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

                            FORM 10-Q
(Mark One)
    [x]  QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
         SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

          For the quarterly period ended June 30, 2004

                               OR

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

        For the transition period from _______ to _______
                           ___________

                Commission File Number 000-32855
                           ___________

                      TORCH OFFSHORE, INC.
     (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)

            Delaware                         74-2982117
(State or Other Jurisdiction of            (IRS Employer
 Incorporation or Organization)         Identification No.)

    401 Whitney Avenue, Suite 400
         Gretna, Louisiana                   70056-2596
(Address of Principal Executive Offices)     (Zip Code)

      Registrant's Telephone Number, Including Area Code:
                       (504) 367-7030

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 whether the registrant is an accelerated
filer as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act  of
1934. Yes [ ] No [x]

The number of shares of the registrant's common stock outstanding
as of August 12, 2004 was 12,642,950, par value $0.01 per share.


                      TORCH OFFSHORE, INC.

                        TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                      Page
Part I.  Financial Information                        ----

  Item 1.  Financial Statements (Unaudited).

           Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets as
            of June 30, 2004 and December 31, 2003      3

           Condensed Consolidated Statements of
            Operations for the Three and Six Months
            Ended June 30, 2004 and 2003                4

           Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash
            Flows for the Six Months Ended
            June 30, 2004 and 2003                      5

           Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial
            Statements                                  6

  Item 2.  Management's Discussion and Analysis of
             Financial Condition and Results of
             Operations                                14

  Item 3.  Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures
             About Market Risk                         27

  Item 4.  Controls and Procedures                     27

Part II.  Other Information

  Item 1.  Legal Proceedings                           27

  Item 2.  Changes in Securities and Use of Proceeds   28

  Item 4.  Submission of Matters to a Vote of
           Security Holders                            29

  Item 6.  Exhibits and Reports on Form 8-K            29

           Signature                                   30

           Exhibit Index                               31


                 PART I.  FINANCIAL INFORMATION

Item 1.   Financial Statements.
                      TORCH OFFSHORE, INC.
              CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
                         (in thousands)

                                       June 30,  December 31
                                         2004       2003
                                       --------  -----------
                                     (Unaudited)(see Note 1)
Assets
CURRENT ASSETS:
 Cash and cash equivalents              $      41  $      41
 Accounts receivable --
   Trade, less allowance for doubtful
   accounts                                13,961     20,479
 Costs and estimated earnings in excess
   of billings on uncompleted contracts     2,474         --
 Prepaid expenses and other                 6,657      3,561
                                          -------    -------
     Total current assets                  23,133     24,081

PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT, at cost,
  less accumulated depreciation           166,314    143,266
DEFERRED DRYDOCKING CHARGES,
  less accumulated amortization             2,516        807
SECURITY DEPOSIT (Note 7)                   1,250      1,250
OTHER ASSETS                                  488        502
                                          -------    -------
     Total assets                       $ 193,701  $ 169,906
                                          =======    =======

Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity
CURRENT LIABILITIES:
 Accounts payable -- trade              $  17,019  $  15,148
 Accrued expenses                           4,630      4,597
 Accrued payroll and related taxes            759        819
 Financed insurance premiums                4,286      1,832
 Billings in excess of costs and
   estimated earnings on
   uncompleted contracts                    2,812        459
 Finance Facility (Note 7)                 69,870     45,639
 Current portion of long-term debt(Note 7)  3,922      3,396
 Receivable line of credit (Note 7)         8,912      7,227
                                          -------    -------
     Total current liabilities            112,210     79,117

LONG-TERM DEBT, less current portion
  (Note 7)                                 18,341     20,057
COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES (Note 9)
STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY                       63,150     70,732
                                          -------    -------
     Total liabilities and
      stockholders' equity              $ 193,701  $ 169,906
                                          =======    =======

 The accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed
               consolidated financial statements.

                      TORCH OFFSHORE, INC.
   CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS (Unaudited)
              (in thousands, except per share data)


                             Three Months Ended   Six Months Ended
                                  June 30,            June 30,
                               2004       2003      2004     2003
                             ------------------   ----------------
Revenues                      $ 19,020 $ 13,876   $ 30,862 $30,905
Cost of revenues:
 Cost of sales                  17,295   12,500     30,539  26,245
 Depreciation and
  amortization                   2,640    1,822      4,749   3,649
 General and administrative
  expenses                       1,441    1,348      3,056   2,703
 Other operating expense            --       --        160      --
                                ------   ------     ------  ------
  Total cost of revenues        21,376   15,670     38,504  32,597
                                ------   ------     ------  ------
Operating loss                  (2,356)  (1,794)    (7,642) (1,692)
Other income:
    Interest income                 --       --         --       1
                                ------   ------     ------  ------
        Total other income          --       --         --       1
                                ------   ------     ------  ------
Loss before income taxes        (2,356)  (1,794)    (7,642) (1,691)
Income tax benefit                  --      628         --     592
                                ------   ------     ------  ------
Net loss                      $ (2,356)$ (1,166)  $ (7,642)$(1,099)
                                ======   ======     ======  ======

Net loss per common share:
    Basic and Diluted         $  (0.19)$  (0.09)  $  (0.60)$ (0.09)
                                ======   ======     ======  ======

Weighted average common stock
outstanding:
    Basic and Diluted           12,640   12,636     12,639  12,636
                                ======   ======     ======  ======

 The accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed
               consolidated financial statements.

                      TORCH OFFSHORE, INC.
   CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS (Unaudited)
                         (in thousands)

                                         Six Months Ended
                                             June 30,
                                        ------------------
                                          2004      2003
                                          ----      ----
Cash flows provided by operating
  activities:
Net loss                                $(7,642)  $(1,099)
  Depreciation and amortization           4,749     3,649
  Deferred income tax benefit                --      (592)
  Deferred drydocking costs incurred     (2,321)       --
 (Increase) decrease in working capital:
  Accounts receivable                     6,518     8,185
  Costs and estimated earnings in excess
   of billings on uncompleted contracts    (121)      244
  Prepaid expenses, net of financed
   portion                                 (642)     (765)
  Accounts payable - trade                1,871     1,479
  Accrued payroll and related taxes         (60)     (128)
  Accrued expenses and other                193    (1,996)
                                         -------  -------
Net cash provided by operating
  activities                              2,545     8,977
                                         -------  -------
Cash flows used in investing
  activities:
  Purchases of property and equipment   (27,186)  (36,931)
                                        -------   -------
Net cash used in investing activities   (27,186)  (36,931)
                                        -------   -------

Cash flows provided by financing
  activities:
  Net proceeds on receivable line of
   credit                                 1,685       597
  Net proceeds from Finance Facility     24,231    19,630
  Net proceeds (payments) on long-term
   debt                                  (1,269)    7,419
  Treasury stock purchases                   (6)      (18)
                                        -------   -------
Net cash provided by financing
 activities                              24,641    27,628
                                        -------   -------

Net change in cash and cash equivalents      --      (326)
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning
  of period                                  41       327
                                        -------   -------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of
  period                                $    41   $     1
                                        =======   =======

Interest paid (net of amounts
capitalized)                            $    --   $    --
                                        =======   =======

Income taxes paid                       $    --   $    --
                                        =======   =======

Supplementary non-cash investing
 activities:
  Purchase of Midnight Wrangler         $    --   $(9,731)
                                        =======   =======

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed
              consolidated financial statements.

                      TORCH OFFSHORE, INC.
      NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                           (Unaudited)

1.   Organization and Basis of Presentation:
The  interim condensed consolidated financial statements included
herein  have  been prepared by Torch Offshore, Inc.  (a  Delaware
corporation) and are unaudited, except for the balance  sheet  at
December  31,  2003, which has been prepared from  the  Company's
previously  audited financial statements. The  balance  sheet  at
December  31,  2003  has been derived from the audited  financial
statements  at  that  date  but  does  not  include  all  of  the
information  and  footnotes required by U.S.  generally  accepted
accounting   principles  (U.S.  GAAP)  for   complete   financial
statements.  The condensed consolidated financial  statements  of
Torch  Offshore, Inc. include its wholly-owned subsidiaries Torch
Offshore,  L.L.C.,  Torch  Express, L.L.C.,  and  Torch  Venture,
L.L.C.  (collectively, the "Company"). Management  believes  that
the   unaudited   interim   financial  statements   include   all
adjustments  (such  adjustments  consisting  only  of  a   normal
recurring  nature)  necessary  for  fair  presentation.   Certain
information  and  note disclosures normally  included  in  annual
financial  statements prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP  have
been  condensed  or  omitted pursuant to  rules  and  regulations
governing interim period reporting. The results for the three and
six months ended June 30, 2004 are not necessarily indicative  of
the  results  to  be  expected for the entire year.  The  interim
financial   statements  included  herein  should   be   read   in
conjunction  with  the  audited financial  statements  and  notes
thereto  together with Management's Discussion  and  Analysis  of
Financial  Condition and Results of Operations  included  in  the
Company's  annual report on Form 10-K for the fiscal  year  ended
December 31, 2003.

The  Company  provides  integrated pipeline installation,  subsea
construction and support services to the offshore oil and natural
gas  industry, primarily in the United States Gulf of Mexico (the
"Gulf  of  Mexico").  The  Company's  focus  has  been  providing
services  primarily for oil and natural gas production  in  water
depths  of  20  to 300 feet in the Gulf of Mexico (the  "Shelf").
Over the past few years, the Company has expanded its operations,
fleet capabilities and management expertise in order to enable it
to  provide  services analogous to those services it provides  on
the Shelf in water depths up to 10,000 feet on a global basis.

The  Company's  financial statements are prepared  in  accordance
with  accounting  principles generally  accepted  in  the  United
States.  As  further  discussed in  Note  2,  the  Company  faces
significant  financial liquidity issues as a  result  of  adverse
business  conditions  in  its operating  sector  and  significant
current  debt  obligations  due  in  2004  associated  with   the
conversion of the Midnight Express, which has experienced certain
unbudgeted cost overruns and unexpected delays in the  timing  of
scheduled  construction completion. In addition, as  of  December
31,  2003,  the  Company  was  not  in  compliance  with  certain
covenants  of  its loan agreements and had to obtain  forbearance
waivers  and  amendments from its lenders  for  such  matters  of
noncompliance. These conditions raise substantial doubt about the
Company's  ability  to continue as a going concern.  Management's
plans   in  regard  to  these  matters,  which  involve  inherent
uncertainties  and conditions beyond the Company's  control,  are
also  discussed in Note 2. The accompanying financial  statements
have been prepared on the basis that the Company will continue as
a going concern and do not include any adjustments to reflect the
possible  future effects on the recoverability and classification
of  assets or the amounts and classification of liabilities  that
may result from the outcome of these uncertainties.

2.   Capital Resources and Liquidity:
As  discussed in the Company's annual report on Form 10-K for the
year  ended December 31, 2003, the Company has been significantly
and  negatively  affected by adverse business conditions  in  its
industry,  and other events with a direct impact on the Company's
earnings.  The  Company  has experienced  recurring  losses  from
operations,  negative operating cash flows and a working  capital
deficiency.  As  a  result,  the  Company's  independent   public
accountants  advised  the  Company  that  they  had   reached   a
conclusion that there is substantial doubt the Company's  ability
to  continue  as  a  going concern and, as required  by  auditing
standards  generally accepted in the United States,  included  in
their auditors' report on the Company's 2003 financial statements
an explanatory paragraph to reflect that conclusion.

The  accompanying financial statements reflect a net loss of $7.6
million  for  the first six months of 2004 and a working  capital
deficit of $89.1 million as of June 30, 2004, which includes  the
$69.9 million amount due under the Company's Finance Facility  to
build the Midnight Express. In addition, the Company generated  a
net  loss  of $9.2 million for the year ended December 31,  2003,
$6.8  million of which was realized in the fourth fiscal  quarter
of  2003.  The  Company faces significant liquidity  and  working
capital  challenges,  in  addition  to  costs  of  expanding  the
Company's operations into the deepwater market, and will need  to
raise additional capital to continue to meet its debt obligations
and conduct its operations as currently conducted.

The  Company's  ability  to continue  in  the  normal  course  of
business  is  dependent  upon  its ability  to  raise  additional
capital  and the success of its future operations. Management  of
the  Company  has  developed  a plan  to  address  its  liquidity
challenges.  The components of this plan involve  completing  the
conversion  of  the  Midnight Express  within  current  financial
constraints,  raising additional capital to fund working  capital
and  debt  obligation  requirements, and  the  possible  sale  of
certain  vessels.  The  Company has retained  Raymond  James  and
Energy  Capital Solutions as its financial advisors  to  evaluate
financing  alternatives.  There can  be  no  assurance  that  the
Company  will  be  successful  in  significantly  improving   its
operating  results, or that it will be able to raise  capital  or
sell  vessels on acceptable terms, if at all. If the  Company  is
unable  to  successfully implement its plan  and/or  improve  its
operating results, its financial condition will be materially and
adversely affected.

Conversion of the Midnight Express
In April 2004, the Company entered into an agreement with Regions
Bank  and Export Development Canada (EDC) for an additional $19.0
million  of  funding under the Finance Facility (see Note  7)  to
complete the conversion of the Midnight Express. In addition, the
Company's  creditors  agreed to extend  the  time  frame  of  the
construction period of the Finance Facility from June 30, 2004 to
October 31, 2004 at which point the construction period financing
is  expected to convert to term status. Regions Bank and EDC have
also  amended certain covenant obligations that the Company  must
meet  in  2004.  The  consolidated  current  ratio  covenant  (as
defined) is now at 0.70 to 1 for all four quarters of 2004.

The Midnight Express arrived in Scheidam, The Netherlands in mid-
June  2004  and  the installation of the patented pipelay  system
began  immediately at the manufacturer's operation. In  addition,
the  Company partially installed the special-built 500-ton crane.
The  vessel departed for the Gulf of Mexico in late July 2004 and
is  expected to arrive in the Gulf of Mexico in mid-August  2004.
Further  outfitting and installation of the pipe handling system,
automatic  welding system, and the gantry crane rails  and  racks
will  occur  in  the  Gulf of Mexico, as will the  final  pipelay
system  sea trials for the vessel. The Company expects the vessel
to  enter the active fleet at the beginning of the fourth quarter
of 2004.

Utilization of the Midnight Express
In  August  2002,  the  Company developed a  deepwater  group  to
initiate  its  entrance  into  the  deepwater  market  using  the
Midnight  Hunter and Midnight Wrangler. The group  has  completed
various pipelay projects and subsea construction projects in  the
deepwater. This group has also been dedicated to the marketing of
the  Midnight  Express. To date, the Company  has  submitted  the
Midnight Express to multiple customers on various types of  bids.
The  Company is in discussions with several customers to  perform
work in the last quarter of 2004 in the Gulf of Mexico as well as
international work in 2005 and beyond. There is no assurance that
such contracts will be awarded to the Company.

Additional Capital and Restructuring of Indebtedness
The  Company  is  seeking to raise capital and or  refinance  its
existing debt through the private and public capital markets. The
Company's ability to raise capital will depend on factors outside
of  the Company's control, including the condition of the capital
markets and the Company's industry. Additionally, pursuant to the
terms of the Company's financing agreement with Regions Bank  and
EDC, the Company is required to raise the lesser of $10.0 million
or 20% of the market capitalization of the Company at the time of
the  issuance  by  June 30, 2005 through an equity  offering  and
requires that the first $10.0 million of proceeds associated with
such an offering be used to reduce amounts outstanding under  the
Finance Facility.

On  July  22,  2004,  the Company entered in  an  agreement  with
Regions Bank for a $5.0 million non-revolving line of credit with
an  initial  term  of  120 days to be used  for  working  capital
purposes.  Interest on this line of credit accrues at LIBOR  plus
4.00%.  The  Company's obligation under this line  of  credit  is
secured  by the Midnight Rider, which also secures the  Company's
obligations under the Finance Facility with Regions Bank and EDC.
In  order to use this vessel as collateral in the line of credit,
EDC  took  a  subordinated secured position  on  the  vessel.  In
addition,  as part of the above transaction, Regions Bank  agreed
to allow the usage of approximately $1.5 million of proceeds from
Industry Canada (see Note 11) to pay the interest on the  Finance
Facility   during  the  conversion  period.  The  proceeds   were
originally  allocated  to repay a portion of  the  $19.0  million
additional  financing  arranged in  April  2004  to  convert  the
Midnight Express. The terms of the note call for the loan  to  be
repaid  on  November 19, 2004. The Company intends to  repay  the
$5.0 million note through a refinancing of its existing debt with
the prospect of converting this $5.0 million into long-term debt.
In  the  event the Company is successful in obtaining refinancing
of  its  existing debt, the agreement with Regions Bank  and  EDC
calls for the proceeds of the refinancing to: 1) repay this  $5.0
million  note,  2)  repay $1.5 million of  the  additional  $19.0
million of financing on the Midnight Express conversion,  and  3)
use  50%  of  the refinance proceeds received in excess  of  $6.5
million  to also repay a portion of the additional $19.0  million
of financing on the Midnight Express conversion.

Disposal of Vessels
In  connection  with the Company's efforts to  raise  funds,  the
Company is also pursuing the sale of certain vessels into foreign
markets  either  through charters to operators in  these  foreign
markets  or  the outright sale of these vessels. The Company  has
had  discussions  with  various parties; however,  no  definitive
agreements have been entered into. There is no assurance that the
Company   will  reach  such  an  agreement  and/or   complete   a
transaction during 2004. The Finance Facility specifies that  any
proceeds  from the sale of a vessel that is pledged as collateral
be used to repay the amounts due under the Finance Facility.
                ________________________________

Management   believes  that  these  transactions  would   provide
sufficient  funding  for the Company's debt and  working  capital
requirements  for  2004.  Because  these  transactions  are   not
complete,   they   involve   inherent  uncertainties,   including
uncertainties  beyond the Company's control.  As  a  result,  the
Company's  independent public accountants, after considering  the
plans  described above, advised the Company that they had reached
a  conclusion  that  such uncertainties raise  substantial  doubt
regarding  the  Company's ability to continue as a going  concern
and  as  required  by standards of the Public Company  Accounting
Oversight  Board  (United States), included  in  their  auditors'
report  on the Company's 2003 financial statements an explanatory
paragraph to reflect that conclusion.

Management believes that completion of the transactions described
above will provide sufficient financial resources to conduct  the
Company's  business  plans during 2004.  However,  there  are  no
assurances  that  the  Company will successfully  accomplish  the
objectives of such plans.

For  more information regarding the Company's business plan,  see
Note  14  to the Financial Statements located in Item  8  of  the
Company's  2003  Form  10-K  as filed  with  the  Securities  and
Exchange Commission.

3.   Stockholders' Equity:
Treasury Stock - In August 2001, the Company's Board of Directors
approved  the  repurchase of up to $5.0 million of the  Company's
outstanding  common stock. Purchases were made on a discretionary
basis  in the open market or otherwise over a period of  time  as
determined   by   management,  subject  to   market   conditions,
applicable legal requirements and other factors. In August  2002,
the  Company  elected  to suspend the repurchase  program.  Under
current  conditions and to support our vessel expansion strategy,
the  Company  does not expect to repurchase shares  in  the  near
future  except  for  certain events related  to  the  vesting  of
employee's restricted shares. As of June 30, 2004, 715,074 shares
had been repurchased at a total cost of $4.3 million.

Stock  Option  Plan - The Company has a long-term incentive  plan
under which 3.0 million shares of the Company's common stock  are
authorized to be granted to employees and affiliates.  The awards
can be in the form of options, stock, phantom stock, performance-
based  stock or stock appreciation rights. As of June  30,  2004,
stock  options  covering 428,673 shares of common  stock  with  a
weighted  average exercise price of  $9.85 per share, and  38,124
shares  of  restricted stock, both vesting  generally  over  five
years, were outstanding.

4.   Earnings Per Share:
The  Company follows Statement of Financial Accounting  Standards
(SFAS) No. 128, "Earnings per Share." Basic earnings per share is
calculated  by  dividing net income/loss by the  weighted-average
number  of  common shares outstanding for the applicable  period,
without adjustment for potential common shares outstanding in the
form  of  options, warrants, convertible securities or contingent
stock  agreements. For calculation of diluted earnings per share,
the  number of common shares outstanding are increased (if deemed
dilutive)  by the number of additional common shares  that  would
have been outstanding if the dilutive potential common shares had
been  issued,  determined using the treasury stock  method  where
appropriate.

Common stock equivalents (related to stock options and restricted
stock)  excluded  from  the calculation of diluted  earnings  per
share,   because  they  were  anti-dilutive,  were  approximately
467,000 shares and 348,000 shares for the second quarters of 2004
and  2003,  respectively, and approximately  467,000  shares  and
348,000  shares  in  the  first six  months  of  2004  and  2003,
respectively.

5.   Stock-Based Compensation:
The Company accounts for its stock-based compensation in relation
to   the  2001  Long-Term  Incentive  Plan  in  accordance   with
Accounting Principles Board Opinion (APB) No. 25, "Accounting for
Stock  Issued  to Employees." However, SFAS No. 123,  "Accounting
for  Stock-Based Compensation," and SFAS No. 148, "Accounting for
Stock-Based  Compensation  -  Transition  and  Disclosure  -   An
Amendment  of  SFAS  No. 123," permits the intrinsic  value-based
method   proscribed  by  APB  No.  25,  but  requires  additional
disclosures, including pro forma calculations of earnings and net
earnings  per  share  as if the fair-value method  of  accounting
prescribed  by  SFAS  No. 123 had been applied.  If  compensation
expense  had been determined using the fair-value method in  SFAS
No.  123,  the Company's net loss and loss per share  would  have
been as shown in the pro forma amounts below:

(in  thousands, except per share data)

                             Three Months Ended  Six Months Ended
                                  June 30,           June 30,
                             ------------------  ----------------
                               2004      2003     2004     2003
                              ------    ------   ------   ------
Net loss, as reported       $(2,356)  $(1,166)  $(7,642) $(1,099)
 Add: Stock-based
  compensation expense
  included in net loss,
  net of tax                     33        15        66       62
 Less: Stock-based
  compensation expense
  using fair value method,
  net of tax                   (182)     (107)     (365)    (242)
                            -------   -------    -------  -------
Pro forma net loss          $(2,505)  $(1,258)   $(7,941) $(1,279)
                            =======   =======    =======  =======

Basic and diluted loss
  per share                 $ (0.19)  $ (0.09)   $ (0.60) $ (0.09)
Pro forma basic and
 diluted loss per share     $ (0.20)  $ (0.10)   $ (0.63) $ (0.10)

6.     Property and Equipment:
During the second quarter of 2004, management committed to a plan
to  scrap  the  Midnight Runner and remove the  vessel  from  the
Company's  fleet. An asset impairment charge of $0.6 million  was
recorded  in  relation  to  the  Midnight  Runner  (included   in
depreciation  and  amortization) for  the  three  and  six-months
ending  June 30, 2004. The impairment charge was based  upon  the
Company's  estimate  of  the vessel's scrap  salvage  value,  the
impact of which reduced the Company's previous carrying value for
the vessel to approximately $50,000.

7.   Long-Term Debt:
In  July  2002,  the  Company entered into a $35.0  million  bank
facility  (the  "Bank Facility") consisting of  a  $25.0  million
asset-based  five-year  revolving credit  facility  and  a  $10.0
million  accounts receivable-based working capital facility  with
Regions Bank. The Company's ability to use the asset-based  five-
year  revolving credit facility was suspended in connection  with
our  financing  of the Midnight Express and later  terminated  in
April  2004  as  part  of  the  $19.0  million  increase  to  the
construction  finance  facility  discussed  below.  The   Company
continues to have available the accounts receivable-based working
capital  facility  from  Regions  Bank.  In  December  2003,  the
accounts  receivable-based working capital facility was increased
to   $15.0   million.  Amounts  outstanding  under  the  accounts
receivable-based working capital facility may not exceed  85%  of
eligible trade accounts receivable. The Company had $8.9  million
outstanding  under  the  $15.0 million accounts  receivable-based
working  capital facility as of June 30, 2004. In  addition,  the
Company  issued  a  $1.5  million standby  letter  of  credit  as
security for the charter payments due under the charter agreement
for  the  Midnight  Hunter against the accounts  receivable-based
working capital facility. In July 2003, this letter of credit was
drawn by Cable Shipping, Inc., the owners of the Midnight Hunter.
The  Company recorded the $1.5 million as a liability in full  on
the  balance sheet during the second quarter of 2003. The Company
had  an available borrowing capacity of up to $2.1 million  under
the  $15.0  million  accounts  receivable-based  working  capital
facility  based upon eligible receivables at June 30,  2004.  The
$15.0  million accounts receivable-based working capital facility
was extended and now has a maturity date of July 2, 2005.

In  April 2003, the Company finalized a credit line maturing June
30,  2004 to finance the conversion of the Midnight Express  (the
"Finance  Facility"). Amounts outstanding under the  credit  line
will convert into a three-year term loan facility upon completion
of  the  conversion of the Midnight Express. The Finance Facility
commitment  is  equally provided by Regions Bank and  EDC  ($30.0
million participation by each).

In  April  2004,  the Company increased the Finance  Facility  by
$19.0  million  to  $79.0  million and amended  the  maturity  to
October  31,  2004.  The amounts outstanding  under  the  Finance
Facility  will convert into two separate loans at the earlier  of
the  facility's maturity date or completion of the conversion  of
the  Midnight  Express.  The first loan represents  the  original
$60.0  million  borrowing and will convert to a  three-year  term
loan  facility.  The  second loan is  for  the  additional  $19.0
million  and  will convert to a twenty-month term  loan  facility
maturing  on June 30, 2006. In addition, as part of the  increase
to  the  credit facility, the $25.0 million asset-based five-year
revolving  credit  facility  was cancelled  as  discussed  above.
Regions  Bank  and  EDC also have the right to  the  first  $10.0
million of any equity offering, to the proceeds from the sale  of
any  of  the mortgaged vessels (see discussion below) and to  the
interest  rate buy-down expected from Industry Canada during  the
third quarter of 2004.

The   interest  rate  for  the  $60.0  million  portion  of   the
construction financing was LIBOR plus a spread of 3.25% to  3.50%
based  upon the consolidated leverage ratio of the Company before
it  was  amended  as part of the $19.0 million  increase  to  the
credit  line. The interest rate for the $19.0 million portion  of
the  construction financing is LIBOR plus 4.00%. In addition, the
Company  was charged a 1% origination fee ($190,000)  by  Regions
Bank and EDC for the addition to the credit line and the interest
rate  on the original $60.0 million financing increased to  LIBOR
plus  4.00%. The Company is providing collateral in the  form  of
the  Midnight Express as well as a first preferred ship  mortgage
on  the  Midnight  Fox, Midnight Star, Midnight Dancer,  Midnight
Carrier,  Midnight  Brave and Midnight Rider.  The  Company  must
adhere to various conditions including maintaining a tangible net
worth  of at least $60.0 million, a minimum debt service coverage
ratio of at least 1.20 to 1, a consolidated leverage ratio of  no
more  than  2.00  to 1 and a consolidated current ratio  (defined
below)  of  1.30 to 1 (see below for details of amendments).  The
Company is not allowed to incur additional debt over $8.0 million
without  consent from Regions Bank. The Company had $69.9 million
outstanding under the $79.0 million Finance Facility as  of  June
30,  2004 and capitalized $1.7 million of 2004 interest costs  in
the  six months ended June 30, 2004 in relation to the conversion
of  the  Midnight Express as compared to $0.4 million capitalized
in the first two quarters of 2003.

Upon  achievement of certain construction completion  milestones,
but  no  later  than October 31, 2004, the $79.0 million  Finance
Facility will convert to term status. The $60.0 million term loan
facility  would  then  have  a three-year  term  with  a  10-year
amortization payment schedule consisting of semi-annual  payments
(beginning  in the first half of 2005) with a balloon payment  at
the  end  of  the  three-year term. The interest  rate  for  this
facility is now at 4.00% over LIBOR. The $19.0 million term  loan
facility would then have a twenty-month term with a $6.0  million
principal  payment due on June 30, 2005, a $6.0 million principal
payment  due on December 30, 2005 and the remaining $7.0  million
principal payment due on June 30, 2006. Interest would be payable
on  a  monthly basis based on a rate of LIBOR plus 4.00%. Regions
Bank  and  EDC  will  require the Company to  maintain  the  same
collateral   and  covenants  as  included  in  the   construction
financing depicted above.

See Note 2 regarding the additional $5.0 million of non-revolving
debt negotiated with the Company's lenders in July 2004.

In  December 2002, the Company entered into a purchase  agreement
with  Global  Marine  Systems Limited  (Global  Marine)  for  the
Midnight  Wrangler at a cost of approximately $10.8 million.  The
Company  took delivery of the vessel in March 2003. The  purchase
of  the  vessel  was financed by Global Marine over  a  five-year
period with monthly payments, including 7% per annum interest, of
approximately $0.2 million per month plus a $1.0 million  payment
at  the  purchase  date  in March 2003 and another  $1.0  million
payment at the end of the five-year period.

In  March 2003, the Company finalized a $9.25 million, seven-year
term  loan  with General Electric Commercial Equipment  Financing
(GE  Commercial).  The loan was structured so  that  the  Company
received  $8.0  million  immediately and GE  Commercial  retained
$1.25  million as a security deposit. The interest  rate  on  the
term  loan  is  the 30-day commercial paper rate plus  2.03%  and
includes prepayment penalties of 2% for the first twelve  months,
1%  for the second twelve months and 0% thereafter. The term loan
is structured to have monthly payments over seven years. The loan
agreement  contains  the same financial  covenants  as  the  Bank
Facility  and Finance Facility, as amended, discussed above.  The
collateral  for the loan is the Midnight Eagle and  the  security
deposit  described above. The Company utilized the proceeds  from
the loan to fund the improvements to the Midnight Wrangler and  a
portion of the Midnight Express conversion costs.

In December 2003, the Company refinanced the debt used to acquire
the  Midnight Wrangler with General Electric Capital  Corporation
(GE  Capital)  by  entering  into a  secured  term  loan  in  the
principal  amount  of  $15.0 million. The secured  term  loan  is
structured  to  have  quarterly payments over  seven  years.  The
interest rate on the term loan is 4.25% over LIBOR and the  terms
contained  an  origination discount of 1.50%. The loan  agreement
contains various covenants beginning on March 31, 2005, including
a  minimum EBITDA (as defined) of $18.5 million, a minimum  fixed
charge  ratio  (as defined) of 1.05 to 1, and a maximum  leverage
ratio  (as defined) of 5.25 to 1 for the financial quarters ended
in  the  period from October 1, 2004 through September 30,  2005.
These  maximum leverage ratios decline by 0.50 to 1 for  each  of
the  following four years before reaching 3.25 to 1 that  applies
for  the  financial  quarters ended  from  October  1,  2008  and
thereafter. The collateral for the loan is the Midnight Wrangler,
Midnight Runner and Midnight Gator. A final payment was  made  to
Global  Marine in December 2003. This early termination  of  debt
resulted  in  a  gain  to the Company of  $0.9  million  that  is
recorded in the December 31, 2003 financial statements.

Earlier  in  2004  the  Company was not in  compliance  with  the
current  ratio  or  the debt service coverage ratio  requirements
under the Finance Facility (with respect to the December 31, 2003
testing  period).  As a result, in early April 2004  the  Company
obtained  forbearance  waivers  from  its  lenders  and  effected
amendments  to its loan agreements to provide certain  levels  of
relief with respect to the required level of minimum coverage  as
well  as changes related to certain components of the computation
of  the  minimum current ratio, as defined, and the minimum  debt
service  coverage  ratio, as defined, for the  quarterly  testing
periods  of  2004.  As  of  June 30, 2004,  the  Company  was  in
compliance  with  the financial covenants (as  amended  in  early
April 2004) of the Bank Facility, the Finance Facility and the GE
Commercial  term loan. The Company must comply with  the  amended
consolidated current ratio covenant (as defined) of 0.70 to 1 for
the four quarters of 2004 and then the consolidated current ratio
covenant (as defined) returns to 1.00 to 1 as of March 31,  2005.
There can be no assurance that compliance will be maintained.  If
compliance  is  not  maintained, all credit agreements  could  be
declared  to be in default and all amounts outstanding, including
the  $18.3 million of debt associated with the Midnight Eagle and
Midnight  Wrangler facilities, currently classified as  long-term
could  be demanded for payment and creditors would have the right
to  seize  the  applicable collateral. The Company's  obligations
under  its credit agreements are secured by substantially all  of
the  Company's  assets. Any defaults under the credit  agreements
would  adversely  impact  the Company's ability  to  sustain  its
operations in the normal course and have a material effect on its
financial condition and results of operations.

8.   Income Taxes:
Income  Taxes - SFAS 109, "Accounting for Income Taxes," provides
for the weighing of positive and negative evidence in determining
whether  it is more likely than not that a deferred tax asset  is
recoverable. The Company has incurred losses in 2001 and 2003 and
has  losses on an aggregate basis for the three-year period ended
December  31, 2003. In addition, the Company has incurred  losses
in the six months ended June 30, 2004. Deferred income tax assets
are  reduced by a valuation allowance when it is more likely than
not  that  some portion or all of the deferred income tax  assets
will  not be realized. Relevant accounting guidance suggests that
a  recent  history  of cumulative losses constitutes  significant
negative evidence, and that future expectations about income  are
overshadowed  by  such recent losses. The Company  recognized  no
income tax benefit in the first half of 2004 for this reason.

9.   Commitments and Contingencies:
Contingencies  - The Company has been named as a defendant  in  a
stockholder  class  action suit filed by  purported  stockholders
regarding  the Public Offering. This lawsuit, Karl L. Kapps,  et.
al.  v.  Torch Offshore, Inc. et. al., No. 02-00582, which  seeks
unspecified monetary damages, was filed on March 1, 2002  in  the
United  States  District  Court  for  the  Eastern  District   of
Louisiana.  The lawsuit was dismissed on December  19,  2002  for
failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted.  The
plaintiffs appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the
Fifth  Circuit.  On July 26, 2004 the Court of  Appeals  for  the
Fifth Circuit dismissed the case.

In  May  2002, the Company entered into an agreement  with  Cable
Shipping, Inc. to time charter a vessel, the G. Murray,  under  a
three-year  contract  at  a rate of $18,500  per  day.  The  time
charter commenced in the third quarter of 2002 and the vessel was
renamed  the Midnight Hunter. However, on January 24,  2003,  the
Company  terminated  the  time charter because  of  the  vessel's
failure  to  meet certain specifications outlined in the  charter
agreement. In November 2003, a London arbitrator issued a  ruling
against  the Company's recission claim, finding that the  Company
was  not entitled to terminate the charter, but did rule in favor
of  the Company on the warranty claim for breach of contract.  An
interim  award  of  $2.2  million was  made  in  favor  of  Cable
Shipping,  Inc. The Company has recorded the full amount  of  the
interim  award in its financial statements. The Company attempted
to appeal the ruling, but on April 7, 2004 the appeal was denied.
The escrowed award has been released to Cable Shipping, Inc. Each
party will now make submissions as to quantum of damages for  the
claim upon which it was successful and a further hearing will  be
held.  Additional amounts awarded to the parties will  likely  be
netted in favor of Cable Shipping, Inc. While an estimate of  the
net  impact  of  the damages to be awarded with respect  to  this
matter  is not currently quantifiable, it is possible that future
damages that could potentially be awarded to Cable Shipping, Inc.
in  this  matter  could  have a material adverse  effect  on  the
Company's financial condition and/or results of operations.

In  March 2003, the Company filed a lawsuit (Torch Offshore, Inc.
v. Newfield Exploration Company, No. 03-0735, filed in the United
States District Court, Eastern District of Louisiana on March 13,
2003)  against  Newfield Exploration Company (Newfield)  claiming
damages  of approximately $2.1 million related to work  completed
for Newfield in the Gulf of Mexico at Grand Isle Block 103-A. The
lawsuit alleges that the Company did not receive all compensation
to  which  it was entitled pursuant to the contract. The  Company
has  recorded  a  provision for the full amount  of  this  claim;
however, the Company intends to continue to pursue the claim.

In  July 2003, the Company filed a lawsuit (Torch Offshore,  Inc.
et al v. Stolt Offshore, Inc., Algonquin Gas Transmission Company
and  Duke  Energy,  No.  03-1915, in the United  States  District
Court,  Eastern  District of Louisiana on July 3,  2003)  against
Stolt  Offshore, Inc. (Stolt), and its customer, seeking recovery
of approximately $7.6 million related to work completed for Stolt
in  Boston,  Massachusetts. The Company worked as a subcontractor
to  Stolt, who was engaged by Algonquin Gas Transmission  Company
to  complete  the Boston Hubline project, an underwater  pipeline
crossing the Boston Harbor. The lawsuit alleged that the  Company
did  not  receive  all  compensation to  which  the  Company  was
entitled pursuant to the subcontract the Company had with  Stolt.
Two  other  subcontractors to Stolt joined with the  Company  and
filed  as  plaintiffs in the lawsuit. Additionally, the  Company,
along   with  two  other  subcontractors,  filed  a  lawsuit   in
Massachusetts (Civil Action No. 03-01585), which included a claim
for  breach  of contract as well as a claim to assert  mechanics'
liens  against Algonquin's easement located in Weymouth,  Norfolk
County,  Massachusetts.  In March 2004,  the  Company  reached  a
settlement with Stolt in the amount of $6.2 million and the  full
amount  of  the  difference  between  the  claim  and  the  final
settlement (a loss of approximately $1.4 million) was recorded in
the  Company's financial statements as of December 31, 2003.  The
lawsuits  have  been  dismissed, and the lien  claims  have  been
released.

Because of the nature of its business, the Company is, from  time
to  time,  involved in routine litigation or subject  to  various
other  disputes  or  claims related to  its  business  operations
(other  miscellaneous  legal matters). The  Company  has  engaged
legal counsel to assist in defending all such legal matters,  and
management  intends to vigorously defend all claims. The  Company
does  not  believe, based on all available information, that  the
outcome  of these other miscellaneous legal matters will  have  a
material   effect  on  its  financial  position  or  results   of
operations.

Lease  Commitments - In early 2000, the Company commenced a five-
year  new-build charter for the Midnight Arrow, a DP-2  deepwater
subsea  construction vessel. The long-term charter was  scheduled
to  expire in March 2005, but the Company and Adams Offshore Ltd.
(the  "Lessor")  reached  an agreement  to  early  terminate  the
charter  effective  May  31, 2004. As  part  of  the  termination
agreement, the Lessor waived the early termination fee and it was
agreed  that the Company is to pay the Lessor $250,000 per  month
until  the outstanding balance of $1.8 million due to the  Lessor
(all  of  which has been accrued) is eliminated. The charter  was
accounted for as an operating lease.

In  January 2004, the Company entered into a time charter for the
Midnight  Hunter, a 340-foot DP-2 deepwater capable  vessel.  The
time  charter for the Midnight Hunter is at a day rate of $14,500
per day and ends September 2, 2005, with provisions for extension
or  outright  purchase. The charter amount  includes  the  marine
crew,   maintenance  and  repairs,  drydock  costs  and   certain
insurance  coverages. The vessel was previously under charter  by
the  Company,  but the Company cancelled the charter  in  January
2003  because  the vessel did not meet certain specifications  as
outlined  in  the charter agreement which prevented  the  Company
from  performing  certain types of work,  particularly  deepwater
pipelay (see further discussion above). However, the Company  has
re-chartered the vessel at a lower day rate and has  altered  how
it  utilizes the vessel. The Company is utilizing the DP-2 vessel
in  a  diving  support  capacity,  which  allows  it  to  perform
deepwater tie-ins with the Company's 1,000-foot saturation system
that has been installed on the vessel.

Other  Commitments  -  The  Company has executed  contracts  with
several critical equipment suppliers related to the conversion of
the  Midnight Express. In December 2002, the Company entered into
a  contract  with  Davie  Maritime, Inc.  of  Quebec,  Canada  to
complete  the  conversion of the Midnight Express at  a  contract
value  of  $25.3  million ($37.1 million  inclusive  of  assigned
critical  equipment supplier contracts) that became effective  in
April  2003.  Due  to the recent settlement with Davie  Maritime,
Inc.,  the  shipyard  contract, inclusive  of  assigned  critical
equipment supplier contracts, had a final value of $53.2  million
of  which $7.8 million came from approved change orders and  $8.3
million  from an agreed increase in contract price. The  shipyard
contract was completed with the delivery of the Midnight  Express
on  June  4,  2004. The remaining outstanding contracts  for  the
conversion  of the Midnight Express aggregate $29.7  million,  of
which  $26.2  million had been paid as of June 30, 2004.  In  the
event  the  Company terminates these contracts,  the  Company  is
required  to  pay certain of these suppliers' costs  incurred  to
date while other suppliers are entitled to the full value of  the
contract, depending upon the terms of the relevant agreement. The
Company  believes its present termination cost exposure on  these
contracts totals approximately $3.5 million.

As of June 30, 2004, two trade creditors had outstanding maritime
liens  on  various vessels in the Company's fleet. In July  2004,
the  Company  cured  the maritime liens from  one  of  its  trade
creditors.  The  Company is in the process of  reaching  a  final
settlement   with  the  second  trade  creditor.  All  applicable
liabilities  have been recorded in full on the Company's  balance
sheet as of June 30, 2004.

10.  New Accounting Standards:
In December 2002, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB)
issued  SFAS  No.  148,  which provides  alternative  methods  of
transition for a voluntary change to the fair-value based  method
of  accounting for stock-based employee compensation, and the new
standard,  which  is  now  effective, amends  certain  disclosure
requirements.  The  Company  continues  to  apply  APB  No.   25,
"Accounting   for  Stock  Issued  to  Employees,"   and   related
interpretations  in accounting for its stock-based  compensation;
therefore,  the alternative methods of transition do  not  apply.
The  Company has adopted the disclosure requirements of SFAS  No.
148 (see "Stock-Based Compensation" above).

In   June  2001,  the  American  Institute  of  Certified  Public
Accountants  (AICPA)  issued  an exposure  draft  of  a  proposed
Statement  of Position (SOP), "Accounting for Certain  Costs  and
Activities  Related  to  Property, Plant,  and  Equipment."  This
proposed  SOP  would change, among other things,  the  method  by
which  companies would account for normal, recurring or  periodic
repairs  and  maintenance costs related  to  "in  service"  fixed
assets.  It  would  require  that  these  types  of  expenses  be
recognized  when  incurred rather than  recognizing  expense  for
these  costs while the asset is productive. The proposed SOP  was
presented  to the FASB for clearance, however on April 14,  2004,
the  FASB  did not approve the draft SOP and decided to  consider
the  relevant  concepts  within the SOP in  connection  with  the
FASB's  short-term  convergence project on  property,  plant  and
equipment,  including depreciation currently  scheduled  to  take
place in the 2005-2006 timeframe.

In  January  2003,  the FASB issued Financial Interpretation  46,
"Consolidation  of Variable Interest Entities - An Interpretation
of  Accounting  Research Bulletin (ARB)  51"  ("FIN  46"  or  the
"Interpretation").  FIN  46 addresses consolidation  by  business
enterprises  of  variable interest entities (VIEs).  The  primary
objective  of  the Interpretation is to provide guidance  on  the
identification  of,  and financial reporting for,  entities  over
which control is achieved through means other than voting rights;
such  entities are known as VIEs. The provisions of FIN 46  apply
immediately  to VIEs created after January 31, 2003.  Application
is  required  for  interests in special-purpose entities  in  the
period  ending  after December 15, 2003 and is required  for  all
other  types of VIE's in the period ending after March 15,  2004.
The  Company has no VIEs and there was no material impact on  the
Company's  financial position or results of operations  from  the
adoption of FIN 46.

11.  Subsequent Events:
On  July 6, 2004, the Company signed a forbearance agreement with
GE  Capital to defer the quarterly principal installment  payment
of  $0.5  million  due on the Midnight Wrangler  term  loan.  The
quarterly  installment payment which was originally due  on  June
17, 2004 is now payable on September 17, 2004.

On  July  22,  2004, the Company entered into an  agreement  with
Regions Bank for a $5.0 million non-revolving line of credit. See
the discussion in Note 2 above.

In  July  2004, the Company applied under its structured  Finance
Facility  for  the 10% of the accepted Canadian content  interest
rate subsidy available from Industry Canada. The process has been
initiated by Industry Canada to pay the U.S. dollar equivalent of
approximately  $5.6  million. Of this total,  approximately  $1.5
million will be paid directly to the Company and will be used  by
the  Company  to pay future interest due on the Finance  Facility
(see  Note 2). The remaining amount of approximately $4.1 million
will be paid by Industry Canada to Regions Bank and EDC to reduce
or  "buy  down"  the interest rate on the $79.0  million  Finance
Facility when it converts to the three-year term loan.

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

The   following  discussion  and  analysis  should  be  read   in
conjunction  with  our  Consolidated  Financial  Statements   and
Management's  Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition  and
Results of Operations contained in our Annual Report on Form 10-K
for  the  fiscal year ended December 31, 2003, and the  unaudited
interim  condensed consolidated financial statements and  related
notes contained in "Item 1. Financial Statements" above.

This  Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q contains statements that  are
"forward-looking statements" within the meaning  of  the  Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and Section 21E  of  the
Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended,  concerning,  among
other  things,  our  prospects, expected revenues,  expenses  and
profits, developments and business strategies for our operations,
all  of  which  are  subject to certain risks, uncertainties  and
assumptions. Our actual results may differ materially from  those
expressed or implied in this Form 10-Q. Many of these factors are
beyond our ability to control or predict. Accordingly, we caution
investors   not   to  place  undue  reliance  on  forward-looking
statements. There is no assurance that our expectations  will  be
realized.   Factors  that  could  cause  or  contribute  to  such
differences  include, but are not limited to, those discussed  in
our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December
31,  2003  under  the captions "Forward-Looking  Statements"  and
"Item  7  -  Management's Discussion and  Analysis  of  Financial
Condition and Results of Operations - Risk Factors."

GENERAL

We provide subsea construction services in connection with the in-
field development of offshore oil and natural gas reservoirs.  We
are  a leading service provider in our market niche of installing
and    maintaining   small   diameter   flowlines   and   related
infrastructure  on the Continental Shelf of the Gulf  of  Mexico.
Over  the last few years, we have expanded our operations,  fleet
capabilities  and management expertise to enable  us  to  provide
analogous  services  in  water  depths  up  to  10,000  feet.  In
addition, we have begun to enter the international markets of the
world,  including  Mexico and West Africa, as  we  believe  these
areas present opportunities for utilization of our fleet.

In the first half of 2004, we reported revenues of $30.9 million,
which equaled the revenues for the six months ended June 30, 2003
of  $30.9 million. The operating loss for the first six months of
2004  was $7.6 million, compared with an operating loss  of  $1.7
million in the first six months of 2003. During the first half of
2004,  based  upon  management's experience,  demand  for  subsea
construction  services in the Gulf of Mexico remained  relatively
weak  as  the levels of offshore drilling activity in the markets
where  we  operate  continue to be depressed.  In  addition,  our
operations  are cyclical and fleet-wide utilization is  generally
lower during the first half of the year because of winter weather
conditions  in the Gulf of Mexico. These forces have kept  market
prices  and  fleet utilization at low levels while our  operating
costs have increased, and as a result, an adverse impact has been
seen  on  our  gross  margin (defined as revenues  less  cost  of
sales).

We  have a working capital deficit of $89.1 million. This deficit
is   primarily   attributable  to  the  classification   of   the
outstanding  indebtedness under the Midnight Express construction
finance facility, which matures on October 31, 2004, as a current
liability. This position places a high degree of pressure on  our
liquidity  management and could ultimately impact our  operations
and future business plans. Management believes that our plan,  as
outlined  below,  if successful, will provide us with  sufficient
financial  resources to conduct our operations for the  next  six
months  and  beyond should the Midnight Express  be  successfully
deployed  and  profitably employed. As of June 30, 2004,  we  had
$15.2  million of borrowing capacity under our credit facilities.
However,  if we continue to incur significant losses  or  if  our
ability to access our credit facilities is curtailed, our ability
to  continue to manage our liquidity needs and meet our operating
and other financial commitments may be jeopardized in the future.

We  believe  that  certain factors are critical to  our  success,
including  having sufficient capital resources  to  complete  the
conversion  of  the Midnight Express in 2004; deployment  of  the
Midnight Express as soon as possible upon completion of  its  sea
trials,  which  is expected in the second half of  2004;  raising
additional capital with a public or private placement  of  equity
or  through the sale of certain vessels; refinancing our existing
indebtedness;   reducing  certain  fixed  costs;   managing   the
utilization  of  our existing fleet of vessels  by  strategically
positioning  our DP-2 vessels on jobs to promote  efficiency  and
greater   margins;   and  continuing  to  expand   our   presence
internationally and move into the intermediate water  depths  and
the deepwater markets.

In  order  to implement our business plan and meet our  financial
obligations, we must:

  -  Complete the conversion of the Midnight Express in a timely
     manner and within the financial constraints of the $19.0
     million increase in the conversion financing.

  -  Raise   additional  capital  to  fund  working   capital
     requirements, including the payment of monthly lease amounts
     for the Midnight Hunter, which is approximately $0.4 million
     per month for the remaining two quarters of the year ended
     December 31, 2004, and to make monthly and quarterly interest
     and principal  payments to General Electric Commercial
     Equipment Financing (GE Commercial) as part of the Midnight
     Eagle term loan and General Electric Capital Corporation (GE
     Capital) as part of the Midnight Wrangler term loan (together
     $2.1 million for the remainder of 2004 as of June 30, 2004).

  -  Enter into an agreement(s) for utilization of the Midnight
     Express near the time of the completion of its final sea
     trials in the second half of 2004.

We  have  been  actively attempting to implement  our  plan,  the
ultimate  success of which is beyond our control. If we  are  not
able  to  successfully implement our plan our financial condition
and liquidity will be materially and adversely affected and there
is  significant doubt about our ability to continue  as  a  going
concern. For more information regarding our plan, see Note  2  to
the Financial Statements located in Item 1 of this Form 10-Q, and
for  the  related  risks,  see  "Risk  Factors"  in  "Item  7   -
Management's  Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition  and
Results  of  Operations - Risk Factors" in our annual  report  on
Form 10-K filing for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2003.

We  remain  focused on our business strategy of moving  into  the
deepwater markets of the world through the establishment  of  our
fleet of DP-2 vessels. Since 1997, we have increased the size  of
our total fleet of construction and service vessels from three to
ten  construction and service vessels (excludes Midnight Runner).
In  2002,  we acquired a 520-foot vessel from Smit International,
renamed the Midnight Express, which is being converted to a  DP-2
offshore construction vessel with our patented pipelay system  at
an  estimated cost of approximately $109.0 million.  In  December
2002,  we  committed to purchase a cable-lay vessel, renamed  the
Midnight  Wrangler,  for  the purpose of  deepwater  pipelay  and
subsea  construction. We took possession of this vessel in  March
2003 and the vessel entered our active fleet in August 2003 after
various  modifications and upgrades were made to it.  In  January
2004,  we  entered into a new charter for the Midnight Hunter,  a
deepwater capable diving support vessel. These additions  to  our
fleet  over  the past few years have positioned us  to  grow  our
business  while  achieving better margins as  we  move  into  the
intermediate depths and the deepwater. These DP-2 vessels are the
core of our fleet and the key to our future success.

Business Environment
The  demand  for  subsea construction services  has  historically
depended  upon  the prices of oil and natural gas. However,  this
relationship  has  deteriorated over the past 18  months  as  the
price  of oil has greatly increased without a reciprocal increase
in the activity in the Gulf of Mexico. There has been an increase
in activity in Mexico and West Africa as equipment has moved from
the  Gulf  of Mexico to these areas. These prices do reflect  the
general  condition of the industry and influence the  willingness
of  our customers to spend capital to develop oil and natural gas
reservoirs on a global basis. We are unable to predict future oil
and  natural  gas  prices or the level of  offshore  construction
activity  related to the industry. In addition to the  prices  of
oil  and  natural  gas, we use the following leading  indicators,
among others, to forecast the demand for our services:

-   the offshore mobile and jack-up rig counts;

-   forecasts of capital expenditures by major, independent, and
    state oil and natural gas companies; and

-   recent lease sale activity levels.

Even  when  demand  for subsea construction services  is  strong,
several  factors  may  affect  our profitability,  including  the
following:

-   competition;

-   availability of qualified personnel;

-   equipment and labor productivity;

-   cost of third party services such as catering and labor
    services;

-   fuel cost;

-   weather conditions;

-   contract estimating uncertainties;

-   global economic and political circumstances;

-   other risks inherent in marine construction; and

-   availability and cost of insurance.

Although  greatly  influenced by overall market  conditions,  our
fleet-wide  utilization is generally lower during the first  half
of  the year because of winter weather conditions in the Gulf  of
Mexico.   Accordingly,  we  endeavor  to  schedule  our   drydock
inspections and routine and preventative maintenance during  this
period.  Additionally,  during the first quarter,  a  substantial
number of our customers finalize capital budgets and solicit bids
for   construction   projects.  For   this   reason,   individual
quarterly/interim results are not necessarily indicative  of  the
expected results for any given year.

In  the life of an offshore field, capital is allocated for field
development  following  a  commercial discovery.  The  time  that
elapses  between a successfully drilled well and the  development
phase,  in  which we participate, varies depending on  the  water
depth  of  the  field.  On  the Shelf, demand  for  our  services
generally follows drilling activities by three to twelve  months.
We  have  noticed  that  demand  for  pipeline  installation  for
projects  exceeding 1,000 feet of water depth  generally  follows
drilling activities by at least eighteen months to three years as
deepwater  installations typically require much more  engineering
design work than Shelf installations.

RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

Comparison of the Quarter Ended June 30, 2004 to the Quarter
Ended June 30, 2003

The  following  table  highlights revenue days  (days  of  vessel
utilization),  revenue and gross profit for  the  quarters  ended
June 30, 2004 and June 30, 2003.

(dollars in thousands, except
per revenue day, unaudited)           Quarter Ended June 30,
                                      ----------------------
                                        2004          2003
                                      ----------   ---------
Revenue Days                               574            504
Revenue                              $  19,020      $  13,876
Gross Profit                         $   1,725      $   1,376
Average per Revenue Day:
     Revenue                         $  33,136      $  27,532
     Gross Profit                    $   3,005      $   2,730

Revenues. Revenues were $19.0 million for the three months  ended
June  30,  2004  compared to $13.9 million for the  three  months
ended June 30, 2003, an increase of 37.1%. The increase in second
quarter 2004 revenues was caused by the overall increase  in  the
utilization  of our fleet during the period and the  increase  in
average  pricing realizations (revenues divided by revenue  days)
when  compared to the comparable second quarter 2003  statistics.
The  number  of  revenue  days  worked  increased  13.9%  between
periods. In addition, average pricing realizations in the  second
quarter  of  2004  were  20.4% higher than  the  average  pricing
realizations in the second quarter of 2003. Our fleet worked  574
revenue  days  in  the  second quarter of  2004  resulting  in  a
utilization rate of 64.3%, compared to 504 revenue days worked in
the  three  months  ended June 30, 2003, or a  62.6%  utilization
rate.  The increase in fleet utilization is primarily due to  the
addition  of  the  Midnight Wrangler (91 revenue  days)  and  the
Midnight Hunter (82 revenue days) to our fleet as they were not a
part  of  the operating fleet in the second quarter of  2003.  In
addition, the Midnight Dancer contributed 35 more revenue days in
the second quarter of 2004 than in the comparable period of 2003.
However,  these increases in utilization was partially offset  by
the  decrease  in the number of revenue days on a quarter  versus
quarter  basis for the Midnight Runner, Midnight Rider,  Midnight
Brave and Midnight Arrow (charter terminated on May 31, 2004).

Gross  Profit.  Gross profit (defined as revenues  less  cost  of
sales)  was $1.7 million (9.1% of revenues) for the three  months
ended  June 30, 2004, compared to $1.4 million (9.9% of revenues)
for  the three months ended June 30, 2003. Cost of sales consists
of  job related costs such as vessel wages, insurance and repairs
and  maintenance.  The gross profit margin in the  quarter  ended
June  30, 2004 remained relatively comparable to the gross profit
margin  in the quarter ended June 30, 2003. The overall  increase
in  cost of sales in the second quarter of 2004 was primarily due
to  increases in the fixed cost structure, subcontract costs, job
consumables, vessel consumables, communication costs  and  marine
crew. In addition, included in cost of sales were $0.7 million of
additional  costs  related  to the termination  of  the  Midnight
Hunter charter for the three months ended June 30, 2003.

Depreciation  and  Amortization.  Depreciation  and  amortization
expense was $2.6 million for the three months ended June 30, 2004
compared  to  $1.8 million for the three months  ended  June  30,
2003,  an  increase of 44.9%. The major portion of  the  increase
relates  to  the $0.6 million impairment charge for the  Midnight
Runner.  In  addition,  the  increase consisted  of  depreciation
expense for the Midnight Wrangler and the Midnight Gator  in  the
second  quarter of 2004 as compared to none in the second quarter
of  2003.  This  was  partially offset by  the  decrease  in  the
amortization of drydock costs for the Midnight Brave and Midnight
Carrier  in the second quarter of 2004 as compared to the  second
quarter of 2003.

General  and  Administrative Expenses. General and administrative
expenses  totaled $1.4 million (7.2% of revenues) for  the  three
months  ended  June 30, 2004 compared to $1.3  million  (9.7%  of
revenues)  for the three months ended June 30, 2003.  The  second
quarter 2004 general and administrative expenses were higher than
the  second  quarter of 2003 due to increases in financing  fees,
personnel  costs,  professional fees and insurance  costs.  These
increase  were  offset partially by declines  in  consulting  and
legal costs.

Other  Income. Other income was zero for the three  months  ended
June  30, 2004 and 2003. We capitalized all of our second quarter
2004  and  2003  interest costs, totaling $0.8 million  and  $0.3
million,  respectively,  in relation to  the  conversion  of  the
Midnight Express.

Income  Taxes. For the quarter ended June 30, 2004, we  increased
our  deferred  tax  asset valuation allowance  by  $0.5  million,
recognizing  no  net  income  tax  benefit  associated  with  our
operating  loss due to the uncertainty of future taxable  income.
We  recorded  a $0.6 million benefit (a 35% effective  tax  rate)
during the three months ended June 30, 2003.

Net  Loss. Net loss for the three months ended June 30, 2004  was
$2.4  million, compared with a net loss of $1.2 million  for  the
three months ended June 30, 2003.

Comparison of the Six Months Ended June 30, 2004 to the Six
Months Ended June 30, 2003

The following table highlights revenue days (days of vessel
utilization), revenue and gross profit for the six-month periods
ended June 30, 2004 and June 30, 2003.

(dollars in thousands, except
per revenue day, unaudited)        Six Months Ended June 30,
                                   -------------------------
                                      2004           2003
                                   -----------     ---------
Revenue Days                               952           994
Revenue                            $    30,862     $  30,905
Gross Profit                       $       323     $   4,660
Average per Revenue Day:
     Revenue                       $    32,418     $  31,092
     Gross Profit                  $       339     $   4,688

Revenues.  Revenues were $30.9 million for the six  months  ended
June  30, 2004 compared to $30.9 million for the six months ended
June  30,  2003,  a  decrease of 0.1%. The  minimal  decrease  in
revenues for the six-month period ended June 30, 2004 as compared
to  the  year-ago period is the result of a decline in the number
of  revenue  days  worked in the first six months  of  2004.  The
amount of the decrease was lessened by an increase in the average
revenue  per  revenue day of 4.3%. Our fleet worked  952  revenue
days  in  the first six months of 2004 resulting in a utilization
rate  of  52.0%, compared to 994 revenue days worked in  the  six
months  ended June 30, 2003, or a 61.7% utilization rate. Average
revenue  per revenue day was $32,418 in the first six  months  of
2004 as compared to $31,092 in the first six months of 2003.  The
Midnight Wrangler (140 revenue days) and the Midnight Hunter  (90
revenue  days) were new contributors to the fleet  in  the  first
half  of  2004. The Midnight Dancer had an increase of 44 revenue
days  during the first six months of 2004 as compared to the same
period  of  2003.  The  increases  were  offset  by  declines  in
utilization  from  the Midnight Arrow, Midnight  Rider,  Midnight
Brave and Midnight Runner.

Gross  Profit.  Gross profit (defined as revenues  less  cost  of
sales)  was  $0.3 million (1.0% of revenues) for the  six  months
ended June 30, 2004, compared to $4.7 million (15.1% of revenues)
for the six months ended June 30, 2003. Cost of sales consists of
job related costs such as vessel wages, insurance and repairs and
maintenance.  The  decrease  in  the  gross  profit  margin   was
primarily  caused  by  a higher fixed cost structure  and  higher
direct  job  costs,  including increases  in  subcontract  costs,
vessel consumables and job consumables. In addition, there was an
increase  in indirect costs as well. These increases were  offset
somewhat by lower direct job labor when compared to the first six
months of 2003. In addition, included in cost of sales were  $1.3
million  of  additional costs related to the termination  of  the
Midnight Hunter charter in the six months ended June 30, 2003.

Depreciation  and  Amortization.  Depreciation  and  amortization
expense was $4.7 million for the six months ended June 30,  2004,
compared to $3.6 million for the six months ended June 30,  2003,
an increase of 30.1%. The major portion of the increase is due to
the  impairment  charge of $0.6 million on  the  Midnight  Runner
during the second quarter of 2004. In addition, the increase  was
a  result of more depreciation of vessels in the first six months
of  2004,  as  compared to the same period of 2003  offset  by  a
decrease  in  amortization of drydock  costs.  The  increases  in
depreciation  expense during the first six months  of  2004  came
mostly from the addition of the Midnight Wrangler to the fleet as
well  as  from  the Midnight Gator. The amortization  of  drydock
expense  for  the  Midnight Brave and Midnight Carrier  decreased
during  the 2004 period when compared to the first six months  of
2003.

General  and Administrative Expenses.  General and administrative
expenses  totaled  $3.1 million (9.6% of revenues)  for  the  six
months  ended  June 30, 2004, compared to $2.7 million  (8.7%  of
revenues) for the six months ended June 30, 2003. The general and
administrative expenses were higher in the first  six  months  of
2004  as compared to the six months ended June 30, 2003,  due  to
increases  in financing fees, personnel costs, professional  fees
and  insurance costs offset by a decline in consulting costs  and
business promotion expenses.

Other Income. Other income was zero for the six months ended June
30,  2004  compared to other income of $1,000 for the six  months
ended June 30, 2003. We capitalized all of our year-to-date  2004
and  2003 interest costs, totaling $1.7 million and $0.4 million,
respectively,  in  relation  to the conversion  of  the  Midnight
Express.

Income  Taxes.  For  the  six months  ended  June  30,  2004,  we
increased  our  deferred tax asset valuation  allowance  by  $2.4
million,  recognizing no net income tax benefit  associated  with
our  operating  loss  due to the uncertainty  of  future  taxable
income.  We recorded a $0.6 million benefit (a 35% effective  tax
rate) during the six months ended June 30, 2003.

Net  Loss.  Net loss for the six months ended June 30,  2004  was
$7.6  million, compared with a net loss of $1.1 million  for  the
six months ended June 30, 2003.

LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES

Liquidity Needs and Our Financial Plan
As discussed in our annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December  31,  2003,  we have been significantly  and  negatively
affected  by  adverse business conditions in  our  industry,  and
other  events  with  a  direct impact on our  earnings.  We  have
experienced recurring losses from operations, negative  operating
cash  flows  and a working capital deficiency. As a  result,  our
independent public accountants advised us that they had reached a
conclusion  that  there  is  substantial  doubt  our  ability  to
continue  as  a  going  concern  and,  as  required  by  auditing
standards  generally accepted in the United States,  included  in
their  auditors'  report  on  our 2003  financial  statements  an
explanatory paragraph to reflect that conclusion.  Our ability to
continue  in  business  is  dependent on  our  ability  to  raise
additional  capital  and  improve  our  operating  results.   Our
financial   condition  has  been  significantly  and   negatively
impacted  by adverse conditions in the markets where we  operate.
As  a  result, we have been required to delay payments to vendors
and  other  creditors  to  the extent  possible.  Accordingly,  a
portion  of our accounts payable are past due compared to  stated
terms and certain of vendors have placed liens on our vessels.

We  face significant liquidity and working capital challenges, in
addition  to costs of expanding our operations into the deepwater
market, and will need to raise additional capital to continue  to
meet our debt obligations and conduct our operations as currently
conducted.  In connection with our efforts to raise  capital,  we
have a developed a plan, the components of which include the sale
of   certain  of  our  vessels  and  raising  capital,  including
refinancing  or  debt,  through the  public  or  private  capital
markets. Our ability to raise additional capital will depend upon
the  status of capital markets and industry conditions. If we are
not  able  to  raise  additional capital through  the  public  or
private equity markets or the sale of vessels, then the amount of
cash  generated from our operations may not be sufficient to meet
our  debt  service obligations and working capital  requirements,
which have risen significantly in part due to our entry into  the
deepwater  market. We believe that our plan, if successful,  will
provide  us  with sufficient financial resources to  continue  to
conduct our operations for the next six months and beyond  should
the  Midnight  Express  be successfully deployed  and  profitably
employed.  Please  refer  to Note 2 to the  Financial  Statements
located in Item 1 of this Form 10-Q for more details on our plan.
However,  no  assurances can be given that we  will  successfully
implement our plan.

As  part of our plan, in April 2004 we executed an amendment with
Regions Bank and EDC for a $19.0 million increase to our existing
credit   facility  (the  "Finance  Facility")  to  complete   the
conversion  of  the Midnight Express. In addition, these  lenders
have  agreed to extend the time frame of the construction  period
of  the Finance Facility from June 30, 2004 to October 31,  2004,
at  which point the construction period financing is expected  to
convert  to  term status. Regions Bank and EDC have also  amended
certain  covenant  obligations that we  must  meet  as  discussed
below.  We  also  executed  amendments  in  April  2004  with  GE
Commercial  and  GE  Capital relating to our Midnight  Eagle  and
Midnight Wrangler term loans, respectively.

In  May 2004, we reached a settlement with Davie Maritime,  Inc.,
the  shipyard  that  completed the  conversion  of  the  Midnight
Express  in  Quebec, Canada, through an increase in the  contract
price  of $8.3 million. This settlement covered all of the claims
made  by  Davie  Maritime, Inc. against  us.  Since  the  initial
contract signing, the contract price increased from $37.1 million
to  $53.2  million of which $7.8 million resulted  from  approved
change  orders  and  $8.3  million from  an  agreed  increase  in
contract  price.  The  settlement was paid  from  March  1,  2004
through  the  delivery date (June 4, 2004)  from  the  additional
$19.0  million  from the Finance Facility. Also as  part  of  our
plan,  we reached a settlement with Stolt Offshore, Inc.  (Stolt)
in  the amount of $6.2 million for work we completed for Stolt on
the  Boston  Hubline  project  in the  first  half  of  2003.  We
collected  these  funds  in March 2004 and  have  used  them  for
general operating purposes and for reducing amounts due under the
Company's receivable line of credit.

On  July  6,  2004,  we signed a forbearance  agreement  with  GE
Capital  to defer the quarterly principal installment payment  of
$0.5  million  due  on  the  Midnight  Wrangler  term  loan.  The
quarterly  installment payment which was originally due  on  June
17,  2004 is now payable on September 17, 2004. On July 22, 2004,
we  entered in an agreement with Regions Bank for a $5.0  million
non-revolving line of credit with an initial term of 120 days  to
be  used  for working capital purposes. The rate on the borrowing
is  LIBOR plus 4.00%. The collateral on the non-revolving line is
the  Midnight Rider, which is also collateral under  the  Finance
Facility  with Regions Bank and EDC. In order to use this  vessel
as  collateral  in  this  deal, EDC took a  subordinated  secured
position  on  the  vessel. In addition,  as  part  of  the  above
transaction,   Regions  Bank  agreed  to  allow  the   usage   of
approximately  $1.5 million of proceeds from Industry  Canada  to
pay  the  interest on the Finance Facility during the  conversion
period. The proceeds were originally allocated to repay a portion
of  the $19.0 million additional financing arranged in April 2004
to  convert the Midnight Express. The terms of the note call  for
the  loan  to be repaid on November 19, 2004. We intend to  repay
the  $5.0 million note through a refinancing of our existing debt
with  the prospect of converting this $5.0 million into long-term
debt. In the event we are successful in obtaining refinancing  of
our  existing debt, the agreement with Regions Bank and EDC calls
for  the  proceeds  of the refinancing to:  1)  repay  this  $5.0
million  note,  2)  repay $1.5 million of  the  additional  $19.0
million of financing on the Midnight Express conversion,  and  3)
use  50%  of  the refinance proceeds received in excess  of  $6.5
million  to also repay a portion of the additional $19.0  million
of financing on the Midnight Express conversion.

In  July  2004, we applied under our structured Finance  Facility
for the 10% interest rate subsidy available from Industry Canada.
The process has been initiated by Industry Canada to pay the U.S.
dollar  equivalent of approximately $5.6 million. Of this  total,
approximately $1.5 million will be paid directly to us  and  will
be  used  to  pay future interest due on the Finance Facility  as
discussed  above.  The  remaining amount  of  approximately  $4.1
million  will be paid by Industry Canada to Regions Bank and  EDC
to reduce or "buy down" the interest rate on the Finance Facility
when it converts to the three-year term loan.

Our  Finance Facility specifies we must raise the lesser of $10.0
million  or 20% of our market capitalization at the time  of  the
issuance  by  June  30, 2005 and requires that  the  first  $10.0
million  of proceeds associated with such an offering be used  to
reduce amounts outstanding under the Finance Facility.

Current Liquidity and Capital Resources
The  net cash provided by or used in our operating, investing and
financing activities is summarized below:

(in thousands, unaudited)            Six Months Ended June 30,
                                     -------------------------
                                        2004           2003
                                     ----------     ----------
Cash flows provided by (used in):
     Operating activities            $  2,545        $  8,977
     Investing activities             (27,186)        (36,931)
     Financing activities              24,641          27,628
                                     --------         --------
Net change in cash and cash
equivalents                          $     --        $   (326)
                                     ========         ========

Our  cash flow from operating activities is affected by a  number
of   factors,   including  our  net  results,  depreciation   and
amortization, drydocking expenditures and changes in our  working
capital.  In  the six months ended June 30, 2004,  our  operating
activities provided net cash of $2.5 million as compared to  $9.0
million in the six months ended June 30, 2003.

Cash  flow  used in investing activities in the six months  ended
June 30, 2004 was related to the purchase of equipment, primarily
related   to  the  conversion  of  the  Midnight  Express.   Cash
expenditures totaled $27.2 million for the six months ended  June
30,  2004 compared to $36.9 million for the six months ended June
30,  2003. The cash expenditures in the first six months of  2003
do  not include the $9.7 million expended for the purchase of the
Midnight  Wrangler,  as  this amount was fully  financed  by  the
seller (see discussion below).

Cash  flow provided by financing activities was $24.6 million  in
the  six months ended June 30, 2004 and related primarily to  the
borrowings  under our various credit agreements, principally  the
construction  finance facility. Cash flow provided  by  financing
activities  for  the  six months ended June 30,  2003  was  $27.6
million  and was also related mostly to the borrowings under  our
various  credit  agreements, primarily the  construction  finance
facility.

We  had  negative  working capital (current assets  less  current
liabilities) of $89.1 million at June 30, 2004. This is primarily
the  result  of  the  inclusion in current liabilities  of  $69.9
million  of borrowings to finance the Midnight Express.  As  this
debt  is  associated  with the conversion work  on  the  Midnight
Express,  it  is  classified as current  as  of  June  30,  2004.
However, once the conversion of the Midnight Express is completed
and  the  vessel meets certain requirements as specified  by  the
finance agreement, the amounts borrowed to finance the conversion
of  the  Midnight Express are expected to convert  to  term  loan
status.  There are other things that could affect classification,
such as compliance with covenants.

The  significant changes in our financial position from  December
31,  2003 to June 30, 2004 are the increase in debt, the increase
in  property  and  equipment, and the decrease  in  the  accounts
receivable balance. Total debt has increased to $101.0 million as
of  June  30,  2004 and consists primarily of the  borrowings  to
finance  the conversion of the Midnight Express, the  GE  Capital
Midnight  Wrangler  term loan, the GE Commercial  Midnight  Eagle
term loan, and the receivable line of credit, which are discussed
below. Property and equipment has increased by $23.0 million  due
to  the  capital expenditures primarily related to the conversion
of  the Midnight Express and our accounts receivable balance  has
decreased by $6.5 million.

Historically,  our capital requirements have been  primarily  for
the  acquisition  and  improvement of  our  vessels  and  related
equipment.  We expect that as we continue our entrance  into  the
deepwater  market our capital requirements will  continue  to  be
primarily  for  the conversion and improvement  of  our  vessels.
Capital  expenditures totaled $27.2 million for  the  six  months
ended June 30, 2004, compared to $46.7 million for the six months
ended  June  30,  2003. Capital expenditures  in  2004  and  2003
primarily  relate to the conversion of the Midnight  Express.  We
currently estimate capital expenditures for the remainder of 2004
to  be  approximately $10.9 million, primarily  representing  the
conversion  of, and the equipment associated with,  the  Midnight
Express.  We  expect  to  fund  these  capital  requirements   by
utilizing  our bank and debt facilities in addition to cash  flow
from operations. Included in this estimate are approximately $2.2
million  for  routine  capital and  drydock  inspections  of  our
vessels to be incurred during the remainder of 2004.

Available Credit Facilities and Debt
Regions  Bank  Facility. In July 2002, we entered  into  a  $35.0
million  bank  facility (the "Bank Facility") with Regions  Bank,
consisting  of  a  $25.0 million asset-based five-year  revolving
credit  facility  and  a $10.0 million accounts  receivable-based
working capital facility. Our ability to use the asset-based five-
year  revolving credit facility was suspended in connection  with
our financing of the conversion of the Midnight Express and later
terminated in April 2004 as part of the $19.0 million increase to
the   construction  finance  facility  as  mentioned  above   and
discussed below. We continue to have available to us the accounts
receivable-based working capital facility from Regions  Bank.  In
December  2003,  the  accounts receivable-based  working  capital
facility  was  increased  to a limit of  $15.0  million.  Amounts
outstanding  under the accounts receivable-based working  capital
facility   may   not  exceed  85%  of  eligible  trade   accounts
receivable.  We  had  $8.9 million outstanding  under  the  $15.0
million accounts receivable-based working capital facility as  of
June  30,  2004.  In addition, we issued a $1.5  million  standby
letter  of credit as security for the charter payments due  under
the  charter  agreement  for  the  Midnight  Hunter  against  the
accounts receivable-based working capital facility. In July 2003,
this  letter  of  credit was drawn by Cable Shipping,  Inc.,  the
owners  of the Midnight Hunter. We have recorded the $1.5 million
as  a  liability on our balance sheet as of December 31, 2003  as
part of the receivable line of credit. We had available borrowing
capacity  of  up  to an additional $2.1 million under  the  $15.0
million accounts receivable-based working capital facility  based
upon  eligible  receivables at June 30, 2004. The  $15.0  million
accounts  receivable-based working capital facility was  extended
and now has a maturity date of July 2, 2005.

Midnight  Express $79.0 Million Finance Facility. In April  2003,
we  finalized  a  credit line that matures on June  30,  2004  to
finance  the  conversion of the Midnight  Express  (the  "Finance
Facility").  Amounts  outstanding  under  the  credit  line  will
convert  into a three-year term loan facility upon completion  of
the  conversion  of  the Midnight Express. The  Finance  Facility
commitment  is  equally  provided  by  Regions  Bank  and  Export
Development Canada (EDC) ($30.0 million participation by each).

In April 2004, we increased the credit line from Regions Bank and
EDC   by   $19.0   million  to  $79.0  million   ($39.5   million
participation  by each) and amended the maturity to  October  31,
2004.  The amounts outstanding under the credit line will convert
into two separate loans at the earlier of the facility's maturity
date or completion of the conversion of the Midnight Express. The
first  loan  represents the original facility  of  $60.0  million
borrowing  and  will convert to a three-year term loan  facility.
The  second  loan  is for the additional $19.0 million  and  will
convert to a twenty-month term loan facility maturing on June 30,
2006.  In  addition,  as  part  of the  increase  to  the  credit
facility,  the  $25.0  million  asset-based  five-year  revolving
credit  facility was cancelled as discussed above.  Regions  Bank
and  EDC  also have the right to the first $10.0 million  of  any
equity  offering, to the proceeds from the sale  of  any  of  the
mortgaged  vessels (see discussion below), and  to  the  interest
rate  buy-down  expected from Industry Canada  during  the  third
quarter of 2004.

The   interest  rate  for  the  $60.0  million  portion  of   the
construction financing was LIBOR plus a spread of 3.25% to  3.50%
based  upon our consolidated leverage ratio before it was amended
as  part  of the $19.0 million increase to the credit  line.  The
interest  rate for the $19.0 million portion of the  construction
financing is LIBOR plus 4.00%. In addition, a 1% origination  fee
($190,000)  was charged by Regions Bank and EDC for the  addition
to  the  credit line and the interest rate on the original  $60.0
million financing increased to LIBOR plus 4.00%. We are providing
collateral in the form of the Midnight Express as well as a first
preferred  ship  mortgage  on the Midnight  Fox,  Midnight  Star,
Midnight  Dancer, Midnight Carrier, Midnight Brave  and  Midnight
Rider. We must adhere to various conditions including maintaining
tangible  net  worth of at least $60.0 million,  a  minimum  debt
service  coverage  ratio of at least 1.20 to  1,  a  consolidated
leverage  ratio  of  no more than 2.00 to 1  and  a  consolidated
current ratio (defined below) of 1.30 to 1 (see below for details
of  amendments). We are not allowed to incur additional debt over
$8.0  million  without consent from Regions Bank. We  have  drawn
approximately $69.9 million as of June 30, 2004 under  the  $79.0
million facility.

Upon  achievement of certain construction completion  milestones,
but  no  later  than October 31, 2004, the $79.0 million  Finance
Facility will convert to term status. The $60.0 million term loan
facility  would  then  have  a three-year  term  with  a  10-year
amortization payment schedule consisting of semi-annual  payments
with  a  balloon payment at the end of the three-year  term.  The
interest  rate for this facility is now at 4.00% over LIBOR.  The
$19.0  million term loan facility would then have a  twenty-month
term  with a $6.0 million principal payment due on June 30, 2005,
a $6.0 million principal payment due on December 30, 2005 and the
remaining  $7.0 million principal payment due on June  30,  2006.
Interest would be payable on a monthly basis based on a  rate  of
LIBOR  plus  4.00%.  Regions Bank and  EDC  will  require  us  to
maintain  the  same collateral and covenants as included  in  the
construction financing depicted above.

Earlier in 2004 we were not in compliance with the current  ratio
or the debt service coverage ratio requirements under the Finance
Facility  (with respect to the December 31, 2003 testing period).
As  a result, in early April 2004 we obtained forbearance waivers
from  our  lenders and effected amendments to our loan agreements
to  provide certain levels of relief with respect to the required
level  of minimum coverage as well as changes related to  certain
components  of the computation of the minimum current  ratio,  as
defined, and the minimum debt service coverage ratio, as defined,
for  the quarterly testing periods of 2004. As of June 30,  2004,
we were in compliance with the financial covenants (as amended in
early April 2004) of the Bank Facility, the Finance Facility  and
the  GE  Commercial term loan. We must comply  with  the  amended
consolidated current ratio covenant (as defined) of 0.70 to 1 for
the four quarters of 2004 and then the consolidated current ratio
covenant (as defined) returns to 1.00 to 1 as of March 31,  2005.
There can be no assurance that compliance will be maintained.  If
compliance  is  not  maintained, all credit agreements  could  be
declared  to be in default and all amounts outstanding, including
the  $18.3 million of debt associated with the Midnight Eagle and
Midnight  Wrangler facilities, currently classified as long-term,
could  be  demanded for payment and our creditors would have  the
right  to seize the applicable collateral. Our obligations  under
these  credit agreements are secured by substantially all of  our
assets.  Any defaults under the credit agreements would adversely
impact our ability to sustain our operations in the normal course
and have a material effect on our financial condition and results
of operations.

Purchase  of the Midnight Wrangler. In December 2002, we  entered
into  a  purchase  agreement with Global Marine  Systems  Limited
(Global Marine) for the purchase of the Wave Alert, to be renamed
the  Midnight Wrangler, at a cost of approximately $10.8 million.
We  took possession of the vessel in March 2003. The purchase  of
the  vessel was financed by Global Marine over a five-year period
with  monthly  payments,  including 7%  per  annum  interest,  of
approximately  $0.2 million plus a $1.0 million  payment  at  the
purchase  in March 2003 and another $1.0 million payment  at  the
end of the five-year period.

GE  Commercial  Midnight  Eagle Term  Loan.  In  March  2003,  we
finalized a seven-year term loan with GE Commercial. Although the
principal  amount of the term loan is $9.25 million, we  received
$8.0  million  and  GE Commercial retained  $1.25  million  as  a
security deposit. The interest rate on the term loan is  the  30-
day  commercial  paper  rate plus 2.03% and  includes  prepayment
penalties  of 2% for the first twelve months, 1% for  the  second
twelve  months and 0% thereafter. The term loan is structured  to
have  monthly  payments  over seven  years.  The  loan  agreement
contains  the  same financial covenants as the Bank Facility  and
Finance Facility discussed above. The collateral for the loan  is
the  Midnight Eagle and the security deposit described above.  We
used  the proceeds from the loan to fund the improvements to  the
Midnight  Wrangler  and  a  portion  for  the  Midnight   Express
conversion costs.

GE  Capital  Midnight Wrangler Term Loan. In  December  2003,  we
refinanced  the  debt used to acquire the Midnight  Wrangler  (as
discussed  above) by entering into a secured term  loan  with  GE
Capital  in  the principal amount of $15.0 million.  The  secured
term  loan  is structured to have quarterly payments  over  seven
years. The interest rate on the term loan is 4.25% over LIBOR and
the  terms contained an origination discount of 1.50%.  The  loan
agreement contains various covenants beginning on March 31, 2005,
including  a  minimum  EBITDA (as defined) of  $18.5  million,  a
minimum  fixed  charge ratio (as defined) of 1.05  to  1,  and  a
maximum  leverage  ratio  (as defined)  of  5.25  to  1  for  the
financial  quarters  ended in the period  from  October  1,  2004
through September 30, 2005. These maximum leverage ratios decline
by  0.50 to 1 for each of the following four years (on an  annual
basis  at  October 1st) before reaching 3.25 to 1, which  applies
for  the  financial  quarters ended  from  October  1,  2008  and
thereafter. The collateral for the loan is the Midnight Wrangler,
Midnight Runner and Midnight Gator. A final payment was  made  to
Global  Marine  in December 2003. This early retirement  of  debt
resulted  in a gain $0.9 million that we recorded in  our  income
statement for the year ended December 31, 2003.

Cash Requirements
The   following   table   presents  our   long-term   contractual
obligations and the related amounts due, in total and by  period,
as of June 30, 2004 (in thousands):
                                   Payments Due by Period
                         ----------------------------------------
                                 Less                      After
                                Than 1    1-3      4-5       5
                         Total   Year    Years    Years    Years
                         -----   -----   -----    -----    -----
Finance Facility        $69,870 $69,870 $   --   $   --   $   --
Long-Term Debt           22,263   3,922  6,896    7,045    4,400
Receivable Line of
  Credit                  8,912   8,912     --       --       --
Capital Lease
  Obligations               171     171     --       --       --
Operating Leases          7,636   5,763  1,530      271       72
Unconditional Purchase
  Obligations             3,272   3,272     --       --       --
Other Long-Term
  Obligations               250     250     --       --       --
                          -----   -----  -----    -----    -----
Total Contractual Cash
  Obligations          $112,374 $92,160 $8,426   $7,316   $4,472
                        =======  ======  =====    =====    =====

As  discussed  above, we expect the Midnight Express construction
loan  (Finance Facility) to convert to two different  term  loans
with varying amortization payment schedules. The majority of  the
long-term  debt  obligation consists of the Midnight  Eagle  term
loan  with GE Commercial and the Midnight Wrangler term loan with
GE Capital, both of which are discussed above.

Included in long-term debt is a note assumed by us as part of the
purchase  of a leisure fishing vessel from an investment  holding
company  wholly-owned by Mr. Stockstill to be used  for  customer
entertainment  purposes.  The  total  cost  of  the  vessel   was
approximately  $0.1  million, of which $41,000  was  paid  during
2002. The debt assumed will be paid in monthly installments  over
a five-year period.

During  the  quarter  ended June 30, 2004, we  made  payments  of
approximately  $0.1  million for the operating  lease  obligation
relating to our deepwater technology vessel, the Midnight  Arrow.
The  long-term charter was scheduled to expire in March 2005, but
we  reached an agreement with Adams Offshore Ltd. (the  "Lessor")
to early terminate the charter effective May 31, 2004. As part of
the   termination   agreement,  the  Lessor  waived   the   early
termination  fee  and  we agreed to pay the Lessor  $250,000  per
month beginning on July 24, 2004 until the outstanding balance of
$1.8 million due to the Lessor (all of which has been accrued) is
eliminated. We also paid $1.3 million in the quarter  ended  June
30,  2004  for the charter of the Midnight Hunter, a DP-2  diving
support  vessel. We paid approximately $10.2 million  during  the
quarter ended June 30, 2004 in relation to the purchase price and
conversion   of   the   Midnight  Express  bringing   our   total
expenditures as of June 30, 2004 to $100.8 million.

Included  in  the operating leases are the monthly  payments  for
certain  facilities  used  in the normal  course  of  operations.
However,  the majority of the operating lease obligation  relates
to  our  charter  agreement of the Midnight Hunter.  Included  in
unconditional   purchase   obligations   and   other    long-term
obligations are the contracts with equipment suppliers related to
the  conversion of the Midnight Express. We expect to finance the
Midnight  Express contracts with proceeds from the $79.0  million
Finance Facility discussed above.

As of June 30, 2004, two trade creditors had outstanding maritime
liens on various vessels in our fleet. In July 2004, we cured the
maritime  liens from one of our trade creditors. We  are  in  the
process  of  reaching a final settlement with  the  second  trade
creditor. All applicable liabilities have been recorded  in  full
on the balance sheet as of June 30, 2004.

In August 2001, our Board of Directors approved the repurchase of
up  to  $5.0  million of our outstanding common stock.  Purchases
were  made  on  a  discretionary basis  in  the  open  market  or
otherwise  over  a  period of time as determined  by  management,
subject  to market conditions, applicable legal requirements  and
other  factors.  In  August  2002,  we  elected  to  suspend  our
repurchase  program. Under current conditions and to support  our
vessel  expansion strategy, we do not expect to repurchase shares
in  the  near  future except for certain events  related  to  the
vesting  of employee's restricted shares. As of August 12,  2004,
715,074  shares  had  been repurchased at a total  cost  of  $4.3
million.

Consistent  with  the focus toward investing in  new  technology,
including  deepwater capable assets such as the Midnight  Express
and the Midnight Wrangler, five of the last six vessels added  to
our  fleet  have  been  DP-2 deepwater capable  (Midnight  Eagle,
Midnight  Arrow, Midnight Express, Midnight Wrangler and Midnight
Hunter).  Through  June 30, 2004, we have expended  approximately
$163.7 million (in combined capital expenditures, operating lease
payments  and  purchase  payments) for  these  vessels,  with  an
additional  estimated $16.7 million to be incurred in  associated
construction costs, operating lease payments and drydock expenses
through 2005.

We  believe  that  our  cash flow from operations  and  the  Bank
Facility  will  not be sufficient to meet our existing  liquidity
needs  for the operation of the business in 2004. We also believe
that  the  options  offered  by  the  Finance  Facility,  the  GE
Commercial Midnight Eagle term loan, and the GE Capital  Midnight
Wrangler term loan, in addition to our cash flow from operations,
will  not be sufficient to complete our identified growth  plans.
Raising additional capital during 2004 is a requirement for us to
continue to conduct our operations and meet our debt obligations.
We may not be able to raise these additional funds, or we may not
be able to raise such funds on favorable terms.

NEW ACCOUNTING STANDARDS

In December 2002, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB)
issued  SFAS No. 148, "Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation  -
Transition and Disclosure - an Amendment of SFAS No. 123,"  which
provides alternative methods of transition for a voluntary change
to  the  fair-value  based method of accounting  for  stock-based
employee  compensation,  and  the  new  standard,  which  is  now
effective, amends certain disclosure requirements. We continue to
apply APB No. 25, "Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees," and
related   interpretations  in  accounting  for  our   stock-based
compensation; therefore, the alternative methods of transition do
not  apply. We have adopted the disclosure requirements  of  SFAS
No. 148 (see Note 2 to the financial statements).

In   June  2001,  the  American  Institute  of  Certified  Public
Accountants  (AICPA)  issued  an exposure  draft  of  a  proposed
Statement  of Position (SOP), "Accounting for Certain  Costs  and
Activities  Related  to  Property, Plant,  and  Equipment."  This
proposed  SOP  would change, among other things,  the  method  by
which  companies would account for normal, recurring or  periodic
repairs  and  maintenance costs related  to  "in  service"  fixed
assets.  It  would  require  that  these  types  of  expenses  be
recognized  when  incurred rather than  recognizing  expense  for
these  costs while the asset is productive. The proposed SOP  was
presented  to the FASB for clearance, however on April 14,  2004,
the  FASB  did not approve the draft SOP and decided to  consider
the  relevant  concepts  within the SOP in  connection  with  the
FASB's  short-term  convergence project on  property,  plant  and
equipment,  including depreciation currently  scheduled  to  take
place in the 2005-2006 timeframe.

In  January  2003,  the FASB issued Financial Interpretation  46,
"Consolidation  of Variable Interest Entities - An Interpretation
of  Accounting  Research Bulletin (ARB)  51"  ("FIN  46"  or  the
"Interpretation").  FIN  46 addresses consolidation  by  business
enterprises  of  variable interest entities (VIEs).  The  primary
objective  of  the Interpretation is to provide guidance  on  the
identification  of,  and financial reporting for,  entities  over
which control is achieved through means other than voting rights;
such  entities are known as VIEs. The provisions of FIN 46  apply
immediately  to VIEs created after January 31, 2003.  Application
is  required  for  interests in special-purpose entities  in  the
period  ending  after December 15, 2003 and is required  for  all
other  types of VIE's in the period ending after March 15,  2004.
We have no VIEs and there was no material impact on our financial
position or results of operations from the adoption of FIN 46.

Significant Accounting Policies and Estimates.

For   a   discussion  of  significant  accounting  policies   and
estimates, see our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year
ended December 31, 2003.

Item 3.   Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market
Risk.

Interest  Rate  Risk.  We  are subject to  market  risk  exposure
related  to changes in interest rates on our Bank Facility  (when
drawn  upon),  Midnight  Eagle  term  loan  with  GE  Commercial,
Midnight Wrangler term loan with GE Capital, our Finance Facility
and  our  $5.0  million  non-revolving line  with  Regions  Bank.
Interest  on  borrowings  under the Bank  Facility  accrue  at  a
variable  rate,  using  LIBOR plus a range  of  1.75%  to  2.25%,
depending  upon the level of our consolidated leverage ratio  (as
defined)  measured on a quarterly basis. Our Midnight Eagle  term
loan  with GE Commercial includes an interest rate consisting  of
the  30-day  commercial  paper  rate  plus  2.03%.  Our  Midnight
Wrangler  term  loan with GE Capital includes  an  interest  rate
consisting  of LIBOR plus 4.25%. Under the Finance Facility,  the
interest  rate during the construction financing phase  is  based
upon  our  consolidated leverage ratio at LIBOR plus  4.00%.  The
$60.0 million term facility of the Finance Facility is priced  at
4.00%  over  LIBOR  and the $19.0 million term  facility  of  the
Finance Facility is priced at LIBOR plus 4.00%. Finally, the $5.0
million  non-revolving line with Regions Bank is priced at  LIBOR
plus 4.00%.

Item 4.  Controls and Procedures.

Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures. As of  the  end
of the period covered by this report, our Chief Executive Officer
and   Chief   Financial  Officer,  with  the   participation   of
management,  have evaluated the effectiveness of the  design  and
operation  of  our disclosure controls and procedures.  Based  on
their evaluation, the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial
Officer   have   concluded  that  our  disclosure  controls   and
procedures have been designed and are functioning effectively  in
alerting them in a timely manner to material information relating
to  Torch Offshore, Inc. required to be disclosed in our periodic
Securities  and Exchange Commission filings under the  Securities
Exchange Act of 1934.

Changes  in Internal Controls. There were no significant  changes
in   our  internal  controls  or  in  other  factors  that  could
significantly  affect these internal controls subsequent  to  the
date  of  their most recent evaluation, including any  corrective
actions  taken  with  regard  to  significant  deficiencies   and
material weaknesses.

                   PART II.  OTHER INFORMATION

Item 1.        Legal Proceedings.

We  have been named as a defendant in a stockholder class  action
suit filed by purported stockholders regarding our initial public
offering. This lawsuit, Karl L. Kapps, et. al. v. Torch Offshore,
Inc.  et.  al.,  No.  02-00582, which seeks unspecified  monetary
damages, was filed on March 1, 2002 in the United States District
Court  for  the  Eastern District of Louisiana. The  lawsuit  was
dismissed on December 19, 2002 for failure to state a claim  upon
which  relief  could be granted. The plaintiffs appealed  to  the
United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. On July 26,
2004,  the  Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit dismissed  the
case.

We  terminated our charter of the Midnight Hunter on January  24,
2003,  as,  among other things, the vessel did not  meet  certain
specifications  as  outlined in the charter  agreement  and  this
prevented  us  from  performing some types of work.  In  November
2003,  a  London arbitrator issued a ruling against our recission
claim,  finding  that  we  were not  entitled  to  terminate  the
charter,  but did rule in favor of us on the warranty  claim  for
breach of contract. An interim award of $2.2 million was made  in
favor  of  Cable  Shipping, Inc. and such amount  was  placed  in
escrow  pending  further proceedings. We have recorded  the  full
amount  of  the  interim  award in the financial  statements.  We
attempted  to appeal the ruling, but on April 7, 2004 the  appeal
was  denied.  The  escrowed  award has  been  released  to  Cable
Shipping, Inc. Each party will now make submissions as to quantum
of  damages  for  the claim upon which it was  successful  and  a
further hearing will be held. Additional amounts awarded  to  the
parties  will  likely be netted in favor of Cable Shipping,  Inc.
While  an estimate of the net impact of the damages to be awarded
with respect to this matter is not currently quantifiable, it  is
possible  that  future damages to be awarded to  Cable  Shipping,
Inc.  in this matter could have a material adverse effect on  our
financial condition and/or results of operations.

We  filed a lawsuit (Torch Offshore, Inc. v. Newfield Exploration
Company, No. 03-0735, filed in the United States District  Court,
Eastern District of Louisiana on March 13, 2003) against Newfield
Exploration  Company (Newfield) claiming damages of approximately
$2.1  million related to work completed for Newfield in the  Gulf
of  Mexico at Grand Isle Block 103-A. Our lawsuit alleges that we
did  not  receive  all  compensation to which  we  were  entitled
pursuant  to the contract. We have recorded a provision  for  the
full  amount  of  this claim; however, we intend to  continue  to
pursue the claim.

In  July 2003, we filed a lawsuit (Torch Offshore, Inc. et al  v.
Stolt  Offshore, Inc., et al, No. 03-1915, in the  United  States
District  Court, Eastern District of Louisiana on July  3,  2003)
against  Stolt Offshore, Inc. (Stolt), and its customer,  seeking
approximately $7.6 million related to work completed for Stolt in
Boston, Massachusetts. We worked as a subcontractor to Stolt, who
was engaged by Algonquin Gas Transmission Company to complete the
Boston  Hubline  project,  an underwater  pipeline  crossing  the
Boston  Harbor. The lawsuit alleged that we did not  receive  all
compensation   to  which  we  were  entitled  pursuant   to   the
subcontract we had with Stolt. Two other subcontractors to  Stolt
joined   with  us  and  filed  as  plaintiffs  in  the   lawsuit.
Additionally,  we, along with two other subcontractors,  filed  a
lawsuit  in  Massachusetts  (Civil Action  No.  03-01585),  which
included  a  claim for breach of contract as well as a  claim  to
assert  mechanics' liens against Algonquin's easement located  in
Weymouth,  Norfolk  County,  Massachusetts.  In  March  2004,  we
reached a settlement with Stolt in the amount of $6.2 million and
we  recorded  the  full  amount of  the  difference  between  our
original  claim and the final settlement (a loss of approximately
$1.4  million)  in our financial statements as  of  December  31,
2003. The lawsuits have been dismissed, and the lien claims  have
been released

Additionally,  due to the nature of our business,  we  are,  from
time  to  time,  involved  in routine litigation  or  subject  to
disputes  or  claims  related to our business  activities  (other
miscellaneous litigation). In our management's opinion,  none  of
this  other miscellaneous litigation will have a material adverse
effect on our financial condition or results of operations.

Item 2.   Changes in Securities and Use of Proceeds.

The  information on the use of proceeds from our Public  Offering
required  by  this item is set forth in "Management's  Discussion
and  Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations  -
Liquidity and Capital Resources" in Part I of this report,  which
section is incorporated herein by reference.


Item 4.   Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders.

Our annual meeting of stockholders was held on May 20, 2004.

      (a)  At such meeting, each of the following persons listed
           below was elected as a director of the Company to
           serve during the ensuing year.

                                      Votes For  Votes Withheld
                                      ---------  --------------
           Lyle G. Stockstill        13,197,398      47,000
           Lana J. Hingle Stockstill 13,197,398      47,000
           Curtis Lemons             13,197,398      47,000
           Andrew L. Michel          13,197,398      47,000
           R. Jere Shopf             13,197,398      47,000
           Ken Wallace               13,197,398      47,000

      (b)  At such meeting, the stockholders also approved the
           appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as the Company's
           independent public accountants for 2004.

               Votes For    Votes Against  Abstained
               ----------   -------------  ---------
               13,207,348       37,050        --

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

      (a)  Exhibits filed as part of this report are listed below.

           Exhibit 10.1  Sixth  Amendment  to  Credit  Agreement
                    among Torch Offshore, Inc., Regions Bank  and
                    Export Development Canada

           Exhibit 10.2  Sixth Amendment to Amended and  Restated
                    Loan Agreement among Torch Offshore, Inc. and
                    Regions Bank

           Exhibit 10.3  Amended   and  Restated   Subordination
                    Agreement among Torch Offshore, Inc., Regions
                    Bank and Export Development Canada

           Exhibit 10.4  Seventh  Amendment to  Credit  Agreement
                    among Torch Offshore, Inc., Regions Bank  and
                    Export Development Canada

           Exhibit 10.5  Seventh   Amendment  to   Amended   and
                    Restated Loan Agreement among Torch Offshore,
                    Inc. and Regions Bank

           Exhibit 10.6  Second Amendment to the Lease  Agreement
                    dated 12 August 2003 between Thrustmaster  of
                    Texas, Inc. and Torch Offshore, Inc.

           Exhibit 31.1  Certification by Lyle G. Stockstill
                    Pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley
                    Act of 2002

           Exhibit 31.2  Certification  by  Robert   E.   Fulton
                    Pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley
                    Act of 2002

           Exhibit 32.1  Certification  by  Lyle  G.  Stockstill
                    Pursuant  to  18  U.S.C.  Section  1350,   as
                    Adopted  Pursuant  to  Section  906  of   the
                    Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

           Exhibit 32.2  Certification  by  Robert   E.   Fulton
                    Pursuant  to  18  U.S.C.  Section  1350,   as
                    Adopted  Pursuant  to  Section  906  of   the
                    Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

      (b) Reports on Form 8-K.

          On  April  16,  2004, we filed a report  on  Form  8-K,
          reporting under Item 12, announcing the release of  the
          operating  results for the quarter ended  December  31,
          2003.

          On  May  13,  2004,  we  filed a report  on  Form  8-K,
          reporting  under Item 5, announcing  a contract  valued
          at  over  $12.0  million with Marathon E.G.  Production
          Limited  to  perform  work  in  Malabo,  Bioko  Island,
          Equatorial Guinea.

          On  May  13,  2004,  we  filed a report  on  Form  8-K,
          reporting under Item 12, announcing the release of  the
          operating results for the quarter ended March 31, 2004.

                            SIGNATURE

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


                              TORCH OFFSHORE, INC.

Date: August 12, 2004         By:  /s/ ROBERT E. FULTON
                                   ---------------------
                                    Robert E. Fulton
                                    Chief Financial Officer
                                   (Principal   Accounting and
                                     Financial Officer)

                          EXHIBIT INDEX

10.1  --    Sixth Amendment to Credit Agreement among Torch
            Offshore,  Inc., Regions Bank and Export  Development
            Canada

10.2  --    Sixth  Amendment to Amended and  Restated  Loan
            Agreement  among  Torch Offshore,  Inc.  and  Regions
            Bank

10.3  --    Amended  and  Restated Subordination  Agreement
            among  Torch Offshore, Inc., Regions Bank and  Export
            Development Canada

10.4  --    Seventh  Amendment  to Credit  Agreement  among
            Torch   Offshore,  Inc.,  Regions  Bank  and   Export
            Development Canada

10.5  --    Seventh Amendment to Amended and Restated  Loan
            Agreement  among  Torch Offshore,  Inc.  and  Regions
            Bank

10.6  --    Second  Amendment to the Lease Agreement  dated
            12  August  2003 between Thrustmaster of Texas,  Inc.
            and Torch Offshore, Inc.

31.1  --    Certification by Lyle G. Stockstill Pursuant to
            Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

31.2  --    Certification by Robert E. Fulton  Pursuant  to
            Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

32.1  --    Certification by Lyle G. Stockstill Pursuant to
            18  U.S.C.  Section  1350,  as  Adopted  Pursuant  to
            Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

32.2  --    Certification by Robert E. Fulton Pursuant to
            18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as Adopted Pursuant to
            Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

                                               Exhibit 10.1

               SIXTH AMENDMENT TO CREDIT AGREEMENT

      This Sixth Amendment to Credit Agreement is entered into as
of the 22nd day of July, 2004, and is executed in connection with
that certain Credit Agreement effective as of April 23, 2003  (as
the  same has been and may further be amended, restated, modified
or  supplemented from time to time, the "Credit Agreement") among
Torch  Offshore,  Inc.  ("Borrower") and the  Lenders,  including
Regions  Bank  in its capacity as a Lender and as Agent  for  the
Lenders.

      WHEREAS,  Borrower and the Lenders desire to further  amend
the Credit Agreement.

      NOW  THEREFORE,  for  good and adequate  consideration  the
receipt  of which is hereby acknowledged, the parties  hereto  do
hereby agree as follows:

      1.    As  used herein, capitalized terms not defined herein
shall  have  the  meanings  attributed  to  them  in  the  Credit
Agreement. Section 1.1 of the Credit Agreement is hereby  amended
to   add   the  following  definitions  of  "Minimum  Refinancing
Proceeds" and "Refinancing Proceeds":

           Minimum  Refinancing Proceeds  shall  mean  fifty
     (50%) percent of all Refinancing Proceeds.

           Refinancing Proceeds shall mean the funds owed to
     or  received  by  or  on  behalf  of  Borrower  or  any
     Subsidiary,  after July 22, 2004, from the issuance  or
     incurrence  of  any  Indebtedness of  Borrower  or  any
     Subsidiary of the nature referred to in clause  (i)  or
     (ii) of the definition of "Indebtedness", but excluding
     any  Indebtedness  representing the  deferred  purchase
     price of Property.

      2.    Section 3.4 of the Credit Agreement is hereby amended
and restated to read as follows:

           3.4  Tranche 2 Term Loan Commitments.  Subject to
     the  terms  and conditions set forth in this  Agreement
     and  so  long  as  no Default or Event of  Default  has
     occurred and is continuing, on the last day of the Line
     of  Credit  Period, each Lender with a Tranche  2  Term
     Loan  Commitment severally (and not jointly) agrees  to
     lend to Borrower (individually, a "Tranche 2 Term Loan"
     and collectively, the "Tranche 2 Term Loans") an amount
     not to exceed the lesser of (a) such Lender's Tranche 2
     Term  Loan  Commitment or (b) the aggregate outstanding
     principal amount of the Tranche 2 Line of Credit  Loans
     due  and payable to such Lender as of such date.  Loans
     under  this Section 3.4 shall be made from the  several
     Lenders  ratably in proportion to their respective  Pro
     Rata  Shares.  The failure of any Lender  to  make  any
     Tranche  2  Term  Loan under this Agreement  shall  not
     release any other Lender from its obligation to make  a
     Tranche 2 Term Loan as provided herein.  Each Tranche 2
     Term  Loan shall be payable as follows: each Tranche  2
     Term  Loan  shall  bear  interest  on  the  outstanding
     principal balance thereof at a rate per annum equal  to
     the  applicable LIBOR Base Rate plus 400  basis  points
     (4.00%); provided that any overdue principal of and, to
     the  extent permitted by law, overdue interest on,  any
     Tranche  2  Term Loan shall bear interest,  payable  on
     demand,  for  each day until paid at a rate  per  annum
     equal  to  the sum of three percent (3%) plus the  rate
     otherwise  in  effect for such day; interest  shall  be
     payable  monthly  in arrears on the last  day  of  each
     month (or the immediate subsequent Business Day if  any
     such  last  day is not a Business Day) and at maturity;
     principal shall be payable on each Tranche 2 Term  Loan
     as follows: a principal payment on June 30, 2005, equal
     to  one  third (1/3) of the original principal  balance
     due on such Tranche 2 Term Loan, a principal payment on
     December  30,  2005, equal to one third  (1/3)  of  the
     original principal balance due on such Tranche  2  Term
     Loan, with the entire unpaid balance of principal being
     payable  on  June 30, 2006; provided that, (a)  if  any
     Recapture Proceeds are delivered to Agent prior to June
     30,   2005,  the  amount  of  the  mandatory  principal
     payments  due on each Tranche 2 Term Loan on  June  30,
     2005 and December 30, 2005 will be reduced by one sixth
     (1/6) of the amount of such Recapture Proceeds and  (b)
     if  any Recapture Proceeds are delivered to Agent after
     June  30,  2005, but prior to December  30,  2005,  the
     amount of the mandatory principal payments due on  each
     Tranche  2  Term  Loan on December  30,  2005  will  be
     reduced  by  one  fourth (1/4) of the  amount  of  such
     Recapture  Proceeds; and interest  on  the  outstanding
     principal  owed on such Tranche 2 Term  Loan  shall  be
     computed and assessed on the basis of the actual number
     of days elapsed over a year composed of 360 days.

     3.   Section 5.12 of the Credit Agreement is hereby amended and
  restated to read as follows:

            5.12   Subordination.   The  security  documents
     executed  pursuant  to  Section 3.09  of  the  Existing
     Regions  Loan  Agreement  shall  remain  in  force  and
     effect.   Regions and the other Lender(s) shall execute
     a  Subordination  Agreement in the form  of  Exhibit  L
     annexed hereto (the "Subordination Agreement").

      4.    The  Credit Agreement is hereby amended  to  add  the
following as Section 8.1(z) thereof:

                (z)   Borrower shall arrange for the Minimum
     Refinancing Proceeds to be delivered directly to Agent,
     which Minimum Refinancing Proceeds shall be used to pay
     Indebtedness  of  Borrower in the  following  order  of
     priority:  (i) First, for the payment of principal  and
     interest  due  on the loans (including  all  principal,
     interest, attorneys' fees and costs owed thereon)  made
     by  Regions  to  Borrower pursuant to the $5,000,000.00
     non-revolving  line  of credit  set  forth  in  Section
     2.03(a)  of  the  Existing Regions Loan Agreement;  and
     (ii)  Second, for the payment of principal on the Loans
     (with  any  excess amounts to be applied  to  interest,
     fees or other amounts due hereunder or under any of the
     other Transaction Documents).

      5.    The  Credit Agreement is hereby amended  to  add  the
following as Section 8.1(aa) thereof:

                (aa) Minimum Refinancing Proceeds.  Borrower
     shall   use   its   best  efforts  to  obtain   Minimum
     Refinancing Proceeds by November 18, 2004.

      6.    Regions will not extend the maturity of the following
described  loans,  beyond the initial 120 day term,  without  the
consent  of Export Development Canada: the loans made by  Regions
to  Borrower pursuant to the $5,000,000.00 non-revolving line  of
credit set forth in Section 2.03(a) of the Existing Regions  Loan
Agreement.

      7.    Nothing  contained in the Credit  Agreement  will  be
construed to required Agent or Lenders to release any Collateral.

      8.   As clarification, subject to the provisions of Section
3.4, no prepayment, whether pursuant to Section 8.1(x) or (z), or
otherwise,  will  eliminate  the requirement  to  make  regularly
scheduled payments.

     9.   In connection with the foregoing and only in connection
with  the foregoing, the Credit Agreement is hereby amended,  but
in all other respects all of the terms, conditions and provisions
of   the   Credit  Agreement  remain  unaffected.   All  security
agreements,  financing  statements,  mortgages,  pledges,  deeds,
continuing  guaranties and other security documents in  favor  of
Agent,  for the benefit of the Secured Parties, shall  remain  in
full force and effect.

      10.   Except as may be specifically set forth herein,  this
Sixth Amendment to Credit Agreement shall not constitute a waiver
of  any  Default(s) under the Credit Agreement or  any  documents
executed in connection therewith, all rights and remedies of  the
Lenders being preserved and maintained.

      11.   This  Sixth  Amendment to  Credit  Agreement  may  be
executed  in  two  or  more counterparts, and  it  shall  not  be
necessary  that the signatures of all parties hereto be contained
on  any  one counterpart hereof; each counterpart shall be deemed
an  original, but all of which together shall constitute one  and
the same instrument.

      IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have caused this instrument
to be duly executed.

                                   TORCH OFFSHORE, INC.

                             By:_________________________________
                                Robert E. Fulton
                                Its Chief Financial Officer
                                401 Whitney Avenue, Suite 400
                                Gretna, Louisiana 70056
                                Telecopy  number: (504)367-7075

                                   REGIONS BANK

                             By:______________________________
                                Jorge E. Goris
                                Its Senior Vice President
                                301 St. Charles Avenue
                                New Orleans, LA 70130
                                Telecopier:  (504) 584-2165

                                   EXPORT DEVELOPMENT CANADA

                             By:______________________________
                                Bruce Millar
                                Loan Asset Manager

                             By:______________________________
                                Bruce Dunlop
                                Loan Portfolio Manager
                                151 O'Connor
                                Ottawa, Canada K1A1K3
                                (Telecopier: (613) 598-2504

                                                     Exhibit 10.2

                       SIXTH AMENDMENT TO
               AMENDED AND RESTATED LOAN AGREEMENT

      This Sixth Amendment to Amended and Restated Loan Agreement
is  entered  into  effective July 22, 2004, and  is  executed  in
connection with that certain Amended and Restated Loan  Agreement
effective as of December 20, 2002 (as the same has been  and  may
be  further amended, restated, modified or supplemented from time
to  time,  the  "Loan  Agreement")  among  Torch  Offshore,  Inc.
("Borrower") and Regions Bank ("Bank").

      WHEREAS, Borrower and Bank desire to further amend the Loan
Agreement.

      NOW  THEREFORE,  for  good and adequate  consideration  the
receipt  of which is hereby acknowledged, the parties  hereto  do
hereby agree as follows:

       1.     Unless  otherwise  defined  or  indicated   herein,
capitalized terms used herein shall have the meanings  attributed
to   them  in  the  Loan  Agreement.   As  used  herein,  "Credit
Agreement" shall mean that certain Credit Agreement by and  among
Torch  Offshore, Inc., Regions Bank, as Agent, and  Regions  Bank
and  Export Development Canada, as Lenders, dated April 23, 2003,
as it has been and may further be amended, restated, supplemented
or replaced from time to time.

     2.   (a) The Acquisition Line of Credit has been terminated,
(b)  Bank  shall not have any obligation to make any  Acquisition
Line  of  Credit Loan or to issue any Acquisition Line of  Credit
Letter  of Credit, and (c) Bank shall not be obligated to  extend
credit  to  Borrower or to issue any letter  of  credit  for  the
account  of  Borrower or any Subsidiary under the Loan Agreement,
except as may be expressly set forth in Sections 2.01(a), 2.03(a)
and 4.01(a) of the Loan Agreement.

     3.   Section 1.01 of the Loan Agreement is hereby amended to
add the following definitions of
"Non-Revolving  Line of Credit", "Non-Revolving  Line  of  Credit
Note",  "Non-Revolving  Line of Credit Loan"  and  "Non-Revolving
Line of Credit Period" to Section 1.01 of the Loan Agreement  and
the  definitions  of  "Loans", "Notes" and "Receivables  Line  of
Credit  Period" in Section 1.01 of the Loan Agreement are  hereby
amended and restated to read as follows:

           "Loans" shall mean the Receivables Line of Credit
     Loans, the Acquisition Line of Credit Loans,  the  Term
     Loans, and the Non-Revolving Line of Credit Loans, with
     each  being  a  Loan, and shall include all  principal,
     interest, attorney's fees and costs owed thereon.

           "Non-Revolving  Line of Credit"  shall  mean  the
     credit  facility  made available by  Bank  to  Borrower
     pursuant to Section 2.03(a).

          "Non-Revolving Line of Credit Note" shall have the
     meaning ascribed thereto in Section 2.03(a).

           "Non-Revolving Line of Credit Loan" shall mean  a
     Loan  made by the Bank to Borrower pursuant to the Non-
     Revolving Line of Credit.

           "Non-Revolving Line of Credit Period" shall  mean
     the  period commencing on July 22, 2004 and ending  120
     days thereafter.

           "Notes" shall mean the Receivables Line of Credit
     Note,  the  Acquisition Line of Credit Note,  the  Term
     Notes, and the Non-Revolving Line of Credit Note.

          "Receivables Line of Credit Period" shall mean the
     period commencing on the date hereof and ending on July
     2, 2005.

      4.    The following is hereby added as Section 2.03 of  the
Loan Agreement:

                (a)   Non-Revolving Line  of  Credit  Loans.
     Subject  to  the  due and faithful performance  of  the
     terms  and  conditions  of this Agreement  and  in  any
     instrument   or   agreement  executed   contemporaneous
     herewith  or as a consequence hereof and in  accordance
     with  the terms and conditions of this Agreement,  Bank
     shall  make loans to Borrower on a non-revolving  basis
     during  the  Non-Revolving Line  of  Credit  Period  in
     amounts  not  to  exceed the total aggregate  principal
     amount  of  Five Million ($5,000,000.00) Dollars.   The
     amount  available  to Borrower under the  Non-Revolving
     Line of Credit shall be reduced by the aggregate amount
     of principal payments made on the Non-Revolving Line of
     Credit  Loans.   The loans will bear  interest  on  the
     outstanding principal balance from time to  time  at  a
     rate  per annum equal to the LIBOR Base Rate plus  four
     hundred  basis  points (4.00%), and  shall  be  payable
     interest  only monthly in arrears on the  last  day  of
     each month (or the immediate subsequent Business Day if
     any  such  last  day is not a Business Day),  with  the
     balance of all outstanding principal and interest being
     due  and  payable  upon  the  expiration  of  the  Non-
     Revolving  Line  of  Credit Period.   Interest  on  the
     outstanding  principal  owed  on  the  loans  will   be
     computed and assessed on the basis of the actual number
     of  days elapsed over a year composed of 360 days.  The
     obligation  of  Borrower to repay the  loans  shall  be
     evidenced  by  and  payable  in  accordance  with   the
     promissory note executed by Borrower a copy of which is
     attached  hereto as Exhibit H (the "Non-Revolving  Line
     of  Credit Note").  In addition to the other rights  of
     Bank  under  the  Loan Documents, Bank shall  have  the
     right  to  refuse  to  fund that portion  of  the  Non-
     Revolving Line of Credit equal to the aggregate  amount
     of any Liens against the MIDNIGHT EXPRESS (Official No.
     1450) (other than Liens in favor of Regions, whether as
     agent or its individual capacity).

                (b)  Default Interest Rate.  Notwithstanding
     any  provisions of this Agreement to the contrary,  any
     overdue  principal of and, to the extent  permitted  by
     law,  overdue  interest on, any Non-Revolving  Line  of
     Credit Loan shall bear interest, payable on demand, for
     each day until paid at a rate per annum equal to twelve
     percent (12%).

               (c)  Use of Proceeds.  The Borrower shall use
     the  proceeds of the Non-Revolving Line of  Credit  for
     working capital.

      5.    Section  3.01 of the Loan Agreement  is  amended  and
restated to read as follows:

           3.01 Advance Request.  Upon the terms and subject
     to  the  conditions  hereof, Borrower  may  request  an
     Advance during a Business Day between the hours of 9:00
     a.m.  and  2:00  p.m.  (New  Orleans  time).   If  Bank
     receives  the Borrower's proper request for an  Advance
     by  no  later  than 2:00 p.m. (New Orleans time),  then
     Bank  shall make the Advance in accordance herewith  on
     the same Business Day.  If Bank receives the Borrower's
     proper request for an Advance later than 2:00 p.m. (New
     Orleans  time),  then Bank shall make  the  Advance  in
     accordance  herewith on the next  Business  Day.   Each
     request  for  an  Advance  shall  be  made  either   by
     telephone calls to Bank or in writing, by delivering to
     Bank by mail, hand-delivery, or facsimile a request (i)
     specifying  the amount to be borrowed, (ii)  specifying
     the date the funds will be advanced and (iii) complying
     with the requirements of this Section.  Bank shall have
     the  right to verify the telephone requests by  calling
     the person who made the request at the telephone number
     identified by the Borrower.  If the Advance request  is
     by telephone, the Borrower will confirm said request in
     writing within two (2) Business Days.  All such Advance
     requests  shall  be  made  by  the  Borrower's   Agent.
     Borrower   agrees   that  only  its   duly   authorized
     Borrower's Agent shall make an Advance request.

      6.    The Loan Agreement is hereby amended by deleting  the
term  "LIBOR Rate" in clauses (b) and (c) of Section 3.06 of  the
Loan  Agreement and inserting the term "LIBOR Base Rate" in  lieu
thereof.

      7.    In  addition  to the origination fees  set  forth  in
Section 3.08 of the Loan Agreement, on the effective date hereof,
Borrower shall pay Bank an origination fee in connection with the
Non-Revolving Line of Credit in the amount of $70,000.00.

     8.   In connection with the foregoing and only in connection
with the foregoing, the Loan Agreement is hereby amended, but  in
all other respects all of the terms, conditions and provisions of
the  Loan  Agreement remain unaffected.  All security agreements,
financing  statements, mortgages, pledges, continuing  guaranties
and  other  security documents in favor of Bank shall  remain  in
full force and effect.

      9.    Except as may be specifically set forth herein,  this
Sixth Amendment to Amended and Restated Loan Agreement shall  not
constitute a waiver of any Default(s) under the Loan Agreement or
any  documents executed in connection therewith, all  rights  and
remedies of Bank being preserved and maintained.

      10.   This  Sixth  Amendment to Amended and  Restated  Loan
Agreement  may  be executed in two or more counterparts,  and  it
shall  not be necessary that the signatures of all parties hereto
be  contained  on  any one counterpart hereof;  each  counterpart
shall  be  deemed  an original, but all of which  together  shall
constitute one and the same instrument.

      IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have caused this instrument
to be duly executed.

                                   TORCH OFFSHORE, INC.

                             By:______________________________
                                Robert E. Fulton
                                Its: Chief Financial Officer
                                401 Whitney Avenue, Suite 400
                                Gretna, Louisiana 70056
                                Telecopier: (504) 367-7075

                                   REGIONS BANK

                             By:______________________________
                                Jorge E. Goris
                                Its: Senior Vice President
                                301 St. Charles Avenue
                                New Orleans, LA 70130
                                Telecopier:  (504)  584-2165

                                                     Exhibit 10.3

          AMENDED AND RESTATED SUBORDINATION AGREEMENT

      This  Amended  and Restated Subordination  Agreement  (this
Agreement") is entered into effective as of July 22, 2004, by and
among  (i) Regions Bank ("Regions"), (ii) Regions Bank and Export
Development  Canada  (collectively,  the  "Lenders"),  and  (iii)
Regions Bank, as agent for the Lenders (the "Agent") pursuant  to
that  certain Credit Agreement, dated April 23, 2003 (as the same
has  been  and  may  further be amended,  restated,  modified  or
supplemented  from time to time, the "Credit Agreement")  by  and
among  Torch  Offshore,  Inc. ("Borrower"),  the  Agent  and  the
Lenders.   The Agent and the Lenders are hereinafter collectively
referred to as the "Creditors."  Capitalized terms used  in  this
Agreement  and  not  otherwise  defined  herein  shall  have  the
meanings ascribed to them in the Credit Agreement.

      WHEREAS,  pursuant to the Existing Regions Loan  Agreement,
Borrower  and  its subsidiaries, Torch Offshore,  L.L.C.  ("Torch
Offshore")  and  Torch  Express, L.L.C. ("Torch  Express"),  each
have granted Liens in favor of Regions on certain property;

      WHEREAS, pursuant to the Credit Agreement, Borrower,  Torch
Offshore  and Torch Express  each have granted Liens in favor  of
the Agent for the benefit of the Creditors on certain property;

      WHEREAS,  on  July  22,  2004, the  Existing  Regions  Loan
Agreement  was amended to provide for the Non-Revolving  Line  of
Credit Loans (as hereinafter defined); and

     WHEREAS, Regions and the Creditors desire to provide for the
priority of certain Liens on certain property of Borrower,  Torch
Offshore and Torch Express.

      NOW  THEREFORE, in consideration of the premises and  other
good  and valuable consideration, the receipt and sufficiency  of
which are hereby acknowledged by each of the parties hereto,  the
parties hereto agree as follows:

      1.    For  all purposes of this Agreement, unless expressly
provided,  the following terms shall have the following  meanings
(such  meanings shall be equally applicable to the  singular  and
plural forms of the terms used, as the context requires):

     "Creditors Superior Collateral" shall mean:

     (a)  the  following property owned by Borrower, whether  now
          or  hereafter  existing,  owned,  issued,  acquired  or
          arising,  and  wherever located: (i) all of  Borrower's
          right,  title  and  interest in, to,  and  under  Torch
          Offshore and Torch Express, including, but not  limited
          to,  all  of  Borrower's membership interest  in  Torch
          Offshore  and Torch Express; and (ii) (1)  all  of  the
          fruits,  profits, revenues, returns, distributions  and
          interest  produced by, derived from or attributable  to
          Borrower's  interest  in  Torch  Offshore   and   Torch
          Express;  (2)  all rights of Borrower as  a  member  of
          Torch  Offshore and Torch Express, including,  but  not
          limited  to, the right to receive all distributions  of
          capital,  profits, returns and revenues from the  sale,
          lease,  improvement, operation or disposal of  any  and
          all  property owned by Torch Offshore or Torch Express;
          and   (3)   all   accessions  to,   substitutions   and
          replacements  for,  and  all  rents,  fruits,   issues,
          increases,   profits,  revenues,  returns,   dividends,
          distributions, payments, proceeds, goods acquired  with
          cash  proceeds  and  products of or  from  any  of  the
          property described in subparagraph (i) above; and

          (b)   the  following property owned by Torch  Offshore,
          whether  now  or  hereafter  existing,  owned,  issued,
          acquired  or  arising, and wherever  located:  (i)  the
          Torch  Offshore U.S. Vessels, other than  the  MIDNIGHT
          RIDER   Collateral;  and  (ii)  the  following  vessels
          registered  under the laws of the Republic of  Vanuatu:
          MIDNIGHT  STAR (Official No. 398) and MIDNIGHT  CARRIER
          (Official No. 1208), together with all masts,  boilers,
          cables,  engines, machinery, bowsprits, sails, rigging,
          boats,  anchors,  chains, tackle,  apparel,  furniture,
          fittings,  tools,  pumps,  equipment,  fuel,  supplies,
          spare  parts  and all other attachments, appurtenances,
          accessories,     additions,    fixtures,     equipment,
          appliances,  improvements  and  replacements   now   or
          hereafter belonging thereto, affixed thereto,  or  used
          in  connection therewith, whether because of repairs or
          otherwise,   and  whether  or  not  removed   therefrom
          (collectively, the "Torch Offshore Vanuatu Vessels").

     "Non-Revolving  Line of Credit Loans" shall mean  the  loans
     made  by  Regions to Borrower pursuant to the  $5,000,000.00
     non-revolving line of credit set forth in Section 2.03(a) of
     the  Existing Regions Loan Agreement, and shall include  all
     principal, interest, attorney's fees and costs owed thereon.

     "MIDNIGHT  EXPRESS  Earnings" shall mean (i)  all  accounts,
     inventory, chattel paper and general intangibles relating to
     the  vessel  MIDNIGHT EXPRESS (Official No. 1450) registered
     under  the laws of the Republic of Vanuatu; (ii) all charter
     hire, freights, leases, rents, earnings, revenues, proceeds,
     money,  payments, claims, accounts, contract rights, chattel
     paper,  documents  and  general  intangibles  affecting  the
     vessel MIDNIGHT EXPRESS (Official No. 1450), relating to the
     vessel MIDNIGHT EXPRESS (Official No. 1450), or arising  out
     of or from the sale, charter, lease, use or operation of the
     vessel  MIDNIGHT EXPRESS (Official No. 1450); and (iii)  all
     proceeds of any of the foregoing.

     "MIDNIGHT  RIDER Collateral" shall mean the  MIDNIGHT  RIDER
     (Official  No.  1035377), together with all masts,  boilers,
     cables,   engines,  machinery,  bowsprits,  sails,  rigging,
     boats,   anchors,   chains,  tackle,   apparel,   furniture,
     fittings,  tools,  pumps, equipment, fuel,  supplies,  spare
     parts and all other attachments, appurtenances, accessories,
     additions, fixtures, equipment, appliances, improvements and
     replacements  now  or hereafter belonging  thereto,  affixed
     thereto, or used in connection therewith, whether because of
     repairs or otherwise, and whether or not removed therefrom.

     "Receivables Line of Credit Loans" shall mean the loans made
     by  Regions to Borrower pursuant to the $15,000,000.00  line
     of  credit  set  forth in Section 2.01(a)  of  the  Existing
     Regions  Loan  Agreement, and shall include  all  principal,
     interest, attorney's fees and costs owed thereon.
     "Regions Superior Collateral" shall mean:

     (a)  the  following property owned by Torch Express, whether
          now  or hereafter existing, owned, issued, acquired  or
          arising,   and   wherever   located:    all   accounts,
          inventory, chattel paper and general intangibles, other
          than  the MIDNIGHT EXPRESS Earnings, together with  all
          proceeds thereof; and

     (b)  the following property owned by Torch Offshore, whether
          now  or hereafter existing, owned, issued, acquired  or
          arising,   and  wherever  located:  (i)  all  accounts,
          inventory,   chattel  paper  and  general  intangibles,
          together  with all proceeds thereof; (ii)  all  charter
          hire,  freights,  leases,  rents,  earnings,  revenues,
          proceeds,  money, payments, claims, accounts,  contract
          rights,    chattel   paper,   documents   and   general
          intangibles  affecting any of the Torch  Offshore  U.S.
          Vessels,  relating  to any of the Torch  Offshore  U.S.
          Vessels,  or arising out of or from the sale,  charter,
          lease,  use  or operation of any of the Torch  Offshore
          U.S.  Vessels;  and (iii) all charter  hire,  freights,
          leases,  rents,  earnings, revenues,  proceeds,  money,
          payments,  claims, accounts, contract  rights,  chattel
          paper, documents and general intangibles affecting  any
          of  the Torch Offshore Vanuatu Vessels, relating to any
          of  the Torch Offshore Vanuatu Vessels, or arising  out
          of  or  from the sale, charter, lease, use or operation
          of any of the Torch Offshore Vanuatu Vessels.

     "Torch Offshore U.S. Vessels" shall mean the MIDNIGHT  RIDER
     Collateral  and the following vessels registered  under  the
     laws  of  the  United  States of  America:   MIDNIGHT  BRAVE
     (Official  No. 529263), MIDNIGHT FOX (Official No.  1065954)
     and MIDNIGHT DANCER (Official No. 586595), together with all
     masts,   boilers,  cables,  engines,  machinery,  bowsprits,
     sails,  rigging,  boats, anchors, chains,  tackle,  apparel,
     furniture,   fittings,   tools,  pumps,   equipment,   fuel,
     supplies,   spare   parts   and   all   other   attachments,
     appurtenances, accessories, additions, fixtures,  equipment,
     appliances,  improvements and replacements now or  hereafter
     belonging  thereto, affixed thereto, or used  in  connection
     therewith,  whether  because of repairs  or  otherwise,  and
     whether or not removed therefrom.

     2.   Regions agrees that any Liens of Creditors in or on the
Creditors Superior Collateral are and shall be first, senior  and
prior  to any Liens now or hereafter claimed by Regions in or  on
the  Creditors Superior Collateral.  Regions further agrees  that
in  the event of any foreclosure sale or other execution upon any
Liens of Creditors in or on the Creditors Superior Collateral  or
in  the  event of any other disposition or liquidation of any  of
the  Creditors  Superior Collateral, now or in  the  future,  the
rights of Creditors to the Creditors Superior Collateral and  the
proceeds thereof shall in all respects prime those of Regions and
Creditors  shall be paid by preference and priority to  and  over
any claim of Regions.

      3.   Creditors agree that any Liens of Regions in or on the
Regions  Superior Collateral shall be first, senior and prior  to
any  Liens  now or hereafter claimed by Creditors in  or  on  the
Regions Superior Collateral.  Creditors further agree that in the
event  of any foreclosure sale or other execution upon any  Liens
of  Regions in or on the Regions Superior Collateral  or  in  the
event  of  any  other disposition or liquidation of  any  of  the
Regions Superior Collateral, now or in the future, the rights  of
Regions  to  the  Regions Superior Collateral  and  the  proceeds
thereof  shall  in  all  respects prime those  of  Creditors  and
Regions shall be paid by preference and priority to and over  any
claim of Creditors.

     4.   Regions and Creditors agree that any Liens of Creditors
in  or  on the MIDNIGHT RIDER Collateral are and shall be  first,
senior and prior to any Liens now or hereafter claimed by Regions
in  or on the MIDNIGHT RIDER Collateral and that in the event  of
any  foreclosure  sale  or  other execution  upon  any  Liens  of
Creditors in or on the MIDNIGHT RIDER Collateral or in the  event
of  any  other disposition or liquidation of any of the  MIDNIGHT
RIDER  Collateral, now or in the future, the rights of  Creditors
to  the MIDNIGHT RIDER Collateral and the proceeds thereof  shall
in  all  respects prime those of Regions and Creditors  shall  be
paid by preference and priority to and over any claim of Regions;
provided that, notwithstanding anything to the contrary  in  this
Agreement, to the extent (and only to the extent) that any  Liens
of Regions in or on the MIDNIGHT RIDER Collateral secure the Non-
Revolving  Line  of Credit Loans, such Liens of Regions  will  be
first, senior and prior to any Liens now or hereafter claimed  by
Creditors in or on the MIDNIGHT RIDER Collateral and in the event
of  any  foreclosure sale or other execution upon  any  Liens  of
Regions in or on the MIDNIGHT RIDER Collateral or in the event of
any other disposition or liquidation of any of the MIDNIGHT RIDER
Collateral,  now or in the future, the rights of Regions  to  the
MIDNIGHT RIDER Collateral and the proceeds thereof shall  in  all
respects  prime those of Creditors, up to the amount of the  Non-
Revolving  Line  of Credit Loans, and Regions shall  be  paid  by
preference and priority to and over any claim of Creditors, up to
the amount of the Non-Revolving Line of Credit Loans.

     4.   Regions and Creditors agree that any Liens of Creditors
in  or  on the MIDNIGHT EXPRESS Earnings are and shall be  first,
senior and prior to any Liens now or hereafter claimed by Regions
in  or on the MIDNIGHT EXPRESS Earnings and that in the event  of
any  foreclosure  sale  or  other execution  upon  any  Liens  of
Creditors in or on the MIDNIGHT EXPRESS Earnings or in the  event
of  any  other disposition or liquidation of any of the  MIDNIGHT
EXPRESS  Earnings, now or in the future, the rights of  Creditors
to  the MIDNIGHT EXPRESS Earnings and the proceeds thereof  shall
in  all  respects prime those of Regions and Creditors  shall  be
paid by preference and priority to and over any claim of Regions;
provided that, notwithstanding anything to the contrary  in  this
Agreement, to the extent (and only to the extent) that any  Liens
of  Regions  in  or on the MIDNIGHT EXPRESS Earnings  secure  the
Receivables Line of Credit Loans, such Liens of Regions  will  be
first, senior and prior to any Liens now or hereafter claimed  by
Creditors in or on the MIDNIGHT EXPRESS Earnings and in the event
of  any  foreclosure sale or other execution upon  any  Liens  of
Regions in or on the MIDNIGHT EXPRESS Earnings or in the event of
any  other  disposition or liquidation of  any  of  the  MIDNIGHT
EXPRESS Earnings, now or in the future, the rights of Regions  to
the  MIDNIGHT EXPRESS Earnings and the proceeds thereof shall  in
all  respects prime those of Creditors, up to the amount  of  the
Receivables Line of Credit Loans, and Regions shall  be  paid  by
preference and priority to and over any claim of Creditors, up to
the amount of the Receivables Line of Credit Loans.

      6.    Currently, the Liens of Regions on the Torch Offshore
U.S.  Vessels  are  evidenced  by  that  certain  Preferred  Ship
Mortgage  by  Torch  Offshore, L.L.C.  dated  December  20,  2002
recorded  by  the  United  States Coast  Guard  at  the  National
Documentation  Center on December 23, 2002, in Book  03-34,  Page
196  and  by  that  certain  Preferred  Ship  Mortgage  by  Torch
Offshore,  L.L.C. dated July ___, 2004, recorded  by  the  United
States  Coast  Guard  at  the National  Documentation  Center  on
____________, 2004, in Book ______, Page ______.  Currently,  the
Lien of Creditors on the Torch Offshore U.S. Vessels is evidenced
by  that  certain  Preferred Fleet Mortgage  by  Torch  Offshore,
L.L.C. dated April 23, 2003, recorded by the United States  Coast
Guard  at  the National Vessel Documentation Center on April  24,
2003  at  Book  No.  03-36, Page 650.   Currently,  the  Lien  of
Creditors  on the Torch Offshore Vanuatu Vessels is evidenced  by
that  certain Preferred Fleet Mortgage by Torch Offshore,  L.L.C.
dated  April 23, 2003, recorded in the Office of the Commissioner
of Maritime Affairs of the Republic of Vanuatu at the Port of New
York, New York on April 24, 2003 in Book PM 24 at Page 18.

       7.    The  priorities  specified  in  this  Agreement  are
applicable irrespective of the validity or the time or  order  of
attachment  or  perfection of the Liens referred to  herein,  the
time   or  order  of  filing,  or  the  nonfiling,  of  financing
statements  or  preferred  ship  mortgages,  the  acquisition  of
purchase money or other security interests, or the time of giving
or  failure to give notice with respect to any purchase money  or
other security interests.

      8.    This  Agreement  is  an  irrevocable  and  continuing
agreement,  and Regions and Creditors may each continue  to  rely
upon  same  in lending money, extending credit, and making  other
financial  accommodations  to or for  the  account  of  Borrower,
without notice to the other.

      9.   No waiver shall be deemed to have been made by Regions
or  Creditors of any of their respective rights hereunder  unless
such waiver is in writing and signed by Regions or Creditors,  as
appropriate, and any such written waiver shall be limited to  the
specific instance specified therein.

      10.   If any provision of this Agreement is for any  reason
held  invalid,  illegal or unenforceable  in  any  respect,  such
invalidity,  illegality or unenforceability will not  affect  any
other provision of this Agreement.

      11.   This  Agreement is binding upon  and  inures  to  the
benefit  of  the  parties hereto and their respective  assignees,
transferees, and successors. This Agreement shall be governed and
construed  in accordance with the laws of the State of  Louisiana
without regard to its conflicts of laws principles.

     12.  This Agreement may be executed in counterparts, each of
which  shall  be  an original, but all of which, taken  together,
shall  constitute one and the same instrument. A telecopy of  any
such executed counterpart shall be deemed valid as an original.

     EXECUTED as of the date first written above.

                                   REGIONS BANK
                             (in  the capacities set forth above)

                              By:_____________________________
                                        Jorge E. Goris
                                    Its: Senior Vice President

                                   EXPORT DEVELOPMENT CANADA

                              By:______________________________
                                        Bruce Dunlop
                                        Loan Portfolio Manager

                              By:______________________________
                                        Bruce Millar
                                        Loan Asset Manager

STATE OF LOUISIANA

PARISH OF ORLEANS

      BEFORE  ME, the undersigned Notary Public duly commissioned
and  qualified  in  and  for  the  aforesaid  State  and  Parish,
personally came and appeared Jorge E. Goris, who being first duly
sworn,  declared  and  acknowledged  unto  me,  Notary,  and  the
undersigned witnesses, that he a Senior Vice President of Regions
Bank,  and that as such officer on behalf of said Bank, he signed
and  executed  the  above  and  foregoing  Amended  and  Restated
Subordination Agreement, by authority of the Board  of  Directors
of the Bank, and said appearer acknowledged said instrument to be
the  free  act  and  deed  of  the Bank,  for  the  purposes  and
considerations therein expressed.

      IN  WITNESS  WHEREOF, this instrument is  executed  in  the
presence  of  the undersigned witnesses and me, Notary,  on  this
22nd day of July, 2004.

WITNESSES:

_____________________________   ________________________________
                                   Jorge E. Goris

_____________________________


                ________________________________
                          NOTARY PUBLIC
                 My Commission expires at death.


____________________________

____________________________

     BEFORE ME, the undersigned Notary Public duly commissioned
and qualified, personally came and appeared Bruce Dunlop, who
being first duly sworn, declared and acknowledged unto me,
Notary, and the undersigned witnesses, that he is a Loan
Portfolio Manager of Export Development Canada, and that as such
manager and on behalf of Export Development Canada, he signed
and executed the above and foregoing Amended and Restated
Subordination Agreement, by authority of the governing body of
Export Development Canada, and said appearer acknowledged said
instrument to be the free act and deed of Export Development
Canada, for the purposes and considerations therein expressed.

     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, this instrument is executed in the
presence of the undersigned witnesses and me, Notary, on this
 ___ day of July, 2004.

WITNESSES:

_____________________________    _____________________________
                                   Bruce Dunlop

_____________________________


                ________________________________
                          NOTARY PUBLIC
         My commission expires on ____________________.


____________________________

____________________________

     BEFORE ME, the undersigned Notary Public duly commissioned
and qualified, personally came and appeared Bruce Millar, who
being first duly sworn, declared and acknowledged unto me,
Notary, and the undersigned witnesses, that he is a Loan Asset
Manager of Export Development Canada, and that as such manager
and on behalf of Export Development Canada, he signed and
executed the above and foregoing Amended and Restated
Subordination Agreement, by authority of the governing body of
Export Development Canada, and said appearer acknowledged said
instrument to be the free act and deed of Export Development
Canada, for the purposes and considerations therein expressed.

     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, this instrument is executed in the
presence of the undersigned witnesses and me, Notary, on this
 ___ day of July, 2004.

WITNESSES:

_____________________________   ______________________________
                                   Bruce Millar

_____________________________


                ________________________________
                          NOTARY PUBLIC
         My commission expires on ____________________.

                                                     Exhibit 10.4

              SEVENTH AMENDMENT TO CREDIT AGREEMENT

      This Seventh Amendment to Credit Agreement is entered  into
as of the 13th day of August, 2004, and is executed in connection
with that certain Credit Agreement effective as of April 23, 2003
(as  the  same  has  been and may further be  amended,  restated,
modified   or  supplemented  from  time  to  time,  the   "Credit
Agreement")  among  Torch  Offshore, Inc.  ("Borrower")  and  the
Lenders,  including Regions Bank in its capacity as a Lender  and
as Agent for the Lenders.

      WHEREAS,  Borrower and the Lenders desire to further  amend
the Credit Agreement.

      NOW  THEREFORE,  for  good and adequate  consideration  the
receipt  of which is hereby acknowledged, the parties  hereto  do
hereby agree as follows:

      1.    As  used herein, capitalized terms not defined herein
shall  have  the  meanings  attributed  to  them  in  the  Credit
Agreement. The definitions of "Minimum Refinancing Proceeds"  and
"Refinancing Proceeds" in Section 1.1 of the Credit Agreement are
hereby amended and restated to read as follows:

     Minimum Refinancing Proceeds shall mean, as of the date
     of  any determination thereof, all Refinancing Proceeds
     up  to  the  amount equal to the sum of the  following,
     without duplication: (a) principal and interest due  on
     the   loans   (including   all   principal,   interest,
     attorneys' fees and costs owed thereon) made by Regions
     to Borrower pursuant to the $5,000,000.00 non-revolving
     line  of  credit  set forth in Section 2.03(a)  of  the
     Existing  Regions Loan Agreement, as of such date  plus
     (b)  the  aggregate amount of the proceeds received  by
     Borrower  and  its  Subsidiaries from the  Contribution
     Agreement as of such date plus (c) fifty (50%)  percent
     of  the  balance  of  all  Refinancing  Proceeds  after
     subtracting  the amounts set forth in clauses  (a)  and
     (b) of this defined term "Minimum Refinancing Proceeds"
     therefrom.

     Refinancing Proceeds shall mean the funds  owed  to  or
     received by or on behalf of Borrower or any Subsidiary,
     net  of  any  Indebtedness secured  by  preferred  ship
     mortgage(s) (other than the Obligations) which Borrower
     or  any  Subsidiary is obligated to pay  in  connection
     therewith,  from  the  issuance or  incurrence  of  any
     Indebtedness by Borrower or any Subsidiary, after  July
     22,  2004, of the nature referred to in clause  (i)  or
     (ii) of the definition of "Indebtedness", but excluding
     any  Indebtedness  representing the  deferred  purchase
     price of Property.

     2.   In connection with the foregoing and only in connection
with  the foregoing, the Credit Agreement is hereby amended,  but
in all other respects all of the terms, conditions and provisions
of   the   Credit  Agreement  remain  unaffected.   All  security
agreements,  financing  statements,  mortgages,  pledges,  deeds,
continuing  guaranties and other security documents in  favor  of
Agent,  for the benefit of the Secured Parties, shall  remain  in
full force and effect.

      3.    Except as may be specifically set forth herein,  this
Seventh  Amendment  to Credit Agreement shall  not  constitute  a
waiver  of  any  Default(s) under the  Credit  Agreement  or  any
documents  executed  in  connection  therewith,  all  rights  and
remedies of the Lenders being preserved and maintained.

      4.    This  Seventh  Amendment to Credit Agreement  may  be
executed  in  two  or  more counterparts, and  it  shall  not  be
necessary  that the signatures of all parties hereto be contained
on  any  one counterpart hereof; each counterpart shall be deemed
an  original, but all of which together shall constitute one  and
the same instrument.

      IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have caused this instrument
to be duly executed.

                                   TORCH OFFSHORE, INC.

                            By:______________________________
                                Robert E. Fulton
                                Its Chief Financial Officer
                                401 Whitney Avenue, Suite 400
                                Gretna, Louisiana 70056
                                Telecopy  number:  (504)367-7075

                                   REGIONS BANK

                            By:______________________________
                                Jorge E. Goris
                                Its Senior Vice President
                                301 St. Charles Avenue
                                New Orleans, LA 70130
                                Telecopier:  (504)  584-2165

                                   EXPORT DEVELOPMENT CANADA

                             By:______________________________
                                 Bruce Millar
                                 Loan Asset Manager

                             By:______________________________
                                 Peter G. Johnston
                                 Financial Services Manager
                                 151 O'Connor
                                 Ottawa, Canada K1A1K3
                                 (Telecopier: (613)598-2504

                                                     Exhibit 10.5

                      SEVENTH AMENDMENT TO
               AMENDED AND RESTATED LOAN AGREEMENT

       This  Seventh  Amendment  to  Amended  and  Restated  Loan
Agreement  is  entered into effective August  13,  2004,  and  is
executed  in  connection with that certain Amended  and  Restated
Loan Agreement effective as of December 20, 2002 (as the same has
been   and   may  be  further  amended,  restated,  modified   or
supplemented from time to time, the "Loan Agreement") among Torch
Offshore, Inc. ("Borrower") and Regions Bank ("Bank").

      WHEREAS, Borrower and Bank desire to further amend the Loan
Agreement.

      NOW  THEREFORE,  for  good and adequate  consideration  the
receipt  of which is hereby acknowledged, the parties  hereto  do
hereby agree as follows:

       1.     Unless  otherwise  defined  or  indicated   herein,
capitalized terms used herein shall have the meanings  attributed
to them in the Loan Agreement.

      2.    The  last  sentence of Section 2.03(a)  of  the  Loan
Agreement is hereby amended and restated to read as follows:

     In  addition to the other rights of Bank under the Loan
     Documents, Bank shall have the right to refuse to  fund
     that  portion of the Non-Revolving Line of Credit equal
     to  the  aggregate  amount of  any  Liens  against  the
     MIDNIGHT  RIDER (Official Number 1035377)  (other  than
     Liens  in  favor  of  Bank, whether  as  agent  or  its
     individual capacity).

      3.    The  following shall be additional  Permitted  Liens:
Liens  incurred  prior to the date hereof  in  favor  of  Tersoro
Marine Services, Inc. against the MIDNIGHT RIDER (Official Number
1035377)  which  do  not  exceed  $54,673.81  in  the  aggregate;
provided that, Borrower shall satisfy such Liens within ten  (10)
days of receiving Bank's written demand to satisfy such Liens.

     4.   In connection with the foregoing and only in connection
with the foregoing, the Loan Agreement is hereby amended, but  in
all other respects all of the terms, conditions and provisions of
the  Loan  Agreement remain unaffected.  All security agreements,
financing  statements, mortgages, pledges, continuing  guaranties
and  other  security documents in favor of Bank shall  remain  in
full force and effect.

      5.    Except as may be specifically set forth herein,  this
Seventh  Amendment to Amended and Restated Loan  Agreement  shall
not  constitute  a  waiver  of  any  Default(s)  under  the  Loan
Agreement or any documents executed in connection therewith,  all
rights and remedies of Bank being preserved and maintained.

      6.    This  Seventh Amendment to Amended and Restated  Loan
Agreement  may  be executed in two or more counterparts,  and  it
shall  not be necessary that the signatures of all parties hereto
be  contained  on  any one counterpart hereof;  each  counterpart
shall  be  deemed  an original, but all of which  together  shall
constitute one and the same instrument.

      IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have caused this instrument
to be duly executed.

                                   TORCH OFFSHORE, INC.

                          By:______________________________
                                  Robert E. Fulton
                                  Its: Chief Financial Officer
                                  401 Whitney Avenue, Suite 400
                                  Gretna, Louisiana 70056
                                  Telecopier:  (504) 367-7075

                                   REGIONS BANK

                          By:______________________________
                                  Jorge E. Goris
                                  Its:  Senior Vice President
                                  301 St. Charles Avenue
                                  New Orleans, LA 70130
                                  Telecopier:  (504)584-2165


                                                     Exhibit 10.6
               SECOND AMENDMENT TO LEASE AGREEMENT

This  Amendment  is made this 16th day of July, 2004  and  is  an
amendment  to  the Lease Agreement dated 12 August  2003  between
Thrustmaster  of  Texas, Inc. (Lessor) and Torch  Offshore,  Inc.
(Lessee) covering the lease of two modular thruster units, Serial
Nos.   Y030137-1  and  Y030137-2  with  accessories  as   further
described in said Lease Agreement.

1.   Commencement Date.  It is agreed that the Commencement Date,
  defined in the original Lease Agreement under Section 2, Term and
  Extensions,  is August 12, 2003.  Accordingly, the  Termination
  Date of the original Lease Agreement was February 11, 2004.  The
  Lease  Agreement has subsequently been extended by a  second  6
  months  term through the Amendment to Lease Agreement dated  14
  January,  2004.  The Termination Date of the extended Lease  is
  August 12, 2004.

2.Second  Extension  of  Lease.  By mutual agreement,  the  Lease
  Agreement  is hereby extended again, this time for an  8  month
  term  ("Second  Extended Term") following the Termination  Date
  of  the Extended Term.  Accordingly, the Second Extended  Lease
  Term  runs from August 12, 2004 through April 12, 2005.   Lease
  payments  for  the Second Extended Term are $25,000  per  month
  payable  monthly  on or before the 12th day  of  each  calendar
  month of the Second Extended Term, the first payment being  due
  on or before August 12, 2004.

3.Purchase  Option.  The Purchase Option as described in  Section
  5  of  the  original  Lease Agreement  is  hereby  extended  as
  follows:

The  equipment being leased may be purchased by Lessee at and  as
of  the  conclusion of the Second Extended Term for the  Purchase
Price  specified  in the Rental Schedule, less a  credit  in  the
amount  equal  to 75% of the Initial Term Rent and Extended  Term
Rent  and  Second  Extended Term Rent, to the extent  theretofore
paid  by  Lessee  hereunder.   Such option may  be  exercised  by
providing  at least 30 days advance written notice to Lessor  and
by  paying  the  balance  of  the Purchase  Price  to  Lessor  in
immediately available U.S. funds as set forth in Schedule A on or
before  the  end  of  the Second Extended  Term,  time  being  of
essence.  If  such  option is exercised, title to  the  Equipment
shall transfer as of the later of the date of payment or the date
of  expiration of the Initial Term. For purposes of  Schedule  C,
Warranty  Provisions, title to the Equipment shall be  deemed  to
have transferred to the Lessee as of the Commencement Date.

With  respect to the alternate option as described in the  second
paragraph  of  Section  5 of the original Lease  Agreement,  this
alternate option is not extended and has expired as of  July  16,
2004.

4.    Miscellaneous.   Except as expressly  amended  hereby,  the
  terms and provisions of the original Lease Agreement of 12 August
  2003 remain in full force and effect.

In  witness  whereof,  Lessor and Lessee, each  pursuant  to  due
authority, have so agreed as of the date first set forth above.

                              LESSOR:

                              Thrustmaster of Texas, Inc.
ATTEST:
                              By:________________________________
By: ___________________________         Joe R. Bekker, President
     Secretary

                              LESSEE:

                              Torch Offshore, Inc.
ATTEST:

By:_________________________________
By: ___________________________
     Witness

                                                     Exhibit 31.1

   CERTIFICATION BY LYLE G. STOCKSTILL PURSUANT TO SECTION 302
                OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

I, Lyle G. Stockstill, certify that:

     1.   I have reviewed this quarterly report on Form 10-Q of Torch
       Offshore, Inc.;

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

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

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

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

       (c)  evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure
          controls and procedures and presented in this report our
          conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls
          and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this
          report based on such evaluation; and

       (d)  disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's
          internal control over financial reporting that occurred during
          the registrant's most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant's
          fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has
          materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially
          affect, the registrant's internal control over financial
          reporting; and

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

       (a)  all significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the
          design or operation of internal control over financial reporting
          which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's
          ability to record, process, summarize and report financial
          information; and

       (b)  any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management
          or  other employees who have a significant role in  the
          registrant's internal control over financial reporting.

Date:  August 12, 2004           /s/ LYLE G. STOCKSTILL
                                 ----------------------
                                 Lyle G. Stockstill
                                 Chairman of the Board and Chief
                                   Executive Officer

                                                     Exhibit 31.2

    CERTIFICATION BY ROBERT E. FULTON PURSUANT TO SECTION 302
                OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

I, Robert E. Fulton, certify that:

     1.   I have reviewed this quarterly report on Form 10-Q of Torch
       Offshore, Inc.;

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

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

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

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

       (c)  evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure
          controls and procedures and presented in this report our
          conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls
          and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this
          report based on such evaluation; and

       (d)  disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's
          internal control over financial reporting that occurred during
          the registrant's most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant's
          fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has
          materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially
          affect, the registrant's internal control over financial
          reporting; and

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

       (a)  all significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the
          design or operation of internal control over financial reporting
          which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's
          ability to record, process, summarize and report financial
          information; and

       (b)  any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management
          or  other employees who have a significant role in  the
          registrant's internal control over financial reporting.

Date:  August 12, 2004           /s/ ROBERT E. FULTON
                                 --------------------
                                 Robert E. Fulton
                                 Chief Financial Officer

                                                     Exhibit 32.1

CERTIFICATION BY LYLE G. STOCKSTILL PURSUANT TO 18 U.S.C. SECTION
 1350, AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO SECTION 906 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY
                           ACT OF 2002

In  connection with the Quarterly Report of Torch Offshore,  Inc.
(the  "Company") on Form 10-Q for the period ending June 30, 2004
as  filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission of the date
hereof  (the  "Report"), I, Lyle G. Stockstill, Chairman  of  the
Board  and  Chief  Executive Officer  of  the  Company,  certify,
pursuant  to  18 U.S.C. Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act  of
2002, that:

(1)  The  Report fully complies with the requirements of  Section
     13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and

(2)  The information contained in the Report fairly presents,  in
     all material respects, the financial condition and results of
     operations of the Company.

/s/ LYLE G. STOCKSTILL
-----------------------
Lyle G. Stockstill
Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

                                                     Exhibit 32.2

 CERTIFICATION BY ROBERT E. FULTON PURSUANT TO 18 U.S.C. SECTION
 1350, AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO SECTION 906 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY
                           ACT OF 2002

In  connection with the Quarterly Report of Torch Offshore,  Inc.
(the  "Company") on Form 10-Q for the period ending June 30, 2004
as  filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission of the date
hereof  (the  "Report"),  I, Robert E.  Fulton,  Chief  Financial
Officer of the Company, certify, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 906
of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that:

(1)  The  Report fully complies with the requirements of  Section
     13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and

(2)  The information contained in the Report fairly presents,  in
     all material respects, the financial condition and results of
     operations of the Company.

/s/ ROBERT E. FULTON
---------------------
Robert E. Fulton
Chief Financial Officer