stock Option Plan (the "1993 Non-
        Employee Directors' Plan") was adopted on September  1,  1993  by  the
        Board  of  Directors and, thereafter, was approved by the shareholders
        in 1994.

            The 1993  Non-Employee  Directors'  Plan is intended to allow each
        non-employee director of Newpark to purchase  15,000  shares of Common
        Stock.  Non-employee directors are not eligible to participate  in any
        other  stock  option  or similar plan currently maintained by Newpark.
        The purpose of the 1993  Non-Employee Directors' Plan is to promote an
        increased incentive and personal interest in the welfare of Newpark by
        those individuals who are  primarily responsible for shaping the long-
        range plans of Newpark, to assist  Newpark in attracting and retaining
        on  the  Board  persons  of  exceptional  competence  and  to  provide
        additional incentives to serve as a director of Newpark.

            Upon the adoption of the 1993  Non-Employee  Directors'  Plan, the
        five  non-employee  directors  were  each  granted  a  stock option to
        purchase 15,000 shares of Common Stock at an exercise price  of  $9.00
        per  share,  the  fair market value of the Common Stock on the date of
        grant.  In addition,  each  new  Non-Employee Director, on the date of

                                        54



        his or her election to the Board of  Directors  automatically  will be
        granted a stock option to purchase 15,000 shares of Common Stock at an
        exercise  price equal to the fair market value of the Common Stock  on
        the date of  grant.   The  determination  of  fair market value of the
        Common Stock is based on market quotations.  On  November 2, 1995, the
        Board   of   Directors  adopted,  subject  to  shareholder   approval,
        amendments to the Non-Employee Directors' Plan to increase the maximum
        number of shares  issuable  thereunder  from 150,000 to 200,000 and to
        provide for the automatic grant at five year  intervals  of additional
        stock options to purchase 10,000 shares of Common Stock to  each  non-
        employee  director  who  continues to serve on the Board.  At December
        31, 1995, 15,000 options had been exercised.

            On November 2, 1995, the  Board  of  Directors adopted, subject to
        shareholder approval, the Newpark Resources, Inc. 1995 Incentive Stock
        Option  Plan  (the "1995 Plan"), pursuant to  which  the  Compensation
        Committee may grant  incentive  stock  options  and nonstatutory stock
        options to designated employees of Newpark.  Initially,  a  maximum of
        500,000 shares of Common Stock may be issued under the 1995 Plan, with
        such maximum number increasing on the last business day of each fiscal
        year  of Newpark, commencing with the last business day of the  fiscal
        year ending  December  31,  1996,  by  a  number equal to 1.25% of the
        number of shares of Common Stock issued and  outstanding  on the close
        of  business  on such date, with a maximum number of shares of  Common
        Stock that may  be  issued  upon exercise of options granted under the
        1995 Plan being limited to 1,250,000.

        I.  Supplemental Cash Flow Information

            During  1994,  the Company's  noncash  transactions  included  the
        consummation of the  sale  of  the  operations of the Company's marine
        repair business for $661,000 in cash and a $400,000 note receivable.

            During  1993,  the  Company's noncash  transactions  included  the
        issuance  of  700,000  shares   of  the  Company's  common  stock  for
        extinguishment of certain notes payable  issued in connection with the
        assets  purchased  from  Quality  Mill, Inc. and  accrued  liabilities
        incurred with the purchase of other  fixed  assets.  Additionally, the
        Company sold property with a book value of $250,000  in  exchange  for
        $100,000 in cash and a $400,000 note receivable.

            Included  in  accounts payable and accrued liabilities at December
        31, 1995, 1994 and  1993,  were  equipment  purchases  of  $4,141,000,
        $774,000, and $933,000 respectively.  Also included are notes  payable
        for  equipment  purchases  in  the amount of $257,000 and $635,000 for
        1995 and 1993, respectively.

            Interest of $4,235,000, $2,713,000,  and  $1,912,000  was  paid in
        1995, 1994 and 1993, respectively.   Income taxes of $51,000, $90,200,
        and $82,000 were paid in 1995, 1994 and 1993, respectively.


                                        55



        J.  Commitments and Contingencies

            Newpark and its subsidiaries are involved in litigation and  other
        claims  or  assessments  on  matters  arising  in the normal course of
        business.  In the opinion of management, any recovery  or liability in
        these  matters  will  not have a material adverse effect on  Newpark's
        consolidated financial statements.

            During 1992, the State  of  Texas  assessed additional sales taxes
        for  the  years  1988-1991.   The Company has  filed  a  petition  for
        redetermination with the Comptroller  of Public Accounts.  The Company
        believes that the ultimate resolution of  this  matter will not have a
        material adverse effect on the consolidated financial statements.

            In  the  normal  course  of  business,  in  conjunction  with  its
        insurance programs, the Company has established letters  of  credit in
        favor  of  certain insurance companies in the amount of $2,825,000  at
        December 31,  1995  and  December 31, 1994.  At December 31, 1995, the
        Company  had outstanding guaranty  obligations  totaling  $469,000  in
        connection with facility closure bonds issued by an insurance company.

            Since  May 1988, the Company has held the exclusive right to use a
        patented prefabricated  mat  system  with  respect  to the oil and gas
        exploration and production industry within the State of Louisiana.  On
        June  20,  1994, the Company entered into a new license  agreement  by
        which it obtained  the  exclusive  right  to  use  the  same  patented
        prefabricated mat system, without industry restriction, throughout the
        continental  United  States.   The  license  agreement requires, among
        other  things,  that  the company purchase a minimum  of  20,000  mats
        annually through 2003.   The  Company has met this annual mat purchase
        requirement since the inception  of  the  agreement.  Any purchases in
        excess  of  that level may be applied to future  annual  requirements.
        The Company's  annual commitment to maintain the agreement in force is
        currently estimated to be $4,600,000.

            At December  31,  1995,  the  Company  had outstanding a letter of
        credit in the amount of $3,816,000 issued to a state regulatory agency
        to  assure  funding for future site closure obligations  at  its  NORM
        processing facility.

            The Company  leases  various manufacturing facilities, warehouses,
        office space, machinery and  equipment  and  transportation  equipment
        under  operating  leases with remaining terms ranging from one to  ten
        years with various  renewal options.  Substantially all leases require
        payment of taxes, insurance  and  maintenance  costs  in  addition  to
        rental  payments.   Total rental expenses of continuing operations for
        all operating leases  were  $5,210,000,  $4,049,000,  and  $4,226,000,
        1995, 1994 and 1993, respectively.

            Future minimum payments under noncancelable operating leases, with
        initial  or  remaining terms in excess of one year are: $1,683,000  in
        1996, $1,192,000 in 1997, $924,000 in 1998, $859,000 in 1999, $781,000
        in 2000, and $562,000 thereafter.

            Capital lease commitments are not significant.

                                        56





        K.  Business and Credit Concentration

            During   1995,   one   customer   accounted    for    approximately
        16%, $15,890,000, of total  revenue.  In 1993 and 1994, the Company did
        not derive ten percent or more  of  its  revenues from sales to any 
        single customer.

            Export sales are not significant.

        L.  Concentrations of Credit Risk

            Financial instruments which  potentially  subject  the  Company to
        significant  concentrations of credit risk consist principally of cash
        investments and trade accounts and notes receivable.

            The Company  maintains  cash  and  cash  equivalents  with various
        financial  institutions.   These  financial  institutions  are located
        throughout the Company's trade area and company policy is designed  to
        limit  exposure to any one institution.  The Company performs periodic
        evaluations  of  the  relative  credit  standing  of  these  financial
        institutions   which   are  considered  in  the  Company's  investment
        strategy.

            Concentrations of credit  risk  with respect to trade accounts and
        notes  receivable  are limited due to the  large  number  of  entities
        comprising the Company's  customer base, and for notes receivable, the
        required collateral.  The Company  maintains  an  allowance for losses
        based  upon  the  expected  collectibility  of  accounts   and   notes
        receivable.

        M.  Supplemental Selected Quarterly Financial Data (Unaudited)


                                      Quarter Ended
        ______________________________________________________________________
                                 Mar 31    Jun 30    Sep 30    Dec 31
         (In thousands, except per share amounts)
        _____________________________________________________________
        Fiscal Year 1995
        Revenues              $22,209    $22,454   $24,793    $28,526
        Operating income        3,711      4,789     5,529      6,951
        Net income              2,490      3,206     2,700      3,840
        Net income per share     0.24       0.30      0.26       0.36

        Fiscal Year 1994
        Revenues              $17,146    $19,396   $21,169    $21,921
        Operating income        2,288      2,843     3,165      3,595
        Net income              1,740      2,273     2,436      2,945
        Net income per share     0.17       0.22      0.23       0.28

                                        57




        ITEM 9.  Changes In and Disagreements With Accountants on Accounting
                 and Financial Disclosure

            None



                                        58





                                       PART III

        ITEM 10. Directors and Officers of the Registrant

            The information required by this Item is incorporated by reference
        to the registrantOs Proxy Statement to be filed pursuant to Regulation
        14A  under the Securities Act of 1934 in connection with the CompanyOs
        1996 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.


        ITEM 11. Executive Compensation

            The information required by this Item is incorporated by reference
        to the registrantOs Proxy Statement to be filed pursuant to Regulation
        14A under  the Securities Act of 1934 in connection with the CompanyOs
        1996 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.


        Item 12. Security   Ownership   of   Certain   Beneficial  Owners  and
        Management

            The information required by this Item is incorporated by reference
        to the registrantOs Proxy Statement to be filed pursuant to Regulation
        14A under the Securities Act of 1934 in connection  with the Company's
        1996 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.


        ITEM 13.  Certain Relationships and Related Transactions

            The information required by this Item is incorporated by reference
        to the registrantOs Proxy Statement to be filed pursuant to Regulation
        14A under the Securities Act of 1934 in connection with  the Company's
        1996 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.




                                        59




                                       PART IV

        Item 14. Exhibits,  Financial Statement Schedules, and Reports on Form
                 8-K

        (a) 1.  Financial Statements

                Reports of Independent Auditors

                Consolidated Balance Sheets as of December 31, 1995 and 1994

                Consolidated Statements  of  Income for the years ended
                December 31, 1995, 1994 and 1993

                Consolidated Statements of Shareholders' Equity for the years
                ended December 31, 1995, 1994 and 1993

                Consolidated  Statements  of  Cash  Flows  for  the  years
                ended December 31, 1995, 1994 and 1993 

                Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

            2.  Financial Statement Schedules

                The following financial statement schedule is included:

                Schedule II - Valuation and Qualifying Accounts

                All other  schedules  for  which  provision  is  made  in  the
                applicable accounting regulations of the Securities and Exchange
                Commission  are  not  required under the related instructions or
                are inapplicable, and therefore have been omitted.

            3.  Exhibits

              3.1    Certificate of Incorporation <FN2>

              3.1.1  Certificate   of  Amendment  to  Certificate  of
                     Incorporation**

              3.2    Bylaws <FN2>

              10.1   Employment Agreement, dated as of  October 23, 1990, 
                     between the registrant and James D. Cole. <FN2>*

              10.2   Lease  Agreement,  dated  as of May 17, 1990, by and 
                     between Harold F. Bean Jr. and Newpark Environmental
                     Services, Inc. ("NESI"). <FN2>

                                        60




              10.3   Building Lease Agreement, dated April 10, 1992,  between 
                     the registrant and The Traveler' Insurance Company. <FN7>

              10.4   Building Lease Agreement, dated  May 14, 1992, between 
                     State Farm Life Insurance Company, and SOLOCO, Inc. <FN7>

              10.5   Operating Agreement, dated June 30,  1993,  between  
                     Goldrus Environmental Services, Inc. and NESI. <FN7>

              10.6   1992 Directors' Stock Option Plan. <FN3>*

              10.7   1993 Non-Employee Directors' Stock Option Plan. <FN4>*

              10.7.1 Amendment to the 1993 Non-Employee Directors' Stock 
                     Option Plan.**

              10.8   Amended and Restated 1988 Incentive Stock Option  Plan.
                     <FN9>*

              10.8.1 1995 Incentive Stock Option Plan**

              10.9   Loan  Agreements,  dated  December  30,  1993,  between  
                     the registrant and SFA Industries, Inc. <FN5>

              10.10  Continuing  Guaranty,  dated December 30, 1993, between 
                     the registrant and Sam Eakin. <FN5>

              10.11  Pledge Agreement, dated  December  30,  1993,  between  
                     the registrant and SFA Industries, Inc. <FN5>

              10.12  Security  Agreement,  dated  December 30, 1993, between 
                     the registrant and SFA Industries, Inc. <FN5>

              10.13  Lease  and Security Agreement,  dated  December 30, 1993,
                     between the registrant and SFA Industries, Inc. <FN5>

              10.14  Guaranty  of  Lease,  dated  December 30, 1993, between 
                     the registrant and SFA Industries, Inc. <FN5>

              10.15  Equipment  Lease Agreement, dated  March  11, 1994, among
                     Republic Financial  Corporation  ("RFC"),  the registrant
                     and Newpark  Shipholding, Inc. <FN6>

              10.16  Guaranty, dated March 11, 1994, by the registrant in favor
                     of RFC. <FN6>

              10.17  First Note,  dated  March  11, 1994, by the registrant in
                     favor of RFC. <FN6>

                                        61



              10.18  Special Guaranty, dated March  11, 1994, by the registrant
                     in favor of Lockwood National Bank of Houston. <FN6>

              10.19  Exclusive License Agreement, dated June 20, 1994, between
                     SOLOCO, Inc. and Quality Mat Company. <FN7>

              10.20  Lease Agreement, dated as of July 29, 1994, by and between
                     Harold F. Bean Jr. and NESI. <FN7>

              10.21  Credit  Agreement by and  among Newpark Resources,  Inc.,
                     SOLOCO,  Inc.,  Newpark  Environmental   Services,  Inc.,
                     SOLOCO   Texas,   L. P.,  Batson   Mill,  L.P.,   Newpark 
                     Environmental Water  Services, Inc., Newpark  Shipholding
                     Texas,  L.P.,  Mallard  and Mallard of La., Inc., SOLOCO,
                     L. L. C., Newpark  Texas, L. L.  C.,  Newpark   Holdings,  
                     Inc., Hibernia  National Bank, Bank  One  Texas,  N.  A.,
                     and  Premier  Bank,  National Association. <FN8>

              10.21.1Second Amendment and  Supplement to the Credit Agreement,
                     dated March 5, 1996 to  Credit  Agreement  by  and  among
                     Newpark  Resources,   Inc.,   SOLOCO, L. L. C.,   Newpark
                     Environmental   Services, L. L. C.,  Newpark  Shipholding
                     Texas, L.P.,  SOLOCO  Texas, L.  P.,  Batson Mill, L. P.,
                     Newpark Environmental  Water Services, Inc., Mallard  and
                     Mallard of La., Inc.,  Newpark Texas,  L.  L. C., Newpark
                     Holdings, Inc., Hibernia National Bank, Bank  One  Texas,
                     N.  A., and Premier Bank, National Association. **

              10.22  Credit Agreement, dated  December  1, 1995, between 
                     SOLOCO, Inc., and Hibernia National Bank**

              21.1   Subsidiaries of the Registrant **

              23.1   Consent  of Deloitte & Touche **

              24.1   Powers of Attorney **

        ________________________________

              *      Management Compensation Plan or Agreement.

              **     Filed herewith.

              <FN1>  Previously  filed in the exhibits to the registrant's
                     Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the   quarter  ended  
                     March  31,  1991,  and incorporated by reference herein.

              <FN2>  Previously filed in the exhibits  to  the  registrant's
                     Registration  Statement  on  Form S-1 (File No. 33-40716)
                     filed  on  June 21, 1991, and incorporated  by  reference
                     herein.

                                        62



              <FN3>  Previously  filed in the  exhibits  to  the  registrant's
                     Registration Statement  on  Form S-8  (File No. 33-67284)
                     filed on August 12, 1993, and  incorporated  by reference
                     herein.

              <FN4>  Previously  filed  in  the exhibits to the registrant's
                     Registration Statement on   Form  S-8 (File No. 33-83680)
                     filed on August 12, 1993, and incorporated  by  reference
                     herein.

              <FN5>  Previously  filed  in  the exhibits to the registrant's
                     Current Report on Form 8-K,  dated  January 14, 1994, and
                     incorporated by reference herein.

              <FN6>  Previously  filed  in the exhibits to  the  registrant's
                     Current Report on Form  8-K,  dated  March  25, 1994, and
                     incorporated by reference herein.

              <FN7>  Previously  filed  in  the  exhibits to the registrant's
                     Annual Report on Form 10-K for  the  year  ended December
                     31, 1994, and incorporated by reference herein.

              <FN8>  Previously  filed  in  the  exhibits to the registrant's
                     Current  Report on Form 8-K, dated  July  18,  1995,  and
                     incorporated by reference herein.

              <FN9>  Previously  filed  as  Exhibit  B  to  the  registrant's
                     Definitive Proxy Materials relating to its Annual Meeting
                     of Shareholders held on June 28, 1995 and incorporated by
                     reference herein.


        (b)   Reports on Form  8-K

              The registrant did not file a report on Form 8-K during
              the fourth quarter of 1995.




                                                                         
                                        63



                                          SIGNATURES

     Pursuant  to  the  requirements  of  Section 13 or 15(d) 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.

        Dated:    March 8, 1996

                                              NEWPARK RESOURCES, INC.


                                              By:  /s/ James D. Cole
                                                   James D. Cole, President

     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange  Act of 1934, this
report  has  been  signed  below  by  the  following persons on behalf  of  the
registrant in the capacities and on the date indicated.




             Signatures                           Title                      Date
                                                                   
        /s/ James D. Cole                President and Chief Executive   March 8, 1996
        James D. Cole                    Officer and Director

        /s/ Matthew W. Hardey            Vice President of Finance and   March 8, 1996
        Matthew W. Hardey                Chief Financial Officer

        /s/ Kathleen D. Lacoste          Controller                      March 8, 1996
        Kathleen D. Lacoste

        /s/ Philip S. Sassower*          Chairman of the Board           March 8, 1996
        Philip S. Sassower               and Director

        /s/ Wm. Thomas Ballantine        Director                        March 8, 1996
        Wm. Thomas Ballantine

        /s/ W. W. Goodson*               Director                        March 8, 1996
        W. W. Goodson

        /s/David P. Hunt*                Director                        March 8, 1996
        David P. Hunt

        /s/ Dr. Alan Kaufman*            Director                        March 8, 1996
        Dr. Alan Kaufman

        /s/ James H. Stone*              Director                        March 8, 1996
        James H. Stone

        By /s/ James D. Cole
        * James D. Cole
          Attorney-in-Fact

                                        64







Newpark Resources, Inc.                                           SCHEDULE II
Valuation and Qualifying Accounts
Years Ended December 31, 1995, 1994 and 1993
(In thousands of dollars)






                                        Additions
                             Balance     Charged                                 Balance
                                at          to                                      at
                            Beginning   Costs and     Other         Other         End of
                             of Year     Expenses   Additions     Deductions       Year
                            _________   _________   _________     __________     _______

       1995
                                                                   
Allowance for
  doubtful accounts       $       455 $       463 $        13 (a) $      (163)(b) $       768
                            =========   =========  ==========       =========       =========
Valuation allowance for
  deferred tax assets     $       967           - $       969 (d) $    (1,700)(c) $       236
                            =========   =========  ==========       =========       =========
       
       1994

Allowance for
  doubtful accounts       $       354 $       974 $        44 (a) $      (917)(b) $       455
                            =========   =========  ==========       =========       =========

Valuation allowance for
  deferred tax assets     $     4,096           -           -     $    (3,129)(c) $       967
                            =========   =========  ==========       =========       =========


       1993

Allowance for
  doubtful accounts       $       352 $       671           -     $      (669)(b) $       354
                            =========   =========  ==========       =========       =========

Valuation allowance for
  deferred tax assets     $     6,503           -           -     $    (2,407)(c) $     4,096
                            =========   =========  ==========       =========       =========







         (a)  Recovery of amounts previously written off and other adjustments.

         (b)  Write-offs.

         (c)  Change in valuation allowance reflecting the future benefit of net operating losses.

         (d)  Initial set-up of valuation allowance.




                                    65