TRITON ENERGY LTD
DEF 14A, 1996-04-09
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<PAGE>
                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
 
                  Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of
            the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No.    )
 
    Filed by the Registrant / /
    Filed by a Party other than the Registrant / /
 
    Check the appropriate box:
    / /  Preliminary Proxy Statement
    / /  Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule
         14a-6(e)(2))
    /X/  Definitive Proxy Statement
    / /  Definitive Additional Materials
    / /  Soliciting  Material  Pursuant  to  Section  240.14a-11(c)  or  Section
         240.14a-12
 
                                       TRITON ENERGY LIMITED
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)
 
Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
 
/X/  $125 per  Exchange Act  Rules 0-11(c)(1)(ii),  14a-6(i)(1), 14a-6(i)(2)  or
     Item 22(a)(2) of Schedule 14A.
/ /  $500  per  each party  to  the controversy  pursuant  to Exchange  Act Rule
     14a-6(i)(3).
/ /  Fee  computed  on   table  below   per  Exchange   Act  Rules   14a-6(i)(4)
     and 0-11.
     1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     3) Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed
        pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (Set forth the amount on which the
        filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     5) Total fee paid:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
/ /  Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
/ /  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
     0-11(a)(2)  and identify the  filing for which the  offsetting fee was paid
     previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement  number,
     or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.
     1) Amount Previously Paid:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     3) Filing Party:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     4) Date Filed:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
                             TRITON ENERGY LIMITED
                         CALEDONIAN HOUSE, MARY STREET
                                 P. O. BOX 1043
                                  GEORGE TOWN
                          GRAND CAYMAN, CAYMAN ISLANDS
 
                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                             TO BE HELD MAY 7, 1996
 
To the Shareholders of
TRITON ENERGY LIMITED
 
    Notice  is hereby  given that the  annual meeting of  shareholders of Triton
Energy Limited (the "Company"), a Cayman Islands company, will be held at  10:00
a.m., Dallas time, on Tuesday, May 7, 1996, at the Royal Oaks Country Club, 7915
Greenville Avenue, Dallas, Texas 75231 for the following purposes:
 
    (1)  To elect  three directors  to serve until  the third  annual meeting of
       shareholders to  occur after  the May  7, 1996  meeting, or  until  their
       respective successors shall have been duly elected and qualified;
 
    (2)  To consider and vote upon a  proposal to adopt the second amendment and
       restatement of the Company's 1992 Stock  Option Plan as described in  the
       accompanying Proxy Statement;
 
    (3)  To consider and vote upon a proposal to amend the Company's Amended and
       Restated 1985  Restricted Stock  Plan to  increase by  50,000 shares  the
       number  of the Company's Ordinary  Shares available for issuance pursuant
       to the plan;
 
    (4) To consider and vote  upon a proposal to  approve the material terms  of
       the  performance goals that will be used by the Compensation Committee of
       the  Board  of  Directors  in  determining  annual  bonuses  for   senior
       management; and
 
    (5)  To consider and act upon such other matters as may properly come before
       the meeting.
 
    Only holders of record of Ordinary Shares at the close of business on  March
29,  1996, are entitled to receive notice of  and to vote at the meeting, or any
adjournment or adjournments thereof. The meeting  may be adjourned from time  to
time without notice other than announcement at the meeting.
 
    IT  IS IMPORTANT THAT YOUR SHARES BE REPRESENTED REGARDLESS OF THE NUMBER OF
SHARES YOU MAY HOLD.  WHETHER OR NOT YOU  PLAN TO BE PRESENT  AT THE MEETING  IN
PERSON,  PLEASE COMPLETE,  DATE AND  SIGN THE  ENCLOSED PROXY  CARD AND  MAIL IT
PROMPTLY TO THE COMPANY IN THE ENCLOSED RETURN ENVELOPE. NO POSTAGE IS  REQUIRED
IF  MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES. IF YOU RECEIVE MORE THAN ONE PROXY CARD BECAUSE
YOUR SHARES ARE REGISTERED  IN DIFFERENT NAMES OR  AT DIFFERENT ADDRESSES,  EACH
SUCH  PROXY CARD SHOULD BE SIGNED AND RETURNED TO ENSURE THAT ALL OF YOUR SHARES
WILL BE VOTED. THE PROXY CARD SHOULD BE SIGNED BY ALL REGISTERED HOLDERS EXACTLY
AS THE SHARES ARE REGISTERED.
 
    This notice, the Annual Report to Shareholders, the Proxy Statement and  the
proxy  card that are enclosed herewith are sent  to you by order of the Board of
Directors of the Company.
 
                                          By Order of the Board of Directors
 
                                          Robert B. Holland, III
                                          SECRETARY
 
April 9, 1996
<PAGE>
                             TRITON ENERGY LIMITED
                         CALEDONIAN HOUSE, MARY STREET
                                 P. O. BOX 1043
                                  GEORGE TOWN
                          GRAND CAYMAN, CAYMAN ISLANDS
 
                                PROXY STATEMENT
                                      FOR
                         ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                             TO BE HELD MAY 7, 1996
 
                    SOLICITATION AND REVOCABILITY OF PROXIES
 
    This  Proxy Statement  is furnished to  the holders of  Ordinary Shares, par
value $.01  per  share  ("Ordinary  Shares"),  of  Triton  Energy  Limited  (the
"Company"),  a Cayman Islands  company, in connection  with the solicitation, by
order of the Board of Directors on  behalf of the management of the Company,  of
proxies  to be voted at the annual meeting  of shareholders of the Company to be
held on May  7, 1996 (the  "Annual Meeting"),  and at any  and all  adjournments
thereof,  at  the  time  and  place  and  for  the  purposes  set  forth  in the
accompanying Notice of Annual Meeting. The approximate date on which this  Proxy
Statement,  the Notice  of Annual Meeting  and the accompanying  proxy card were
first sent or given to shareholders was April 10, 1996.
 
    The purpose  of the  Annual Meeting  is to  consider and  act upon  (i)  the
election  of  three  directors  to  serve  until  the  third  annual  meeting of
shareholders to occur after the Annual  Meeting, or until their successors  have
been duly elected and qualified; (ii) a proposal to adopt the Second Amended and
Restated  1992 Stock Option Plan (the "Option Plan"), which amended and restated
plan would increase the number of  Ordinary Shares available for issuance  under
the  Option Plan  from 3,700,000 shares  to 4,700,000 shares  and effect certain
other amendments; (iii) a proposal to  amend the Company's Amended and  Restated
1985  Restricted Stock Plan (the "Stock Plan")  to increase by 50,000 shares the
number of Ordinary  Shares available for  issuance pursuant to  the Stock  Plan;
(iv) a proposal to approve the material terms of the performance goals that will
be  used by the Compensation Committee of  the Board of Directors in determining
annual bonuses for senior management; and (v) such other matters as may properly
come before the Annual Meeting or any adjournment thereof.
 
    Proxies in the accompanying form that are properly executed, returned to the
Company and not revoked will be voted at the Annual Meeting. Any shareholder has
the unconditional right  to revoke his  proxy at  any time before  it is  voted.
Proxies  may be revoked  by duly executing  a later dated  proxy relating to the
shares being voted or by  attending the Annual Meeting  and voting by ballot  in
person  (attending  the  Annual  Meeting without  executing  a  ballot  will not
constitute revocation of  a proxy). A  proxy in the  accompanying form which  is
properly executed, received by the Company and not revoked will be voted only as
specified  in the proxy. Unless the  shareholder specifies otherwise, a proxy in
the accompanying form which is properly  executed, returned by a shareholder  to
the  Company and  not revoked will  be voted (i)  FOR the election  of the three
individuals who  have been  nominated by  the  Board of  Directors to  serve  as
directors  of the Company; (ii) FOR approval of the proposal to adopt the second
amended and restated Option  Plan; (iii) FOR approval  of the proposal to  amend
the  Stock Plan;  (iv) FOR  approval of  the material  terms of  the performance
goals; and (v) at the discretion of  the proxy holders with regard to any  other
matters that may properly come before the Annual Meeting.
 
    Management of the Company knows of no matters other than as described in the
accompanying  Notice of Annual Meeting that are  likely to be brought before the
Annual Meeting. However,  if any  other matters,  not now  known, properly  come
before such meeting, the persons named in the enclosed proxy will vote the proxy
in accordance with their best judgment on such matters.
<PAGE>
THE REORGANIZATION
 
    On  March 25, 1996,  the merger of  a subsidiary of  the Company into Triton
Energy Corporation  ("Triton Delaware")  was  effected and,  as a  result,  each
outstanding  share of  Common Stock  of Triton  Delaware was  converted into one
Ordinary Share of the Company and  the Company continued the business of  Triton
Delaware.  Information in this Proxy Statement as of a date or with respect to a
period prior to  March 25,  1996 relates  to the  Company's predecessor,  Triton
Delaware.  No Equity Units were issued in the merger because the holders of less
than 15% of the Common Stock of Triton Delaware elected to receive them.
 
                       VOTING AND PRINCIPAL SHAREHOLDERS
 
    At March 29, 1996, the Record Date (herein so called) for the  determination
of shareholders entitled to receive notice of and to vote at the Annual Meeting,
there   were  outstanding   35,926,275  Ordinary   Shares  held   of  record  by
approximately 5,300 shareholders. Each Ordinary Share is entitled to one vote on
any matter to come before the Annual Meeting.
 
    The presence, in person or by proxy,  of the holders of at least a  majority
of  the Ordinary Shares entitled  to vote as of the  Record Date is necessary to
constitute a quorum at  the Annual Meeting. Each  Ordinary Share represented  at
the  Annual  Meeting in  person or  by proxy  will be  counted toward  a quorum.
Approval of  the proposal  to elect  the three  nominees to  serve as  directors
requires  the affirmative  vote of  the holders of  a plurality  of the Ordinary
Shares represented at the Annual Meeting and entitled to vote thereon. Votes may
be cast in favor or withheld. Votes that are withheld will be excluded  entirely
from  the vote and will  have no effect. The holders  of Ordinary Shares have no
appraisal or similar rights with respect to any matter scheduled to be voted  on
at the Annual Meeting.
 
    Approval  of the proposals  to adopt the second  amended and restated Option
Plan, amend the  Stock Plan and  approve the material  terms of the  performance
goals  requires the favorable vote of the  holders of a majority of the Ordinary
Shares present, or  represented, and  entitled to  vote at  the Annual  Meeting.
Abstentions  on such proposals may be specified and will have the same effect as
a vote against such proposals, whereas  broker non-votes will have no effect  on
the outcome of such proposals.
 
    The  following table sets forth information as  of March 29, 1996, except as
noted below, regarding the beneficial ownership of the Company's Ordinary Shares
by each  person known  to the  Company  to own  5% or  more of  the  outstanding
Ordinary  Shares,  each current  director of  the Company  and each  nominee for
director, the  Company's Chief  Executive Officer,  each of  the Company's  four
other most highly compensated executive officers for the year ended December 31,
1995  and the directors  and executive officers  of the Company  as a group. The
persons named in the table have sole voting and investment power with respect to
all capital shares owned by them, unless otherwise noted.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                           AMOUNT AND
                                                                                             NATURE
NAME AND ADDRESS                                                                         OF BENEFICIAL      PERCENT
OF BENEFICIAL OWNER                                                                      OWNERSHIP (1)      OF CLASS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  ----------------  ------------
<S>                                                                                     <C>               <C>
Oppenheimer Group, Inc. (2)...........................................................      4,636,534           12.9%
Dietche & Field Advisers, Inc. (3)....................................................      2,773,300            7.7
Lynch & Mayer, Inc. (4)...............................................................      2,276,500            6.3
Herbert L. Brewer.....................................................................         52,000          *
Ernest E. Cook........................................................................         53,299          *
Sheldon R. Erikson....................................................................         --              --
Ray H. Eubank.........................................................................         62,481          *
Thomas G. Finck.......................................................................        389,987            1.1
Jesse E. Hendricks....................................................................         45,135          *
Fitzgerald S. Hudson..................................................................        164,990(5)       *
John R. Huff..........................................................................         --              --
John P. Lewis.........................................................................         46,090          *
</TABLE>
 
                                       2
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                           AMOUNT AND
                                                                                             NATURE
NAME AND ADDRESS                                                                         OF BENEFICIAL      PERCENT
OF BENEFICIAL OWNER                                                                      OWNERSHIP (1)      OF CLASS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  ----------------  ------------
<S>                                                                                     <C>               <C>
Michael E. McMahon....................................................................         17,000          *
Wellslake D. Morse, Jr................................................................         45,683          *
Edwin D. Williamson...................................................................          7,600          *
J. Otis Winters.......................................................................         15,000          *
Nick G. De'Ath........................................................................        135,231          *
Robert B. Holland, III................................................................        205,902          *
Peter Rugg............................................................................        181,805          *
Al E. Turner..........................................................................         43,399          *
All directors and executive officers as a group (18 persons,
 including those individuals named above).............................................      1,714,856            4.6
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
 *  less than 1%
 
(1) Includes shares held by or  for the benefit of  wives and minor children  of
    directors  and  executive  officers  and  entities  in  which  directors  or
    executive officers hold a controlling  interest, and includes the number  of
    shares indicated as follows that are issuable upon exercise of stock options
    that  are  exercisable  or  exercisable within  60  days  and/or Convertible
    Subordinated Debentures that are convertible or convertible within 60  days:
    Messrs.  Brewer and Hudson, 30,000  shares; Messrs. Cook, Eubank, Hendricks,
    Lewis and Morse, 45,000 shares;  Mr. Finck, 381,250 shares; Messrs.  McMahon
    and  Winters,  15,000  shares;  Mr. Williamson,  5,000  shares;  Mr. De'Ath,
    135,000 shares; Mr. Holland, 198,750  shares; Mr. Rugg, 180,000 shares;  Mr.
    Turner,  42,998;  and  all  directors and  executive  officers  as  a group,
    1,497,540  shares.  Certain  directors  and  executive  officers  also   own
    securities  issued  by corporations  in which  the  Company owns  a minority
    equity interest. Includes shares issuable upon exercise of options owned  by
    trusts  established by certain  executive officers for  the benefit of their
    family members  as  to which  such  executive officers  disclaim  beneficial
    ownership.
 
(2) Based  on a Schedule  13G filed with the  Securities and Exchange Commission
    dated  February  1,  1996.  The  address  of  Oppenheimer  Group,  Inc.   is
    Oppenheimer Tower, World Financial Center, New York, New York 10281.
 
(3) Based  on a Schedule  13G filed with the  Securities and Exchange Commission
    dated January 12, 1996. The address of Dietche & Field Advisers, Inc. is 437
    Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10022.
 
(4) Based on a Schedule  13G filed with the  Securities and Exchange  Commission
    dated  February 1, 1996. The  address of Lynch &  Mayer, Inc. is 520 Madison
    Avenue, New York, New York 10020.
 
(5) Includes 72,604 shares held  by partnerships in which  Mr. Hudson owns a  1%
    interest and for which Mr. Hudson serves as general partner.
 
                                 PROPOSAL NO. 1
 
                             ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
 
    In  accordance with the Articles of Association of the Company, directors of
the Company are  divided into three  classes, with  the term of  office of  each
class  being for  three years.  At the  Annual Meeting  it is  proposed that the
nominees listed below be elected as members of the Board of Directors with terms
expiring in 1999. Each such director shall be elected to serve in such  capacity
until the third annual meeting of shareholders to occur after the Annual Meeting
or until his respective successor is duly elected and qualified.
 
                                       3
<PAGE>
INFORMATION CONCERNING DIRECTORS
 
    Information  concerning the nominees proposed by  the Board of Directors for
election as  directors  with  terms  expiring in  1999  along  with  information
concerning  the present directors whose terms  of office will continue after the
Annual Meeting, is set forth below.
 
    In the  event that  any of  the below-named  nominees for  director  becomes
unable  or unwilling  to accept  nomination or  election, the  person or persons
voting the proxy will vote for the election  in his stead of such person as  the
Board  of Directors may recommend. Unless otherwise instructed on the proxy, the
proxy holders will vote  the proxies received  by them FOR  the election of  the
nominees shown below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                          PRINCIPAL POSITIONS                  DIRECTOR
                     NAME                           AGE                     WITH THE COMPANY                     SINCE
- ----------------------------------------------     -----     ----------------------------------------------  -------------
<S>                                             <C>          <C>                                             <C>
                                                         NOMINEES
                                                         CLASS I
                                                    TERM EXPIRING 1999
 
Thomas G. Finck...............................          49   Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive
                                                              Officer                                               1992
Jesse E. Hendricks............................          82   Director                                               1965
Michael E. McMahon............................          48   Director                                               1993
 
                                              DIRECTORS CONTINUING IN OFFICE
                                                         CLASS II
                                                PRESENT TERM EXPIRES 1997
 
Ernest E. Cook................................          70   Director                                               1978
Ray H. Eubank.................................          68   Director                                               1969
Wellslake D. Morse, Jr........................          68   Director                                               1978
Edwin D. Williamson...........................          56   Director                                               1994
 
                                                        CLASS III
                                                PRESENT TERM EXPIRES 1998
 
Sheldon R. Erikson............................          54   Director                                               1995
Fitzgerald S. Hudson..........................          71   Director                                               1992
John R. Huff..................................          50   Director                                               1995
John P. Lewis.................................          59   Director                                               1987
</TABLE>
 
    Mr.  Finck became a  director, President and Chief  Operating Officer of the
Company in August 1992. Effective January 1993, Mr. Finck became Chief Executive
Officer and effective May 1995 he assumed the additional position of Chairman of
the Board. From  July 1991 to  August 1992,  Mr. Finck served  as President  and
Chief Executive Officer of American Energy Group, an independent oil and natural
gas exploration and production company. From May 1984 until June 1991, Mr. Finck
served  as President  and Chief Executive  Officer of  Ensign Oil &  Gas Inc., a
private domestic oil and gas exploration  company. Mr. Finck is the Chairman  of
the  Board of  Crusader Limited,  the Company's  49.9% owned  affiliate, and its
subsidiary,  Allied  Queensland  Coalfields,  and  a  director  of  New  Zealand
Petroleum Company Limited, a New Zealand corporation 33.7% owned by the Company.
 
    Mr.  Hendricks has been managing his  personal investments for more than the
past five years.
 
    Mr. McMahon became a Managing Director  of Lehman Brothers in October  1994.
Prior  to joining  Lehman Brothers,  Mr. McMahon  had been  a partner  in Aeneas
Group, Inc., a  subsidiary of  Harvard Management Company,  Inc., since  January
1993.   Harvard  Management  Company,  Inc.  is  a  private  investment  company
responsible for managing the endowment  fund of Harvard University. Mr.  McMahon
was  primarily responsible  for the  fund's energy  and commodities investments.
From
 
                                       4
<PAGE>
1989 through 1992 Mr. McMahon was a Managing Director of Salomon Brothers, Inc.,
responsible for investment banking activities with energy and chemical companies
worldwide. Mr. McMahon is a director of Tejas Power Corporation and Cairn Energy
USA, Inc.
 
    Mr. Cook has been an independent oil and gas consultant and independent  oil
operator  for  more  than  the  past  five years.  Mr.  Cook  is  a  director of
Input/Output, Inc. and Marine & Mercantile Securities plc.
 
    Mr. Eubank has been a  professional consulting engineer and independent  oil
operator for more than the past five years.
 
    Mr.  Morse has been managing his personal investments for more than the past
five years.
 
    Mr. Williamson has been  a partner in  the law firm  of Sullivan &  Cromwell
since January 1, 1971, except from September 1990 to January 1993 when he served
as the legal adviser of the United States Department of State.
 
    Mr.  Erikson has served  as President and Chief  Executive Officer of Cooper
Cameron Corporation, a petroleum and industrial equipment company, since January
1995 and has  served as a  director of  such corporation since  March 1995.  Mr.
Erikson  was  the  Chairman of  the  Board  from 1988  and  President  and Chief
Executive Officer from 1987 to 1995 of The Western Company of North America,  an
oil  and  gas  service  company.  Mr.  Erikson  is  also  a  director  of Bettis
Corporation.
 
    Mr. Hudson's  principal  occupation since  1991  has been  his  position  as
general  partner of Hudson Group Partners, a family investment partnership. From
1990 to 1991  Mr. Hudson  was Chairman of  the construction  division of  Willis
Corroon, an insurance brokerage firm.
 
    Mr.  Huff has served as President and Chief Executive Officer of Oceaneering
International, Inc., a company  providing engineering and intervention  services
primarily  for underwater operations, since August  1986. Mr. Huff has served as
Chairman of  Oceaneering International,  Inc. since  1990. Mr.  Huff is  also  a
director of BJ Services and Production Operators.
 
    Mr.  Lewis has been Managing Partner of Lewis Partners, a private investment
company engaged in mergers  and acquisitions, primarily involving  manufacturing
and distribution companies, for more than the past five years.
 
    As far as is known to the Company, no family relationships exist between the
directors and the nominees for director of the Company, or between the directors
or nominees for director and the officers of the Company.
 
MEETINGS OF DIRECTORS AND COMMITTEES
 
    During  the year ended  December 31, 1995,  the Board of  Directors held six
meetings. Each current director attended no less than 75% of these meetings  and
of the meetings of the committees of the Board of Directors on which he served.
 
    The  Board of Directors has an Executive Committee, which has the authority,
subject to restrictions imposed by Cayman Islands law and the Company's Articles
of Association, to  act for the  Board of Directors.  Messrs. Finck  (Chairman),
Erikson,  Hendricks, Hudson,  and Lewis currently  are members  of the Executive
Committee. The Executive Committee did not  meet during the year ended  December
31, 1995.
 
    The  Board of Directors has an  Audit Committee, whose functions include the
selection of the independent auditors, along with the review in conjunction with
the independent auditors  of the plans  and scope of  the audit engagement.  The
committee  also  reviews  with the  independent  auditors the  results  of their
examination, approves the fee  charged by the  independent auditors and  reviews
the  Company's  internal  controls.  Messrs.  Lewis  (Chairman),  Cook,  Eubank,
Hendricks and Morse  currently are  members of  the Audit  Committee. The  Audit
Committee held five meetings during the year ended December 31, 1995.
 
                                       5
<PAGE>
    The  Board  of Directors  has a  Compensation  Committee, which  reviews and
recommends the compensation to be paid to employees and reviews, interprets  and
helps  administer  the  various  existing  stock  option,  restricted  stock and
convertible debenture plans  of the Company.  Messrs. Huff (Chairman),  Erikson,
McMahon,  Morse and Winters currently are members of the Compensation Committee.
The Compensation Committee held four meetings during the year ended December 31,
1995.
 
    The Board of Directors  has a Nominating Committee,  which is authorized  by
the  Board  of Directors  to recommend  nominees  for election  to the  Board of
Directors and nominees to fill additional directorships that may be created  and
to  fill vacancies  that may  exist on  the Board  of Directors.  The Nominating
Committee will consider nominees recommended by shareholders. Recommendations by
shareholders should be  submitted to  the Secretary  of the  Company and  should
identify  the nominee  by name and  provide detailed  background information and
comply with the  other requirements  of the Company's  Articles of  Association.
Messrs. Hudson (Chairman), Huff, McMahon and Williamson currently are members of
the  Nominating Committee. The Nominating Committee  held one meeting during the
year ended December 31, 1995.
 
                                 PROPOSAL NO. 2
              APPROVAL OF SECOND AMENDED AND RESTATED OPTION PLAN
 
GENERAL
 
    A copy  of the  Option Plan,  as proposed  to be  amended and  restated,  is
attached to this Proxy Statement as Appendix A. The following is a brief summary
of  certain provisions of  the Option Plan  and is qualified  in its entirety by
reference to the full text of the Option Plan.
 
    CURRENT PROVISIONS OF  OPTION PLAN.   The  Company adopted  the Option  Plan
effective  September 19, 1991 and the  Company's shareholders approved the first
amendment and restatement  of the Option  Plan at the  Company's Annual  Meeting
held  in  1993. Under  the  Option Plan,  options  to purchase  up  to 3,700,000
Ordinary Shares  may be  granted to  employees, advisors  and directors  of  the
Company  and its  subsidiaries, including  the chief  executive officer  and the
other executive  officers of  the Company.  The Option  Plan requires  that  the
purchase  price per share  under each option be  not less than  100% of the fair
market value of the  Ordinary Shares on  the date of grant  and that the  option
period shall expire not more than ten years from the date the option is granted.
Options  granted  under the  Option  Plan, other  than  directors' automatically
granted options, generally  become exercisable  one year following  the date  of
grant  with respect to 25%  of the Ordinary Shares  covered thereby and vest 25%
per  year  thereafter;  provided  that  all  unexercised  options  will   become
immediately  exercisable upon  a change of  control. The Option  Plan limits the
number of shares that can be acquired by any individual upon exercise of options
granted under the Option Plan to one-half of the total number of shares issuable
under the plan. The Option Plan permits the exercise of options by the  delivery
of Ordinary Shares previously owned by the optionee in lieu of or in addition to
cash.  At  the election  of the  Compensation  Committee, which  administers the
Option Plan,  options granted  thereunder  may be  treated as  "incentive  stock
options" under Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
"Code"),  subject to  compliance with  the conditions  specified therein.  On or
about November 15  each year  non-employee directors  are automatically  granted
options  under the Option  Plan to purchase  15,000 Ordinary Shares  at the fair
market value thereof at  the time of  grant. At March 29,  1996, in addition  to
non-employee directors, the Company had approximately 250 employees, all of whom
were  eligible to  participate in  the Option  Plan, and  there were outstanding
options to purchase 3,098,027 Ordinary Shares under the plan. At March 29, 1996,
308,375 options were  available for  grant under  the Option  Plan. The  closing
price  of the Company's Ordinary Shares on the New York Stock Exchange Composite
Tape on March 29, 1996 was $55.75.
 
    AMENDMENTS.  The Board of Directors of the Company has unanimously  approved
the  adoption  of  the second  amended  and  restated Option  Plan,  the primary
amendments being  (i) to  increase the  number of  Ordinary Shares  that may  be
issued    upon   the   exercise   of    options   granted   under   the   Option
 
                                       6
<PAGE>
Plan from 3,700,000 shares to 4,700,000  shares; (ii) expressly to prohibit  the
committee  from  repricing options  or  otherwise substituting  new  options for
previously granted  options  at  a  lower  exercise  price  without  shareholder
approval;  (iii) to provide that in the event a non-employee director is elected
to the Board of Directors  other than at an  annual meeting, such director  will
automatically  be granted  an option to  purchase 15,000 Ordinary  Shares at the
fair market value thereof at the time of  grant; (iv) to change the date of  the
automatic  grant of options  to non-employee directors from  November 15 of each
year to May 15 of each year; (v) to make the rules governing the  exercisability
of  non-employee directors'  automatic options following  termination of service
consistent with those governing other nonqualified options; and (vi) to increase
the Company's  flexibility under  the  Option Plan  by  providing that  (a)  the
Compensation  Committee  may consist  of not  fewer than  two members;  (b) with
respect to participants  whose transactions in  the Company's equity  securities
are  not  subject to  potential  liability under  Section  16 of  the Securities
Exchange Act  of  1934,  as  amended ("Section  16  Liability"),  generally  all
employees   other  than  executive  officers  and  directors,  the  restrictions
currently imposed  by the  Option  Plan requiring  a minimum  six-month  holding
period  and limiting transferability  to, or for the  benefit of, family members
for no consideration  need not  apply, and  with respect  to participants  whose
transactions  are  subject  to  Section 16  Liability,  generally  directors and
executive officers ("Insiders"), such restrictions need not apply to the  extent
Section  16 or the regulations  thereunder are amended so  as to remove or limit
such restrictions; (c) with  respect to participants who  are not Insiders,  the
plan  may be amended in any manner, and  the terms of any options outstanding or
granted under the Option Plan may be modified, by the Board of Directors without
shareholder approval (except with respect  to repricing as provided above),  and
with respect to Insiders, the plan may be amended and outstanding options may be
modified  by the Board  of Directors without shareholder  approval to the extent
Section 16 or  the regulations thereunder  are amended to  remove or limit  such
restrictions  (except with respect  to repricing as  provided above). Upon their
election in 1995 to fill  vacancies on the Board  of Directors, each of  Messrs.
Erikson  and Huff was granted an option to purchase 15,000 Ordinary Shares as an
automatic grant, conditioned on approval of the second amendment and restatement
of the Option Plan. Members of  the Company's management and Board of  Directors
have  indicated that  they will  vote all shares  held by  them in  favor of the
second amendment and restatement of the  Option Plan and believe approval  would
be in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders.
 
    The  Board of Directors  believes that the continued  success of the Company
depends upon its ability  to attract and retain  highly qualified and  competent
employees, directors and advisors and that options under the Option Plan enhance
that  ability and provide motivation to the recipients of the options to advance
the interests  of the  Company  and its  shareholders.  The Board  of  Directors
believes  that it is necessary and advisable  to increase the number of Ordinary
Shares that may be issued upon exercise of options granted under the Option Plan
at this time because  there are only an  aggregate of 317,165 options  available
for  grant under the Option Plan or  the Company's other stock option plans. The
Board of Directors believes that the other amendments are desirable because they
would increase the  flexibility of the  Compensation Committee in  administering
the  Option  Plan and  add features  that  may make  options more  attractive to
employees, directors and advisors, thereby  increasing the effectiveness of  the
Option Plan.
 
    A  vote  in favor  of Proposal  No. 2  will  be deemed  approval of  (i) the
specific terms of the Option  Plan, as amended and  restated, (ii) the class  of
employees to which options may be granted (including the chief executive officer
and the other executive officers of the Company), (iii) the formula by which the
exercise price is determined (as described above) and (iv) the limitation on the
number  of shares any individual may acquire over  the ten year term of the plan
(as described above).
 
SUMMARY OF CERTAIN FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES OF THE OPTION PLAN
 
    INCENTIVE STOCK OPTIONS.  No taxable income is realized by a participant and
no tax deduction is available to the  Company upon either the grant or  exercise
of  an incentive stock option.  If a participant holds  the shares acquired upon
the exercise of  an incentive  stock option  for more  than one  year after  the
issuance of the shares upon exercise of the incentive stock option and more than
two years
 
                                       7
<PAGE>
after  the date of the  grant of the incentive  stock option ("holding period"),
the difference between the exercise price and the amount realized upon the  sale
of  the  shares will  be treated  as a  long-term  capital gain  or loss  and no
deduction will be available to the Company. If the shares are transferred before
the expiration  of the  holding period,  the participant  will realize  ordinary
income  and the Company  will be entitled to  a deduction on  the portion of the
gain, if  any,  equal to  the  difference  between the  incentive  stock  option
exercise  price and the fair market value of  the shares on the date of exercise
or, if less, the difference between  the amount realized on the disposition  and
the  adjusted basis of the shares. Any further gain or loss will be taxable as a
long-term or short-term capital gain or  loss depending upon the holding  period
before  disposition. Certain special rules apply if an incentive stock option is
exercised by tendering stock.
 
    The difference between  the incentive  stock option exercise  price and  the
fair market value, at the time of exercise, of the Ordinary Shares acquired upon
the  exercise of an incentive stock option  may give rise to alternative minimum
taxable income subject  to an alternative  minimum tax. Special  rules also  may
apply   in  certain  cases  where  there  are  subsequent  sales  of  shares  in
disqualifying dispositions and to determine the basis of the shares for purposes
of computing alternative  minimum taxable  income on  a subsequent  sale of  the
shares.
 
    NONQUALIFIED  OPTIONS.    No taxable  income  generally is  realized  by the
participant upon the  grant of  a nonqualified  stock option,  and no  deduction
generally  is then  available to  the Company.  Upon exercise  of a nonqualified
stock option, the excess of the fair market  value of the shares on the date  of
exercise  over the exercise price will be taxable to the participant as ordinary
income and will be deductible by the  Company. The tax basis of shares  acquired
by the participant will be the fair market value on the date of exercise. When a
participant  disposes of shares  acquired upon exercise  of a nonqualified stock
option, any amount realized in excess of the fair market value of the shares  on
the  date of exercise  generally will be treated  as a capital  gain and will be
long-term or short-term,  depending on  the holding  period of  the shares.  The
holding  period commences upon exercise of the nonqualified stock option. If the
amount received is less than such fair market value, the loss will be treated as
a long-term or short-term  capital loss depending on  the holding period of  the
shares.  The  exercise  of a  nonqualified  stock  option will  not  trigger the
alternative minimum tax consequences applicable to incentive stock options.
 
                                       8
<PAGE>
ISSUANCES OF OPTIONS UNDER THE OPTION PLAN
 
    The following table  sets forth certain  information regarding options  that
have been granted under the Option Plan to the persons or groups indicated since
the plan's inception through March 29, 1996.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  NUMBER OF SHARES      AVERAGE
                                                                                     SUBJECT TO        EXERCISE
NAME OR GROUP                                                                          OPTIONS           PRICE
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------  -----------------  -------------
<S>                                                                               <C>                <C>
Ernest E. Cook..................................................................           75,000      $   40.43
Sheldon R. Erikson..............................................................           30,000          42.38
Ray H. Eubank...................................................................           75,000          40.43
Thomas G. Finck.................................................................          475,000          37.63
Jesse E. Hendricks..............................................................           75,000          40.43
Fitzgerald S. Hudson............................................................           60,000          40.03
John R. Huff....................................................................           30,000          42.38
John P. Lewis...................................................................           75,000          40.43
Michael E. McMahon..............................................................           45,000          40.17
Wellslake D. Morse, Jr..........................................................           75,000          40.43
Edwin D. Williamson.............................................................           30,000          44.13
Nick G. De'Ath..................................................................          195,000          38.94
Robert B. Holland, III..........................................................          285,000          37.12
Peter Rugg......................................................................          234,792          39.10
Al E. Turner....................................................................           80,000          42.69
All current executive officers as a group.......................................        1,465,344          37.79
All current directors who are not executive officers as a group.................          675,000          40.66
All employees, including current officers and executive officers, as a group....        3,018,800          37.76
</TABLE>
 
                                 PROPOSAL NO. 3
 
                    APPROVAL OF AMENDMENT TO THE STOCK PLAN
 
GENERAL
    CURRENT  PROVISIONS OF THE STOCK  PLAN.  The Company  adopted the Stock Plan
effective August 21, 1984 and the Company's shareholders approved the  amendment
and  restatement of the Stock Plan at  the Company's Annual Meeting in 1993. The
Stock Plan offers two types of  compensation -- the purchase of Ordinary  Shares
through  payroll  deductions (the  "Share Purchase  feature")  and the  grant of
Ordinary Shares subject  to certain  restrictions on  transfer (the  "Restricted
Share  feature"). At March 29, 1996,  approximately 250 persons were eligible to
participate in the  Stock Plan,  and 9,327  Ordinary Shares  were available  for
issuance under the plan.
 
    SHARE  PURCHASE.    Under the  Share  Purchase  feature of  the  Stock Plan,
eligible  employees  are  able  to  purchase  Ordinary  Shares  through  payroll
deductions.  This is  accomplished through  semi-annual offerings  of options to
purchase Ordinary Shares (each an "Offering") from January 1 to June 30 and July
1 to December 31 of each year (each an "Offering Period"). Generally, any person
who has been an employee of the Company  or any subsidiary of the Company for  a
specified  period  of time  prior to  the  commencement date  of an  Offering is
eligible to  participate in  the  Share Purchase  feature during  that  Offering
Period  provided  that  no employee  may  participate under  the  Share Purchase
feature if (i)  such employee's  rights to  purchase shares  under all  employee
share  purchase plans  (within the meaning  of Section  423 of the  Code) of the
Company and any parent or subsidiary of the Company would accrue at a rate  that
exceeds  $25,000 of fair market value of  the shares (determined as of the grant
date) for each calendar year in which such option is outstanding at any time  or
(ii)  the employee will own, after grant  of the option, shares possessing 5% or
more of the total combined voting power or value of all classes of shares of the
Company or of any parent or subsidiary of the Company.
 
                                       9
<PAGE>
    Under the Share Purchase feature,  eligible employees may purchase  Ordinary
Shares  under their options by  authorizing a payroll deduction  of up to 15% of
either their "base" or "gross" compensation (as defined in the Stock Plan) to be
withheld by the  Company. The restrictions  on transfer described  below do  not
apply  to any  shares purchased under  the Share Purchase  feature. The purchase
price for the Ordinary Shares will be 85% of the lesser of (a) the market  value
of  the shares  as of the  commencement date of  the Offering or  (b) the market
value of the shares as of the last day of the Offering. The "market value" means
the closing price of the Ordinary Shares  on the New York Stock Exchange. As  of
March  29, 1996, 38,703  Ordinary Shares had  been issued pursuant  to the Share
Purchase feature of the Stock Plan.
 
    RESTRICTED SHARES.  Under  the Restricted Share feature  of the Stock  Plan,
Ordinary  Shares ("Restricted  Shares") may  be granted  to employees (including
directors who are  also employees)  of the  Company and  its subsidiaries.  Each
grant  of Restricted Shares under the Stock  Plan confers upon the recipient the
right to receive a specified number of Restricted Shares in accordance with  the
terms  and conditions of  each individual's written  agreement entered into with
the Company. The Stock Plan is administered by the Compensation Committee.
 
    Any Restricted Shares granted will be  restricted with respect to the  sale,
transfer or other disposition, assignment, pledge or other hypothecation thereof
for  a period  of four  years from  the date  of grant.  Restrictions lapse with
respect to one-third of the shares annually, beginning on the second anniversary
date of the effective date of issuance.  In the event of an employee's death  or
retirement,  the restrictions on the stock lapse.  In the event of an employee's
termination of employment  for any reason  other than death  or retirement,  the
Committee  may, in its sole discretion, waive the restrictions on the stock with
respect to any or all of the Restricted Shares if the Committee determines  such
waiver  to be in the best  interest of the Company. As  of March 29, 1996, 1,970
Ordinary Shares had been issued under the Restricted Share feature of the  Stock
Plan.
 
    AMENDMENT.   The Board of Directors  of the Company has unanimously approved
the adoption  of an  amendment  to the  Stock Plan  to  increase the  number  of
Ordinary  Shares issuable under  the Stock Plan by  50,000 shares and recommends
that the shareholders vote  for approval of the  amendment. The Company  expects
that  substantially  all of  such  shares would  be  issuable through  the Share
Purchase feature of the Stock Plan.
 
SUMMARY OF CERTAIN FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES OF THE STOCK PLAN
 
    PURCHASES OF  ORDINARY  SHARES PURSUANT  TO  SHARE PURCHASE  FEATURE.    For
federal  income tax purposes, an employee's  right to participate in an Offering
is considered an option to purchase Ordinary Shares. As provided in Section  423
of  the Code, the participant will not  recognize taxable income on the grant of
the options or the purchase of shares,  even though the shares are purchased  at
less  than their current fair market value.  If a participant sells or otherwise
disposes of the shares within  two years after the date  of the granting of  the
option  pursuant to  an Offering  applicable to such  shares or  within one year
after the shares were transferred to  him under the Stock Plan, the  disposition
will  be  considered  to  be a  disqualifying  disposition  and  the participant
generally must recognize ordinary income equal to the excess of the fair  market
value  of the shares on their date of purchase over their actual purchase price.
The Company  is entitled  to  a deduction  for  this amount  in  the case  of  a
disqualifying  disposition, subject  to any limitations  as a  result of Section
162(m) of the Code. If the participant sells or otherwise disposes of the shares
more than two years after the date of the granting of the option pursuant to  an
Offering  applicable to  such shares  and after  one year  from the  date of the
transfer of the shares to  him pursuant to the  Stock Plan, the ordinary  income
the  participant must report will be the lesser  of the amount, if any, by which
the fair  market  value of  the  shares on  the  date of  Offering  exceeds  the
participant's  actual purchase price or  the excess, if any,  of the fair market
value of the shares at the time of the disposition over the participant's actual
purchase price. The Company is not entitled to a tax deduction for this amount.
 
                                       10
<PAGE>
    The  basis of any shares purchased pursuant to the Share Purchase feature of
the Stock Plan  is the  actual purchase  price of  the shares  increased by  the
amount of compensation income recognized by the participant. Any further gain or
loss from a disposition of the shares will be taxable as long-term or short-term
capital  gain or loss depending upon  the holding period before disposition. For
shares held  for more  than one  year, the  participant will  realize  long-term
capital  gain  or  loss  upon  disposition. Certain  special  rules  apply  if a
participant dies while owning shares acquired under the Stock Plan.
 
    GRANTS OF RESTRICTED SHARES.   Unless a participant  otherwise elects to  be
taxed upon receipt of Restricted Shares under the Stock Plan, he must include in
his  taxable income the difference  between the fair market  value of the shares
and the  amount  paid,  if any,  for  the  shares,  as of  the  first  date  the
participant's  interest in the shares is no longer subject to a substantial risk
of forfeiture or such shares become  transferable. The Company is entitled to  a
deduction  for  the  amount so  included  in the  participant's  taxable income,
subject to  any  limitation  resulting  from  Section  162(m)  of  the  Code.  A
participant's  rights in Restricted Shares are  subject to a substantial risk of
forfeiture if  the rights  to  full enjoyment  of  the shares  are  conditioned,
directly  or indirectly, upon the future  performance of substantial services by
the participant. Where Restricted  Shares are subject to  a substantial risk  of
forfeiture,  the participant can elect to report the difference between the fair
market value of the shares on the date  of receipt and the amount paid, if  any,
for  the shares as ordinary income in the  year of receipt. To be effective, the
election must be filed  with the Internal Revenue  Service within 30 days  after
the  date the shares are  transferred to the participant.  The amount of taxable
gain arising from a participant's sale of Restricted Shares acquired pursuant to
the Stock Plan is equal to the excess  of the amount realized on such sale  over
the  sum of the amount paid, if any,  for the stock and the compensation element
included by the participant in taxable income. For shares held for more than one
year,  the  participant  will  realize  long-term  capital  gain  or  loss  upon
disposition.
 
ISSUANCES UNDER THE STOCK PLAN
 
    SHARE  PURCHASE.    The  following  table  sets  forth  certain  information
regarding purchases of Ordinary  Shares under the Stock  Plan by the persons  or
groups indicated since the plan's inception through March 29, 1996.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                        NUMBER OF SHARES
NAME OR GROUP (1)                                                                           PURCHASED
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  -----------------
<S>                                                                                     <C>
Thomas G. Finck.......................................................................          1,659
Nick G. De'Ath........................................................................            231
Robert B. Holland, III................................................................          1,659
Peter Rugg............................................................................          1,640
Al E. Turner..........................................................................            748
All executive officers as a group.....................................................          6,685
All employees, including current officers and executive officers, as a group..........         38,703
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
(1) Non-employee  directors are not eligible to  purchase shares under the Share
    Purchase feature of the Stock Plan.
 
    RESTRICTED STOCK.  Since the Restricted Stock Plan's inception, no grants of
Restricted Stock have  been made  to any director  or executive  officer of  the
Company,  and an aggregate of 1,970 shares of Restricted Stock have been granted
under the plan to employees of the Company.
 
                                 PROPOSAL NO. 4
 
                         APPROVAL OF PERFORMANCE GOALS
 
    Prior to  year-end  1995  the  Compensation  Committee  had  considered  the
establishment  of  objective goals  as a  basis  for its  executive compensation
recommendations, but until early 1996 had concluded that a subjective assessment
of management's  performance  was  more  appropriate given  the  nature  of  the
Company's  exploration  business,  the  status  of  the  Company's  major assets
(including its
 
                                       11
<PAGE>
Colombian and Malaysia-Thailand interests), and  the influence on the  Company's
results  of  operations  and  stock  price  of  factors  deemed  largely  beyond
management's control. After year-end  1995, however, the Compensation  Committee
reconsidered  the establishment  of more objective  goals as a  basis for senior
executive  compensation  in  light  of  the  Company's  progress  in   achieving
profitability and other corporate goals. As a result, the Committee decided that
it   would  henceforth   establish  annual   guidelines  for   senior  executive
compensation giving  greater weight  to the  Company's share  price  performance
compared  to that of other  companies in a peer  group selected by the Committee
(see "Stock Performance Chart" below) than to any other factor.
 
    Under the policies and  procedures adopted by  the Committee, the  Committee
(or  a subcommittee consisting solely of  two or more "outside directors" within
the meaning  of Section  162(m) of  the Code)  will, within  90 days  after  the
commencement  of each fiscal  year, establish various  performance goals for the
then current year utilizing the following criteria ("Operating Criteria"):
 
    - Actual to planned performance;
 
    - Increases in  proved  and  probable  reserves  and  success  in  achieving
      significant new discoveries;
 
    - Increases in operating cash flow;
 
    - Improvements in capitalization and financing costs;
 
    - Increases in production; and
 
    - Successful implementation and operation of expense control measures.
 
    Within the same 90 day period the Committee (or an appropriate subcommittee)
will  determine the relative weight to be given achievement of various Operating
Criteria and to the  stock market performance of  the Company's Ordinary  Shares
compared  to  the average  performance of  the  shares of  the companies  in the
selected peer group for the fiscal year in question. The Operating Criteria  and
share  price performance objectives  will be considered  the "Performance Goals"
for the year.
 
    As soon as practicable after each year end the Committee (or an  appropriate
subcommittee)   will  review  the  Company's  and  management's  performance  in
achieving the pre-determined Performance Goals for the then ended fiscal year in
determining senior management (i.e., the Chief Executive Officer and the  Senior
and  Executive  Vice  Presidents  who directly  report  to  the  Chief Executive
Officer) annual bonuses and base salary adjustments. If the maximum  Performance
Goals  are achieved, which  the Committee would  consider "outstanding", bonuses
equal to 100% of the then ended fiscal year's base salary will be awarded to the
Chief Executive Officer and 75% of the then ended fiscal year's base salary will
be awarded  to senior  executives who  report to  the Chief  Executive  Officer,
provided  that no bonus awarded to  any individual executive officer under these
procedures will exceed $1 million. The Committee would award smaller bonuses  if
the  Performance Goals were  achieved to a lesser  extent. The Committee retains
the discretion it now  has, and is  proposed to have, under  the Option Plan  to
award  stock options  to eligible  recipients, including  senior management. See
"Proposal No. 2  -- Approval  of Second Amended  and Restated  Option Plan."  In
considering  annual  stock  option  grants to  senior  management,  however, the
Committee intends  to consider  management  performance using  similar  criteria
applied over a longer period.
 
    The  Board of  Directors of the  Company has unanimously  approved the above
changes in  senior  management  compensation  policy  and  recommends  that  the
shareholders vote for approval of the material terms of the "Performance Goals".
 
                                       12
<PAGE>
                            MANAGEMENT COMPENSATION
 
SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
 
    The  following table  sets forth certain  information regarding compensation
paid during or with respect to the  years ended December 31, 1995 and 1994,  and
the fiscal year ended May 31, 1994, to the Company's Chief Executive Officer and
each  of the Company's four other most highly compensated executive officers who
were executive officers at December 31,  1995, based on salary and bonus  earned
during the year ended December 31, 1995. The Company changed its fiscal year end
from May 31 to December 31, commencing January 1, 1995.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                LONG TERM COMPENSATION
                                                                                            ------------------------------
                                                                                                        AWARDS
                                                  ANNUAL COMPENSATION                       ------------------------------
                              ------------------------------------------------------------     RESTRICTED       OPTIONS/
          NAME AND              FISCAL                                   OTHER ANNUAL             STOCK           SARS
     PRINCIPAL POSITION          YEAR       SALARY($)    BONUS($)       COMPENSATION(S)        AWARD(S)($)       (#)(1)
- ----------------------------  -----------  -----------  -----------  ---------------------  -----------------  -----------
<S>                           <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>                    <C>                <C>
Thomas G. Finck.............        1995      590,000      590,000            --                   --             100,000
  Chairman of the Board             1994(2)    566,667     300,000            --                   --              75,000
  and Chief Executive               1994      520,833      225,000            --                   --             150,000
  Officer
Nick G. De'Ath..............        1995      276,042      210,000            --                   --              50,000
  Senior Vice President,            1994(2)    212,500     150,000            --                   --              50,000
  Exploration                       1994      190,000       --                --                   --              75,000
Robert B. Holland, III......        1995      350,000      225,000            --                   --              60,000
  Senior Vice President,            1994(2)    329,167     150,000            --                   --              50,000
  General Counsel and               1994      314,583      150,000            --                   --             100,000
   Secretary
Peter Rugg..................        1995      325,000      250,000            --                   --              60,000
  Senior Vice President and         1994(2)    304,167     150,000            --                   --              50,000
  Chief Financial Officer           1994      279,167      100,000            --                   --             100,000
Al E. Turner................        1995      254,167      185,000            --                   --              40,000
  Senior Vice President,            1994(2)    205,000      50,000            --                   --              40,000
  Operations                        1994(3)     53,000      --                --                   --              20,000
 
<CAPTION>
 
                                 PAYOUTS
                              -------------
                                  LTIP            ALL OTHER
          NAME AND               PAYOUTS        COMPENSATION
     PRINCIPAL POSITION            (#)               ($)
- ----------------------------  -------------  -------------------
<S>                           <C>            <C>
Thomas G. Finck.............       --                --
  Chairman of the Board            --                --
  and Chief Executive              --                --
  Officer
Nick G. De'Ath..............       --                --
  Senior Vice President,           --                --
  Exploration                      --                --
Robert B. Holland, III......       --                --
  Senior Vice President,           --                --
  General Counsel and              --                --
   Secretary
Peter Rugg..................       --                --
  Senior Vice President and        --                --
  Chief Financial Officer
Al E. Turner................       --                --
  Senior Vice President,           --                --
  Operations                       --                --
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------------
(1)  Options  to acquire Ordinary Shares. Options reported for 1995 were granted
     in February 1996 for performance  during 1995. Does not include  Debentures
     purchased  by  the  named  executive officers  under  the  1986 Convertible
     Debenture Plan. See "Debenture Purchase."
 
(2)  Information is  for  the  twelve  month period  ended  December  31,  1994.
     Accordingly,  information presented for the  fiscal year ended December 31,
     1994 overlaps (with respect to the  five-month period from January 1,  1994
     through  May 31, 1994)  with the information presented  for the fiscal year
     ended May 31, 1994.
 
(3)  Mr. Turner joined the Company in March 1994.
 
OPTION GRANTS WITH RESPECT TO 1995
 
    The following table  provides information regarding  options granted to  the
named  executive officers  in February 1996  relating to  performance during the
year ended December  31, 1995. No  options were granted  to the named  executive
officers during 1995.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                               POTENTIAL REALIZABLE VALUE AT
                                                   INDIVIDUAL GRANTS                               ASSUMED ANNUAL RATES
                              ------------------------------------------------------------            OF STOCK PRICE
                                NUMBER OF      % OF TOTAL                                         APPRECIATION FOR OPTION
                               SECURITIES     OPTIONS/SARS                                                TERM(1)
                               UNDERLYING      GRANTED TO     EXERCISE OR                   -----------------------------------
                              OPTIONS/SARS    EMPLOYEES IN    BASE PRICE                        0%
                              GRANTED(#)(2)  FISCAL YEAR(3)    ($/SH)(4)   EXPIRATION DATE      --         5%($)       10%($)
                              -------------  ---------------  -----------  ---------------               ----------  ----------
<S>                           <C>            <C>              <C>          <C>              <C>          <C>         <C>
Thomas G. Finck.............      100,000           14.6%      $   54.25     Feb. 8, 2006       --        3,411,753   8,646,053
Nick G. De'Ath..............       50,000            7.3%      $   54.25     Feb. 8, 2006       --        1,705,877   4,323,027
Robert B. Holland, III......       60,000            8.7%      $   54.25     Feb. 8, 2006       --        2,047,052   5,187,632
Peter Rugg..................       60,000            8.7%      $   54.25     Feb. 8, 2006       --        2,047,052   5,187,632
Al E. Turner................       40,000            5.8%      $   54.25     Feb. 8, 2006       --        1,364,701   3,458,421
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------
(1) The  potential realizable value portion of  the table illustrates value that
    might be realized  upon exercise  of the  options immediately  prior to  the
    expiration  of  their  term,  assuming  the  specified  compounded  rates of
 
                                       13
<PAGE>
    appreciation on the Company's Ordinary Shares from the date of grant to  the
    expiration  date.  These  numbers do  not  take into  account  provisions of
    certain  options  providing   for  termination  of   the  option   following
    termination  of employment, limited transferability  or vesting over periods
    of up to four years.
 
(2) Options to acquire Ordinary Shares. Options become exercisable with  respect
    to  25% of  the shares covered  thereby on  each anniversary of  the date of
    grant. In the  event of a  change of  control of the  Company, however,  any
    unexercisable portion of the options will become immediately exercisable.
 
(3) Options  are calculated as a percentage of the sum of all options granted in
    February 1996 to  executive officers  relating to 1995  performance and  all
    other options granted in 1995.
 
(4) The  exercise price is equal to the  closing price of the Ordinary Shares as
    of the date of grant  as reported on the  New York Stock Exchange  Composite
    Tape.  The  exercise price  may  be paid  in  Ordinary Shares  owned  by the
    executive officer, in cash, or in any other form of valid consideration or a
    combination of  any of  the  foregoing, as  determined by  the  Compensation
    Committee in its discretion.
 
OPTION EXERCISES DURING 1995 AND OPTION VALUES
 
    The following table provides information related to options exercised by the
named  executive officers during the year ended December 31, 1995 and the number
and value  of options  held at  year  end, as  well as  the options  granted  in
February 1996 relating to 1995 performance.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                            VALUE OF
                                                                                                           UNEXERCISED
                                                                                  NUMBER OF SECURITIES     IN-THE-MONEY
                                                                                 UNDERLYING UNEXERCISED      OPTIONS/
                                                                                      OPTIONS/SARS           SARS AT
                                                SHARES                               AT FY-END (#)         FY-END($)(1)
                                              ACQUIRED ON          VALUE       --------------------------  -----------
                                              EXERCISE(#)       REALIZED($)    EXERCISABLE  UNEXERCISABLE  EXERCISABLE
                                           -----------------  ---------------  -----------  -------------  -----------
<S>                                        <C>                <C>              <C>          <C>            <C>
Thomas G. Finck..........................         --                --            281,250        293,750    $6,696,094
Nick G. De'Ath...........................         --                --             60,000        135,000    1,417,500
Robert B. Holland, III...................         --                --            100,000        185,000    2,490,625
Peter Rugg...............................         --                --             87,500        172,500    1,945,312
Al E. Turner.............................         --                --              9,998         70,002      262,448
 
<CAPTION>
 
                                           UNEXERCISABLE
                                           -------------
<S>                                        <C>
Thomas G. Finck..........................   $ 5,007,031
Nick G. De'Ath...........................     2,176,875
Robert B. Holland, III...................     3,281,250
Peter Rugg...............................     2,735,938
Al E. Turner.............................       912,553
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
(1)  Value  at fiscal year end is calculated based on the difference between the
     option or SAR exercise price (including the February 1996 options) and  the
     closing market price of the Ordinary Shares at December 30, 1995 multiplied
     by  the number of shares to which the option relates. On December 30, 1995,
     the closing price as reported by the New York Stock Exchange Composite Tape
     was $57.375.
 
PENSION PLAN TABLE
 
    The following table lists estimated annual benefits payable upon  retirement
under  the  Company's  Retirement  Income  Plan  ("Retirement  Plan"), including
amounts attributable  to the  Company's Supplemental  Executive Retirement  Plan
("SERP"),  to participants  with varying  average earnings  levels and  years of
service.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           YEARS OF CREDITED SERVICE
                                        ---------------------------------------------------------------
REMUNERATION                                10           15           20           25           30
- --------------------------------------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
<S>                                     <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
$200,000..............................  $    87,008  $    88,006  $    88,004  $    90,001  $    90,999
 250,000..............................      112,008      113,006      114,004      115,001      115,999
 300,000..............................      137,008      138,006      139,004      140,001      140,999
 350,000..............................      162,008      163,006      164,004      165,001      165,999
 400,000..............................      187,008      188,006      189,004      190,001      190,999
 450,000..............................      212,008      213,006      214,004      215,001      215,999
 500,000..............................      237,008      238,006      239,004      240,001      240,999
 550,000..............................      262,008      263,006      264,004      265,001      265,999
 600,000..............................      287,008      288,006      289,004      290,001      290,999
 650,000..............................      312,008      313,006      314,004      315,001      315,999
</TABLE>
 
    Payments made  under the  Retirement Plan  and SERP  are based  on years  of
service and annual earnings. Salary and wages are included in the calculation of
average earnings, but bonuses, overtime, severance pay, overrides, royalties and
fringe benefits are excluded.
 
                                       14
<PAGE>
    Under  the Retirement Plan,  the benefit which a  participant is entitled to
receive at his normal retirement  date (age 65) is equal  to .8% of his  average
monthly  compensation multiplied by his years of service, not to exceed 30 years
plus .65% of his excess average monthly compensation multiplied by his years  of
service,  not to exceed 30 years. The  Retirement Plan also provides an optional
early retirement benefit  under which a  participant may qualify  for a  reduced
pension  after the  attainment of  age 55  and the  completion of  five years of
service. Such benefit is further reduced if distribution commences prior to  the
participant's normal retirement date.
 
    The  SERP provides  supplemental retirement benefits  to selected employees.
The benefit levels under the SERP upon  normal or early retirement are based  on
the  participant's  final  average  compensation at  retirement  reduced  by the
participant's accrued benefit under the  Retirement Plan and further reduced  by
the  participant's  primary  Social  Security  benefits.  The  normal retirement
benefit is 50% of average compensation less 100% of anticipated social  security
less  the Retirement  Plan benefit  (converted to  the joint  and 50% contingent
option if the participant is married) multiplied by the accrual percentage.  The
accrual  percentage is 10% for  each completed year up  to 100%. A participant's
right to receive a benefit is forfeited in the event a participant's  employment
is  terminated for  cause. A participant  accrues his retirement  benefit over a
ten-year period.  In the  event of  a change  in control,  the participant  will
become  fully accrued in the SERP benefit,  the benefit will be distributed as a
lump sum, and the participant will receive an additional payment as a "gross-up"
to cover tax liabilities such that the  net lump sum benefit is retained by  the
participant.  A change of  control is considered  to have occurred  based on the
following: (i) the  consummation of a  merger or consolidation  of the  Company,
where  the  Company is  not  the surviving  corporation,  or the  sale  or other
transfer of  all  or  substantially  all  of  the  Company's  assets,  (ii)  the
shareholders  of the Company approve a plan of liquidation of the Company, (iii)
any person  or  group  becomes, without  the  prior  approval of  the  Board  of
Directors,  a  beneficial owner  (as  defined in  Rule  13d-3 of  the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended) of securities of the Company representing  25%
or more of the Company's then outstanding securities having the right to vote in
the  election of directors, or (iv) during  any period of two consecutive years,
individuals who, at the beginning of  such period constituted the entire  Board,
cease  for  any  reason (other  than  death)  to constitute  a  majority  of the
directors of  the  Company, unless  the  nomination  for election  of  each  new
director  was approved by  a vote of  at least two-thirds  of the directors then
still in office.
 
    The SERP generally provides that a participant may elect to receive benefits
under the SERP  in equal monthly  installments over  a period of  15 years.  The
Company  has  purchased  life insurance  to  fund the  Company's  obligations to
participants.
 
    For the  year ended  December 31,  1995, the  remuneration included  in  the
computation  of annual earnings under the Retirement  Plan and the SERP for each
of the  executive  officers named  in  the  Summary Compensation  Table  was  as
follows: Thomas G. Finck, $590,000; Nick G. De'Ath, $300,000; Robert B. Holland,
III,  $350,000; Peter Rugg, $325,000;  and Al E. Turner,  $275,000. The years of
credited service  under the  Retirement Plan  and  the SERP  for each  of  those
individuals  was as follows:  Thomas G. Finck,  3; Nick G.  De'Ath, 2; Robert B.
Holland, III, 3; Peter Rugg, 2; and Al E. Turner, 2.
 
REPORT OF THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
 
    GENERAL.   The Compensation  Committee  of the  Board  of Directors  of  the
Company  is composed of  non-employee directors. The  Compensation Committee, as
part of  its review  and  consideration of  executive compensation,  takes  into
account, among other things, the following goals:
 
        -  Provision  of  incentives and  rewards  that will  attract and
           retain highly qualified and productive people;
 
        -  Motivation of employees to high levels of performance;
 
        -  Differentiation of individual pay based on performance;
 
                                       15
<PAGE>
        -  Ensuring external competitiveness and internal equity; and
 
        -  Alignment of Company, employee and shareholder interests.
 
    The  principal   components  of   executive  compensation   are  base   pay,
discretionary  bonus, and long-term incentives in  the form of stock options and
convertible debentures. Executive compensation also includes various benefit and
retirement programs. Each element  has a somewhat different  purpose and all  of
the  determinations of the Compensation Committee regarding the appropriate form
and level of  executive compensation,  including the compensation  of the  Chief
Executive  Officer,  ultimately have  been judgments  based on  the Compensation
Committee's ongoing assessment and understanding of the oil and gas business and
the Company's  relative position  in  that business,  and  the Company  and  the
Company's executive officers. After year-end 1995, the Committee determined that
a  more  objective  and  systematic  method  for  determining  senior  executive
compensation was appropriate for future periods. See "Proposal No. 4 -- Approval
of Performance Goals."
 
    Since August  1992, the  Company has  recruited successors  to most  of  its
senior  management. In  doing so,  the Company  negotiated separate compensation
packages, the  principal  components  of  which were  base  salaries  and  stock
options,  with its current  Chief Executive Officer,  its Senior Vice Presidents
(including its Chief Financial Officer, General Counsel and heads of exploration
and operations), and  several Vice Presidents.  Those individuals'  compensation
packages  were  determined  by  negotiations  based  on  what  the  Compensation
Committee and the  entire Board  of Directors  determined to  be reasonable  and
necessary   to  attract   and  properly  incentivize   highly  qualified  senior
executives. In exercising  its judgment  with respect  to the  amount of  salary
increases  and  bonuses  to  be  paid to  executive  officers  during  1995, the
Compensation Committee noted  in particular the  significant improvement in  the
Company's  share price during 1995,  and the progress that  had been achieved by
the  new  senior  management  team  in  meeting  various  corporate  objectives,
including  progress in negotiating agreements  relating to the Malaysia-Thailand
Joint Development Area,  raising capital  to finance  the Company's  substantial
capital   expenditures,  restructuring  the  Company's  assets  and  operations,
disposing of non-core assets, resolving various contingencies, and enhancing the
Company's reputation. The achievement  of any one of  these objectives was  not,
however,  given greater  weight than any  other in determining  salary and bonus
amounts.  The  primary  factor  considered  by  the  Compensation  Committee  in
determining  individual salary and bonus levels was the level of the position of
each executive officer.
 
    The Compensation Committee believes that an emphasis on equity  compensation
is  in the best interests of the  Company's shareholders because it more closely
aligns management and  shareholder interests and  maximizes the availability  of
cash  for  significant  capital  expenditures  such  as  those  contemplated for
development of the Company's properties. At the same time, the Committee expects
that individual members of management will from time to time dispose of portions
of their equity positions. During 1995, the Committee granted options to various
employees based  on their  performance, but  did not  grant options  or  approve
salary increases or bonuses for senior management until after its review of 1995
performance  and consideration  of future  senior executive  compensation policy
(except for a portion  of 1995 bonuses  paid to Messrs.  De'Ath and Turner).  In
early 1996, the Committee applied the criteria it intends to apply in the future
in  determining senior management  salary adjustments, bonuses  and stock option
grants resulting  from 1995  performance. See  "Proposal No.  4 --  Approval  of
Performance  Goals." In  determining how to  allocate stock  option grants among
senior management,  including  the  Chief Executive  Officer,  the  Compensation
Committee  considered  primarily the  recipient's prior  receipt of  options. As
noted above,  in  all cases,  the  Compensation Committee's  specific  decisions
regarding  individual option  grants were  ultimately based  on the Compensation
Committee's subjective judgments.
 
    CHIEF EXECUTIVE  OFFICER'S 1995  COMPENSATION.   The Compensation  Committee
determines  the compensation of  Thomas G. Finck,  the Company's Chief Executive
Officer and President, and is responsible  for making all decisions with  regard
to  his compensation. During 1992, Mr. Finck joined the Company as President and
Chief  Operating   Officer.  Mr.   Finck's   initial  base   compensation,   the
 
                                       16
<PAGE>
opportunity  for  an  incentive  bonus in  the  discretion  of  the Compensation
Committee and  a  stock option  grant  of 250,000  shares,  was a  package  that
resulted  from negotiations with Mr. Finck, and was designed to induce Mr. Finck
to join  the  Company  and to  align  a  significant portion  of  his  potential
compensation  to shareholder interests. The Company also guaranteed $1.3 million
in indebtedness incurred by Mr. Finck to finance the construction of his primary
residence, which guarantee was released in 1996.
 
    Since 1992, Mr. Finck's salary has  been increased, and he has been  awarded
bonuses and stock options and permitted to purchase convertible debentures, from
time  to time as his responsibilities have expanded and the Committee determined
that his performance warranted. In considering external competitiveness as  part
of  determining Mr.  Finck's compensation, the  Compensation Committee reviewed,
among other things, executive compensation  of other companies, including  those
listed under "Stock Performance Chart" taking into account perceived differences
in  the circumstances between  the Company and  those companies. Recommendations
were  examined  in  light  of  this  information,  but,  because  of   perceived
differences  between the circumstances of these and other companies and those of
the Company, the Committee did not engage in a company-by-company comparison  of
each  element of compensation or corporate  performance and there was no special
attempt to set compensation in any particular relationship to such  information.
The  Committee increased Mr. Finck's salary and paid him a bonus and awarded him
stock options  in early  1996 based  on  its evaluation  of his  performance  as
described above.
 
    COMPENSATION  COMMITTEE MEMBERS.  This report is submitted by the members of
the Compensation Committee of the Board  of Directors who served as such  during
1995:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                     <C>
John R. Huff, Chairman
Sheldon R. Erikson                      Wellslake D. Morse, Jr.
Michael E. McMahon                      J. Otis Winters
</TABLE>
 
STOCK PERFORMANCE CHART
 
    The  following chart compares the yearly percentage change in the cumulative
total shareholder return on the Company's Ordinary Shares during the five  years
ended  December 31,  1995 with the  cumulative total  return on (i)  the S&P 500
Index and (ii) the peer group of the nine companies selected by the Compensation
Committee  as  discussed  in  Proposal  No.  4.  The  chart  also  presents  the
performance  of  the  eleven-company  peer  group  selected  by  the  Company in
connection with  its  1995  Annual  Meeting Proxy  Statement.  As  discussed  in
Proposal  No. 4, the Compensation Committee has selected a peer group consisting
of businesses engaged in oil and  gas exploration and development in  connection
with  certain  compensation comparisons,  and the  Company  believes it  is more
appropriate to use that  peer group for  stock performance comparison  purposes.
The  comparison assumes $100 was invested on  December 31, 1990 in the Company's
Ordinary Shares and in each of the foregoing indices and assumes reinvestment of
dividends.
 
    The returns  of each  issuer  in the  foregoing  groups have  been  weighted
according  to  the respective  issuer's stock  market  capitalization as  of the
beginning of each period.
 
                                       17
<PAGE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        DEC-90      DEC-91      DEC-92      DEC-93      DEC-94      DEC-95
<S>                                                   <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
Triton Energy                                            $100        $534        $540        $482        $544        $918
S&P 500-Registered Trademark-                            $100        $130        $140        $155        $157        $215
Custom Composite Index
 (9 Stocks)                                              $100        $86         $93         $114        $104        $125
Custom Composite Index
 (11 Stocks)                                             $100        $79         $69         $71         $70         $79
</TABLE>
 
    The nine-Stock Custom Composite Index selected by the Compensation Committee
consists of  Anadarko Petroleum  Corporation, Apache  Corp., Enron  Oil and  Gas
Corporation,  Louisiana  Land &  Exploration,  Mesa Petroleum  Corporation, Oryx
Energy Company, Santa Fe Energy  Resources Inc., Seagull Energy Corporation  and
Union Texas Petroleum Holdings Inc. The eleven-Stock Custom Composite Index used
in  connection with the  1995 Annual Meeting Proxy  Statement consists of Apache
Corp., Enterprise Oil PLC, Lasmo PLC,  Louisiana Land & Exploration, Murphy  Oil
Corp.,  Oryx Energy Company,  Pogo Producing Company, Ranger  Oil Ltd., Santa Fe
Energy Resources Inc. and Union Texas Petroleum Holdings Inc.
 
EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENTS
 
    All executive officers  of the Company  have executed Employment  Agreements
with  the Company.  Among other  provisions, these  agreements provide  that, in
consideration for remaining in  the employ of the  Company, each such  executive
officer  is entitled, subject to certain conditions, to receive certain benefits
in the event of a change of control of the Company. If an officer of the Company
is terminated for a reason other  than (a) his death, disability or  retirement,
(b) for cause, or (c) his voluntary termination other than for good reason, such
officer  would be  entitled to  receive from  the Company  a lump  sum severance
payment equal to the sum of the  following amounts: (i) the officer's full  base
salary  through his  date of  termination at  the rate  then in  effect; (ii) an
amount equal to three times the sum  of (x) the highest of the officer's  annual
base  salary  in  any of  the  three preceding  years,  (y) the  highest  of the
aggregate bonuses received  by the  executive officer  in any  of the  preceding
three  years and (z) the highest of the contributions made by the Company on the
executive officer's behalf in  respect of the Company's  401(k) plans in any  of
the three preceding years; (iii) certain relocation and
 
                                       18
<PAGE>
indemnity  payments,  along with  all legal  fees and  expenses incurred  by the
officer as a  result of the  termination; and  (iv) in the  event the  executive
officer  is subject to the excise tax imposed  by Section 4999 of the Code, as a
result of the  change of  control, an  additional "gross-up"  amount such  that,
after  payment of such excise tax and any other taxes on such additional amount,
the officer would be entitled to a net amount equal to the amounts set forth  in
the  agreement. In addition, in the event  of a change of control, the executive
officer would have the right to require the Company to purchase his options  and
Debentures  at a price equal to the number of shares underlying such options and
Debentures times the  difference between  the highest price  paid in  connection
with  the change of control  and the exercise price  or conversion price of such
options and Debentures.  Also, unless  the executive officer  is terminated  for
cause,  the Company  must maintain  in effect for  the continued  benefit of the
executive officer  for a  two-year period  after the  date of  termination,  all
benefit  plans and  programs or arrangements  (or similar plans  and programs or
arrangements) in  which  the  executive  officer  was  entitled  to  participate
immediately prior to the date of termination.
 
DIRECTORS' COMPENSATION
 
    CASH  REMUNERATION.  During  the year ended December  31, 1995 each director
who was not also an officer or  employee of the Company was entitled to  receive
$20,000 annually, plus $1,000 (or, $2,000 in the case of the committee chairmen)
for  each board or committee meeting attended. Members of the Board of Directors
are also reimbursed for  travel expenses to meetings  of the Board of  Directors
and its committees.
 
    RETIREMENT  PLAN FOR DIRECTORS.   The Company has  adopted a retirement plan
for Directors to provide certain benefits  to outside directors of the  Company.
In  order to be entitled  to receive any benefits  under the retirement plan for
Directors, a director must have served as an "outside director" for an aggregate
of not less than five complete years or,  if a director has served less than  an
aggregate  of five  complete years  as an "outside  director," (i)  have had his
service on  the  board as  an  "outside director"  terminated  due to  death  or
disability  or (ii) have a change of control of the Company occur while he was a
director. An "outside director" is defined in the retirement plan as a  director
who  is not a full or part-time employee of  the Company or who, other than as a
director, does  not act,  directly  or indirectly,  for  the Company  under  any
consulting  contract or agreement  for the provision  of services which provides
for compensation in excess of $60,000 during any fiscal year.
 
    Benefits under the Retirement Plan  for Directors are payable quarterly  and
commence  at the  beginning of the  Company's fiscal quarter  next following the
later of the date on  which a director (i) attains  age 65 or (ii) retires  from
the  Board of Directors; provided that if  a director retires from the board due
to his death or  disability, the payments  to such director  or his estate  will
commence  at the  beginning of the  Company's fiscal quarter  next following the
date of such director's death or retirement, as the case may be. The payment  of
benefits  continue for a period  equal to the lesser of  (i) the number of years
and parts thereof, rounded upwards to the nearest six months, during which  such
director  served as an outside director or (ii) ten years. The Company may elect
in its discretion to pay a retired  director, with the consent of such  director
or his estate, a lump sum.
 
    Under  the Retirement  Plan for Directors,  the total benefits  payable to a
director for each  year that he  receives benefits thereunder  are equal to  the
greater  of (i) the  annual stipend payable  to such director  effective for the
fiscal year  of the  Company in  which he  retires or  (ii) the  annual  stipend
payable  to such director for the Company's fiscal year prior to the fiscal year
in which he retires.
 
    STOCK OPTION GRANTS.  Pursuant  to the Option Plan,  on November 15 of  each
year,  non-employee directors automatically receive grants of nonqualified stock
options to  purchase  15,000  shares  of Ordinary  Shares.  The  options  become
exercisable  at the rate of 33-1/3% per year  on each anniversary of the date of
grant and terminate on the tenth anniversary of the date of grant. The  exercise
price of the options is equal to fair market value of the Ordinary Shares on the
date of grant. Each of Messrs. Brewer, Cook, Erikson, Eubank, Hendricks, Hudson,
Huff,  Lewis,  McMahon,  Morse,  Williamson and  Winters  on  November  15, 1995
received options to  purchase 15,000  Ordinary Shares  at an  exercise price  of
$52.00.  In addition, Messrs.  Erikson and Huff  were each granted  an option to
 
                                       19
<PAGE>
purchase 15,000 Ordinary Shares at an exercise price of $32.75. Each such  grant
was  made as an automatic grant in  connection with his initial election to fill
vacancies on the  Board in  1995 and  were conditioned  on the  approval of  the
second amendment and restatement of the Option Plan.
 
    STOCK  APPRECIATION RIGHTS PLAN.   Effective November  12, 1987, the Company
adopted the 1988 Stock Appreciation Rights Plan (the "SAR Plan"). Under the  SAR
Plan,  Stock Appreciation Rights  ("SARs") equivalent in the  aggregate of up to
200,000 Ordinary Shares, subject to adjustment as provided below, may be granted
from time to time to non-employee directors of the Company. Presently, there are
twelve directors  eligible to  participate in  the  SAR Plan.  The SAR  Plan  is
administered  by the Board of Directors; however,  the Board of Directors may in
its discretion at any time delegate such administrative authority to a committee
of the Board  of Directors comprised  of disinterested directors.  The Board  of
Directors  has no current intention  to grant any additional  SARs under the SAR
Plan.
 
    An SAR, upon exercise, will allow the holder thereof to receive in cash  the
difference  between the SAR's  Price and the  fair market value  of the Ordinary
Shares covered  by  the SAR  on  the date  of  exercise. The  "SAR's  Price"  is
established  by the Board  of Directors at the  time the SARs  are granted, at a
price not less than  the fair market value  (and in no event  less than the  par
value) of the Ordinary Shares covered by such SARs on the date of grant. Subject
to  the conditions  described below, SARs  granted under the  SAR Plan generally
become exercisable after one  year following the date  of grant with respect  to
50%  of the Ordinary Shares covered thereby. The remaining 50% increment becomes
exercisable two years from  the date of  grant. The form  of SAR Agreement  also
provides  that in the event of a  change of control all SARs shall automatically
be accelerated and exercisable in full.
 
    The period during which an  SAR may be exercised  is specified in the  Stock
Appreciation  Rights Agreement  (the "SAR Agreement")  with respect  to each SAR
granted. In any event, such  period shall terminate at  the earliest of (i)  the
expiration  of 10 years from the date on  which such SARs were granted, (ii) the
expiration of three months from the date  on which the holder terminates his  or
her  membership  on  the  Board  of  Directors  except  by  reason  of  death or
disability, or (iii) the expiration of  12 months after the holder's  membership
on  the Board  of Directors is  terminated by  reason of such  holder's death or
disability. During  the year  ended December  31, 1995,  none of  the  Company's
current directors exercised SARs.
 
    OTHER.   From January  1, 1993, when  he ceased to  serve as Chief Executive
Officer of  the Company,  until September  11, 1995,  when he  retired from  the
Board,  William I. Lee received a monthly consulting fee of $15,000. Mr. Lee was
retained as a  consultant for a  one year period  beginning on the  date of  his
retirement, for which he was paid $180,000.
 
CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS
 
    Lewis  Partners, of which Mr. Lewis is  the Managing Partner and holds a 30%
profits interest,  acted  as advisor  to  Crusader Limited,  a  publicly  traded
Australian  company 49.9% owned by  the Company, in connection  with the sale of
Crusader's Irish coal briquetting  operations in 1995  for which Lewis  Partners
received a fee of 175,000 Irish pounds.
 
DEBENTURE PURCHASE
 
    In  May 1995, executive  officers of the Company  purchased from the Company
under the  Company's  Convertible  Debenture Plan  an  aggregate  of  $8,550,000
principal   amount  of  Debentures  convertible  into  Ordinary  Shares  at  the
conversion price of $42.75 per share, the market value of the Ordinary Shares at
the date  of  purchase. The  consideration  for  the Debentures  given  by  each
executive  officer was a personal promissory note  payable to the Company in the
original principal amount of $1,710,000, the principal amount of the  Debentures
purchased. As a result of such purchases and prior
 
                                       20
<PAGE>
purchases  of Debentures under the plan, the executive officers were indebted to
the Company in the amounts set forth below. The notes bear interest at the  rate
of  prime (the interest rate  payable by the Company  under the Debentures) plus
1/8% per annum.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                PRINCIPAL AMOUNT
                                                                                                       OF
           NAME                                         POSITION                                  INDEBTEDNESS
- --------------------------  -----------------------------------------------------------------  ------------------
<S>                         <C>                                                                <C>
Thomas G. Finck             Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer                    $    3,217,500
 
Nick G. De'Ath              Senior Vice President, Exploration                                        2,463,750
 
Robert B. Holland, III      Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary                      2,715,000
 
Peter Rugg                  Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer                         2,715,000
 
A. E. Turner, III           Senior Vice President, Operations                                         2,463,750
 
John P. Tatum               Executive Vice President, Operations                                      1,256,250
</TABLE>
 
                              INDEPENDENT AUDITORS
 
    The Board  of Directors  has selected  Price Waterhouse  LLP as  independent
auditors  to examine  the Company's  accounts for  the year  ending December 31,
1996. Representatives of Price Waterhouse LLP are expected to be present at  the
Annual  Meeting with the opportunity to make a statement if they desire to do so
and to be available to respond to appropriate questions.
 
                            SECTION 16 REQUIREMENTS
 
    Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange  Act of 1934, as amended,  requires
the  Company's directors and  executive officers, and persons  who own more than
10% of a registered  class of the Company's  equity securities, to file  initial
reports of ownership and reports of changes in ownership with the Securities and
Exchange  Commission and the New York  Stock Exchange. Such persons are required
by Securities and  Exchange Commission  regulation to furnish  the Company  with
copies of all Section 16(a) forms they file.
 
    Based  solely on its review of the copies  of such forms received by it with
respect to the  year ended December  31, 1995, or  written representations  from
certain  reporting persons,  the Company  believes that  all filing requirements
applicable to its directors,  officers and persons  who own more  than 10% of  a
registered  class of  the Company's  equity securities  have been  complied with
except that William I.  Lee, who retired  from the Board  of Directors in  1995,
filed one Form 4 late relating to one transaction.
 
                             SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS
 
    Any  shareholder  who desires  to present  proposals  to the  Company's 1997
Annual Meeting of Shareholders and to have such proposals set forth in the proxy
statement mailed  in  conjunction with  such  Annual Meeting  must  submit  such
proposals  to the Company no  later than December 11,  1996. Any shareholder may
submit any such proposal to Triton Energy Limited, Attention: Robert B. Holland,
III, Esq.,  Senior Vice  President, General  Counsel and  Secretary, 6688  North
Central  Expressway, Suite 1400, Dallas,  Texas 75206. All shareholder proposals
must  comply  with  Rule  14a-8  promulgated  by  the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission pursuant to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.
 
                                 OTHER MATTERS
 
    The  Annual Report to  Shareholders for the period  ended December 31, 1995,
which includes financial  statements, is  enclosed herewith.  The Annual  Report
does  not  form  a  part  of  this Proxy  Statement  or  the  materials  for the
solicitation of proxies to be voted at the Annual Meeting.
 
    A COPY OF THE ANNUAL  REPORT ON FORM 10-K  OF TRITON ENERGY CORPORATION  FOR
THE   PERIOD  ENDED  DECEMBER  31,  1995,  INCLUDING  FINANCIAL  STATEMENTS  AND
 
                                       21
<PAGE>
SCHEDULES BUT NOT  INCLUDING EXHIBITS, WILL  BE FURNISHED AT  NO CHARGE TO  EACH
PERSON  TO WHOM A PROXY STATEMENT IS DELIVERED UPON RECEIPT OF A WRITTEN OR ORAL
REQUEST OF  SUCH  PERSON ADDRESSED  TO  TRITON ENERGY  LIMITED,  ATTN:  INVESTOR
RELATIONS,  6688  NORTH  CENTRAL  EXPRESSWAY, SUITE  1400,  DALLAS,  TEXAS 75206
(TELEPHONE (214) 691-5200). THE COMPANY WILL ALSO FURNISH SUCH ANNUAL REPORT  ON
FORM 10-K TO ANY "BENEFICIAL OWNER" OF SUCH SECURITIES AT NO CHARGE UPON RECEIPT
OF  A WRITTEN  REQUEST, ADDRESSED TO  INVESTOR RELATIONS, AND  CONTAINING A GOOD
FAITH REPRESENTATION THAT,  AT THE  RECORD DATE,  SUCH PERSON  WAS A  BENEFICIAL
OWNER  OF SECURITIES OF  THE COMPANY ENTITLED  TO VOTE AT  THE ANNUAL MEETING OF
SHAREHOLDERS TO BE HELD MAY 7, 1996. COPIES OF ANY EXHIBIT TO THE FORM 10-K WILL
BE FURNISHED UPON THE PAYMENT OF A $.15 PER PAGE FEE.
 
    The accompanying  proxy  is  being  solicited on  behalf  of  the  Board  of
Directors  of the Company.  The expenses of preparing,  printing and mailing the
proxy and the materials used  in the solicitation thereof  will be borne by  the
Company.
 
    Georgeson  &  Co., Inc.  has  been retained  by the  Company  to aid  in the
solicitation of  proxies,  for  a  fee  of  $12,000  and  the  reimbursement  of
out-of-pocket  expenses. Proxies  may also  be solicited  by personal interview,
telephone and telegram by directors, officers  and employees of the Company  who
will  not receive additional  compensation for such  services. Arrangements also
may be made with brokerage houses and other custodians, nominees and fiduciaries
for the  forwarding  of  solicitation  materials to  the  beneficial  owners  of
Ordinary  Shares held by such  persons, and the Company  will reimburse them for
reasonable expenses incurred by them in connection therewith.
 
    All information contained in the Proxy Statement relating to the occupations
and security holdings  of directors  and executive  officers of  the Company  is
based  upon  information received  from the  individual directors  and executive
officers.
 
    PLEASE MARK,  SIGN,  DATE  AND  RETURN  THE  PROXY  CARD  AT  YOUR  EARLIEST
CONVENIENCE IN THE ENCLOSED RETURN ENVELOPE ADDRESSED TO THE COMPANY. NO POSTAGE
IS  REQUIRED IF MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES.  A PROMPT RETURN OF YOUR PROXY CARD
WILL BE APPRECIATED AS IT WILL SAVE THE EXPENSE OF FURTHER MAILINGS.
 
                                          By Order of the Board of Directors
                                          Robert B. Holland, III
                                          SECRETARY
 
Dallas, Texas
April 9, 1996
 
                                       22
<PAGE>
                                                                      APPENDIX A
 
                             TRITON ENERGY LIMITED
                          SECOND AMENDED AND RESTATED
                             1992 STOCK OPTION PLAN
 
    This  Plan amends and restates the 1992 Stock Option Plan, initially adopted
by Triton Energy Corporation in November 1992, as amended and restated by Triton
Energy Corporation in November 1993, and as assumed by the Company in connection
with the merger  of a  subsidiary of  the Company  with and  into Triton  Energy
Corporation  in March 1996. Capitalized terms used herein are defined in Article
I.
 
    To the  extent  permitted  under  Rule  16b-3  and  any  applicable  law  or
regulation,  the amendments effected hereby shall apply to all outstanding Stock
Options previously granted under the Plan; provided that, to the extent that any
such amendment to  any previously  granted Stock  Option would  have an  Adverse
Consequence  for  a  Participant,  such  amendment  shall  not  so  apply unless
specifically consented to by the Participant.
 
    The Plan, as amended and restated, shall  be effective as of April 9,  1996,
subject  to shareholder  approval of the  amendments effected  hereby, except as
provided herein and  except for  Discretionary Amendments which  do not  require
shareholder approval.
 
                                    PURPOSE
 
    The  purpose of the Plan is to help the Company and its Subsidiaries attract
and retain Employees, Directors and Advisors and to provide such persons with  a
proprietary  interest in  the Company  through the  granting of  Incentive Stock
Options and Nonqualified Stock Options which will:
 
        (a) increase the interest  of the Employees,  Directors and Advisors  in
    the Company's welfare;
 
        (b)  furnish an  incentive to the  Employees, Directors  and Advisors to
    continue their services for the Company or its Subsidiaries; and
 
        (c) provide a means  through which the Company  or its Subsidiaries  may
    attract able persons to enter its employ or serve as Directors or Advisors.
 
    With  respect to Reporting Participants, the Plan and transactions under the
Plan (except as otherwise contemplated hereby)  are intended to comply with  all
applicable  conditions of Rule  16b-3. To the  extent that any  provision of the
Plan or action by the Committee fails to so comply, it shall be deemed null  and
void, to the extent permitted by law and deemed advisable by the Committee.
 
                                   ARTICLE I
 
                                  DEFINITIONS
 
    For  the purpose  of this Plan,  unless the context  requires otherwise, the
following terms shall have the meanings indicated:
 
    1.1 "Adverse Consequence"  means (i) the  loss of qualification  of a  Stock
Option held by a Reporting Participant for special treatment under Rule 16b-3 or
the  commencement  of  a  new  holding  period  under  such  rule  or  (ii)  the
disqualification of an Incentive  Stock Option for treatment  as such under  the
Code.
 
    1.2  "Advisor" means any  person performing services for  the Company or any
Subsidiary of the  Company, with or  without compensation, to  whom the  Company
chooses to grant Stock Options in
 
                                      A-1
<PAGE>
accordance  with the Plan, provided that BONA  FIDE services must be rendered by
such person and such services shall not be rendered in connection with the offer
or sale of securities in a capital-raising transaction.
 
    1.3 "Board" means the Board of Directors of the Company as constituted  from
time to time.
 
    1.4  "Cause"  means  an  act  or acts  involving  a  felony,  fraud, willful
misconduct, the commission of any act that causes or reasonably may be  expected
to cause substantial injury to the Company, or other good cause. The term "other
good cause" shall include, but shall not be limited to, habitual impertinence, a
pattern  of  conduct  that tends  to  hold the  Company  up to  ridicule  in the
community, conduct disloyal  to the Company,  conviction of any  crime of  moral
turpitude, and substantial dependence, as judged by the Committee, on alcohol or
any  controlled substance.  To the  extent that  a Participant  is a  party to a
written employment agreement with the Company or any Subsidiary that contains  a
provision  setting forth consequences for termination for cause and a definition
of cause, such definition shall control with respect to Stock Options.
 
    1.5 "Change in Control" means the occurrence of any of the following events:
(i) there shall be consummated (x) any consolidation or merger of the Company in
which the Company is not the continuing or surviving corporation or pursuant  to
which  the Company's Ordinary Shares would be converted into cash, securities or
other property, other than a merger of  the Company in which the holders of  the
Company's  Ordinary Shares  immediately prior to  the merger  would represent at
least a  majority  of the  common  stock or  ordinary  shares of  the  surviving
corporation  immediately after the  merger, or (y) any  sale, lease, exchange or
other transfer (excluding transfer  by way of pledge  or hypothecation), in  one
transaction  or a series of related  transactions, of all, or substantially all,
of the assets of the Company, (ii)  the shareholders of the Company approve  any
plan  or proposal for the  liquidation or dissolution of  the Company, (iii) any
"person" (as such term is defined  in Section 3(a)(9) or Section 13(d)(3)  under
the  1934 Act) or  any "group" (as such  term is used  in Rule 13d-5 promulgated
under the 1934 Act), other than the  Company or any successor of the Company  or
any  Subsidiary or any  employee benefit plan  of the Company  or any Subsidiary
(including such  plan's trustee),  becomes, without  the prior  approval of  the
Board,  a beneficial owner for purposes of Rule 13d-3 promulgated under the 1934
Act, directly or indirectly, of securities of the Company representing 25.0%  or
more  of the Company's then  outstanding securities having the  right to vote in
the election of  Directors of  the Company,  or (iv)  during any  period of  two
consecutive  years, individuals who, at the beginning of such period constituted
the entire  Board, cease  for any  reason  (other than  death) to  constitute  a
majority of the Directors of the Company, unless the election, or the nomination
for election, by the Company's shareholders, of each new Director of the Company
was  approved by a vote  of at least two-thirds of  the Directors of the Company
then still in office who were Directors  of the Company at the beginning of  the
period.
 
    1.6 "Code" means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.
 
    1.7 "Committee" means the committees appointed or designated by the Board in
accordance with Section 2.1 of the Plan.
 
    1.8 "Company" means Triton Energy Limited, a Cayman Islands company.
 
    1.9  "controlled  substance" means  a  drug, immediate  precursor,  or other
substance listed  in  Schedules I-V  of  the Federal  Comprehensive  Drug  Abuse
Prevention and Control Act of 1970, as amended.
 
    1.10   "Date of Grant"  means the effective date on  which a Stock Option is
awarded to an Employee,  Director or Advisor  as set forth  in the Stock  Option
Agreement.
 
    1.11  "Director" means a member of the Board.
 
                                      A-2
<PAGE>
    1.12   "Disability"  of a  Participant shall be  deemed to  occur whenever a
Participant is rendered unable to engage in any substantial gainful activity  by
reason  of any medically determinable physical or mental impairment which can be
expected to result in death or which has lasted or can be expected to last for a
continuing period of not less than 12 months.
 
    1.13  "Discretionary Amendment"  means any amendment to  the Plan that  does
not require shareholder approval.
 
    1.14  "Employee" means an employee of the Company or of any Subsidiary.
 
    1.15   "ERISA" means the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as
amended.
 
    1.16  "Fair Market Value" of an  Ordinary Share means (i) the closing  price
per  share on  the principal  stock exchange  on which  the Ordinary  Shares are
traded, or (ii) the mean between the closing or average (as the case may be) bid
and asked prices per Ordinary Share on the over-the-counter market, whichever is
applicable.
 
    1.17  "Incentive Stock Option" means  an option to purchase Ordinary  Shares
granted  to a Participant and  which is intended to  be treated as an "incentive
stock option" under Section 422 of the Code.
 
    1.18  "1934 Act" means the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.
 
    1.19  "Non-discretionary  Stock Option"  means a  Nonqualified Stock  Option
granted to a Non-Employee Director under Article IV.
 
    1.20   "Non-Employee Director" means a Director of the Company who is not an
Officer or Employee.
 
    1.21   "Nonqualified Stock  Option" means  any Stock  Option that  does  not
qualify as an Incentive Stock Option.
 
    1.22  "Officer" means an officer of the Company or any Subsidiary.
 
    1.23  "Ordinary Shares" means the Ordinary Shares, par value $.01 per share,
of  the  Company  or in  the  event  that the  outstanding  Ordinary  Shares are
hereafter changed  into or  exchanged  for shares  or  other securities  of  the
Company or another issuer, such other shares or securities.
 
    1.24   "Participant" means any Employee, Director  or Advisor who is, or who
is proposed to be, a recipient of a Stock Option.
 
    1.25  "Plan" means  this Triton Energy Limited  Second Amended and  Restated
1992 Stock Option Plan, as amended from time to time.
 
    1.26   "Reporting Participant" means a Participant whose transactions in the
equity securities of the Company give rise to potential liability under  Section
16(b) of the 1934 Act.
 
    1.27   "Retirement" of a Participant shall  be deemed to be retirement after
reaching (i) age 65  or (ii) age 55  and having completed at  least 10 years  of
service with the Company.
 
    1.28   "Rule  16b-3" means  Rule 16b-3  promulgated under  the 1934  Act, as
amended from time to time, or any successor provision.
 
    1.29  "Section 162(m)" means Section 162(m) of the Code and the  regulations
promulgated thereunder from time to time.
 
    1.30   "Section 162(m)  Exception" means the  exception under Section 162(m)
for "qualified performance-based compensation."
 
    1.31   "Stock  Options"  means  any and  all  Incentive  Stock  Options  and
Nonqualified Stock Options granted pursuant to the Plan.
 
                                      A-3
<PAGE>
    1.32   "Stock Option Agreement" means an agreement between the Company and a
Participant with respect to one or more of the Stock Options.
 
    1.33    "Subsidiary"  means  any   corporation  in  an  unbroken  chain   of
corporations beginning with the Company if, at the time of granting of the Stock
Option, each of the corporations other than the last corporation in the unbroken
chain  owns stock possessing 50%  or more of the  total combined voting power of
all classes  of  stock in  one  of the  other  corporations in  the  chain,  and
"Subsidiaries" means more than one of any such corporations.
 
                                   ARTICLE II
 
                          ADMINISTRATION; ELIGIBILITY
 
    2.1    ADMINISTRATION.    The  Plan shall  be  administered  by  a committee
appointed by the Board, consisting of at least two Directors; provided that, (i)
with respect to  any Stock Option  that is granted  to a Reporting  Participant,
such  committee  shall consist  of  at least  such  number of  Directors  as are
required from time to time by Rule  16b-3, and each such committee member  shall
qualify  as a "disinterested person" under Rule  16b-3; and (ii) with respect to
any Stock  Option that  is also  intended  to satisfy  the requirements  of  the
Section  162(m) Exception, such committee shall  consist of at least such number
of Directors as are  required from time  to time to  satisfy the Section  162(m)
Exception, and each such committee member shall qualify as an "outside director"
within the meaning of Section 162(m). Any member of the committee may be removed
at  any time,  with or without  cause, by  resolution of the  Board. Any vacancy
occurring in the membership of the committee may be filled by appointment by the
Board.
 
    The Committee shall select one  of its members to  act as its Chairman,  and
shall make such rules and regulations for its operation as it deems appropriate.
A  majority of the Committee shall constitute a quorum and the act of a majority
of the  members of  the Committee  present at  a meeting  at which  a quorum  is
present  shall be  the act of  the Committee.  Subject to the  terms hereof, the
Committee shall have  complete discretion  and authority to  (i) designate  from
time  to time the persons to whom  Stock Options will be granted, (ii) interpret
the Plan,  (iii)  prescribe,  amend,  and  rescind  any  rules  and  regulations
necessary  or appropriate for  the administration of the  Plan, to determine the
terms, details and  provisions of each  Stock Option Agreement,  (iv) modify  or
amend  any  Stock  Option  Agreement or  waive  any  conditions  or restrictions
applicable to any Stock Option or the exercise thereof, and (v) make such  other
determinations  and, subject to the terms of the Plan, take such other action as
it deems  necessary  or  advisable;  provided  that,  without  the  approval  of
shareholders  (by vote or consent of shareholders representing a majority of the
shares present at a meeting and entitled to vote), the Committee shall not amend
or modify any outstanding Stock Option  to decrease the exercise price  thereof.
In  this regard,  the Committee  shall consider  and give  appropriate weight to
input  from  representatives  of  management   of  the  Company  regarding   the
contributions  or  potential  contributions to  the  Company of  certain  of the
Participants  or  potential   Participants.  Except  as   provided  below,   any
interpretation,  determination, or other  action made or  taken by the Committee
shall be final, binding, and conclusive on all interested parties, including the
Company and all Participants.
 
    With respect to restrictions ("mandated restrictions") in the Plan that  are
based  on the requirements of  Rule 16b-3, Section 422  of the Code, the Section
162(m) Exception, the rules of any exchange upon which the Company's  securities
are listed, or any other applicable law, rule or restriction, to the extent that
any  such mandated  restrictions are no  longer applicable,  the Committee shall
have the discretion and authority to grant Stock Options that are not subject to
such mandated restrictions and/or to  waive any such mandated restrictions  with
respect to outstanding Stock Options.
 
    2.2    ELIGIBILITY.   Any  Employee (including  an  Employee who  is  also a
Director or an Officer),  Director (subject to the  limits provided herein)  and
Advisor  whose judgment, initiative, and efforts  contributed or may be expected
to contribute  to the  successful  performance of  the  Company is  eligible  to
participate  in  the Plan;  provided that  only Employees  shall be  eligible to
receive Incentive Stock
 
                                      A-4
<PAGE>
Options. The  Committee's  determinations  under  the  Plan  (including  without
limitation  determinations  of  which  persons, if  any,  are  to  receive Stock
Options, the  form, amount  and timing  of  such Stock  Options, the  terms  and
provisions of such Stock Options and the agreements evidencing same) need not be
uniform  and may  be made  by it  selectively among  Employees, Directors and/or
Advisors who receive, or are eligible to receive, Stock Options under the Plan.
 
                                  ARTICLE III
 
                             SHARES SUBJECT TO PLAN
 
    The Committee  may not  grant Stock  Options under  the Plan  for more  than
4,700,000  shares  of  Common  Stock  of the  Company  (as  may  be  adjusted in
accordance with Article XI or XII hereof), and no Participant shall be  eligible
to  receive more than 50% of such shares.  Shares to be distributed and sold may
be made  available  from  either  authorized but  unissued  Ordinary  Shares  or
Ordinary  Shares held by the  Company in its treasury.  Shares that by reason of
the expiration  or unexercised  termination  of a  Stock  Option are  no  longer
subject to purchase may be reofferred under the Plan.
 
                                   ARTICLE IV
 
                NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS' AUTOMATIC STOCK OPTIONS
 
    4.1    ELIGIBILITY.   Only Non-Employee  Directors of  the Company  shall be
eligible to receive grants of the Stock Options provided under this Article IV.
 
    4.2  GRANT OF STOCK OPTIONS.  Throughout the term of this Plan, on May 15 of
each year, and,  effective March  1, 1995,  if a  person is  first appointed  or
elected  as  a  Non-Employee  Director  other  than  at  an  annual  meeting  of
shareholders of the Company  then on the date  of such appointment or  election,
the  Committee  shall  grant to  each  Non-Employee  Director of  the  Company a
Nonqualified Stock Option to purchase 15,000 Ordinary Shares. The grant of Stock
Options under this  Article IV  shall be  evidenced by  Stock Option  Agreements
setting forth the total number of shares subject to the Stock Option, the option
exercise price, the term of the Stock Option and such other terms and provisions
as are consistent with the Plan.
 
    4.3   OPTION EXERCISE PRICE.  The  exercise price for a Stock Option granted
under this Article  IV shall be  equal to 100%  of the Fair  Market Value of  an
Ordinary Share on the Date of Grant. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in
this  Section 4.3, the exercise  price of each Stock  Option granted pursuant to
this Article IV shall not be less than the par value of an Ordinary Share.
 
    4.4  OPTION PERIOD.  The option  period for each Stock Option granted  under
this Article IV will terminate ten years from the Date of Grant. No Stock Option
granted under this Article IV may be exercised at any time after its term.
 
    4.5   PAYMENT.  Full  payment for shares purchased  upon exercise of a Stock
Option granted under this Article IV shall  be made either in (i) cash, (ii)  by
certified  or cashier's check, (iii) if  permitted by the Committee, by Ordinary
Shares, (iv) if permitted  by the Committee, and  if permitted under  applicable
law,  by cash or  certified or cashier's check  for the par  value of the shares
plus a promissory note for the balance  of the purchase price, which note  shall
provide  for full personal liability  of the maker and  shall contain such other
terms  and  provisions  as  the  Committee  may  determine,  including   without
limitation the right to repay the note partially or wholly with Ordinary Shares,
or (v) by delivery of a copy of irrevocable instructions from the Participant to
a broker or dealer, reasonably acceptable to the Company, to sell certain of the
shares  purchased  upon  exercise of  the  Stock  Option or  to  pledge  them as
collateral for a loan and promptly deliver to the Company the amount of sale  or
loan  proceeds  necessary to  pay such  purchase  price. If  any portion  of the
purchase price or  a note  given at  the time of  exercise is  paid in  Ordinary
Shares, those shares shall be valued at the then Fair Market Value.
 
                                      A-5
<PAGE>
    4.6    EXERCISE  OF STOCK  OPTION.    Except only  as  specifically provided
elsewhere in this Plan, each Stock Option granted under this Article IV shall be
exercisable in the following cumulative installments:
 
        FIRST INSTALLMENT.  Up to  33 1/3% of the  total optioned shares at  any
    time after one (1) year following the Date of Grant.
 
        SECOND  INSTALLMENT.  Up to an additional  33 1/3% of the total optioned
    shares at any time after two (2) years following the Date of Grant.
 
        THIRD INSTALLMENT.  Up  to an additional 33  1/3% of the total  optioned
    shares at any time after three (3) years following the Date of Grant.
 
    If  an  installment  covers a  fractional  share, such  installment  will be
rounded off to the next highest  share, except for the final installment,  which
will  be for the balance  of the total optioned  shares. No Stock Option granted
under the Plan may  be exercised at any  time after ten years  from the Date  of
Grant.
 
    Stock  Options may not be exercised, nor  may shares be issued under a Stock
Option (i) until the Plan has been approved by the shareholders of the  Company,
if  necessary to comply with  Rule 16b-3 promulgated under  the 1934 Act or with
the applicable  rules  or regulations  of  any stock  exchange  or  inter-dealer
quotation  system on which the  Common Stock is listed or  quoted or (ii) if any
necessary listing of the  shares on a stock  exchange or any registration  under
state  or federal securities laws required  under the circumstances has not been
accomplished.
 
                                   ARTICLE V
 
                     EMPLOYEES' AND ADVISORS' STOCK OPTIONS
 
    5.1   ELIGIBILITY.   The Committee  shall,  from time  to time,  select  the
particular  Employees (including any Employee who is also a Director or Officer)
and Advisors to whom the Stock Options  provided under this Article V are to  be
granted.
 
    5.2  GRANT OF STOCK OPTIONS.  All grants of Stock Options under this Article
V  shall be awarded by the  Committee at such times and  for such amounts as the
Committee may determine.  In the discretion  of the Committee,  any grant to  an
Employee  may be in  the form of an  Incentive Stock Option.  The grant of Stock
Options shall be evidenced  by Stock Option Agreements  setting forth the  total
number  of shares subject to  each Stock Option, the  option exercise price, the
term of the Stock Option, and such other terms and provisions as are  consistent
with the Plan.
 
    5.3   OPTION EXERCISE PRICE.  The  exercise price for a Stock Option granted
under this Article V shall be determined by the Committee and shall be an amount
not less than 100% of  the Fair Market Value per  Ordinary Share on the Date  of
Grant.  Notwithstanding  anything  to  the contrary  in  this  Section  5.3, the
exercise price of each  Stock Option granted  under the Plan  shall not be  less
than the par value per share of an Ordinary Share.
 
    5.4   OPTION PERIOD.  The option  period for each Stock Option granted under
this Article V will begin and terminate on the respective dates specified by the
Committee but may not terminate later than ten years from the Date of Grant.  No
Stock Option granted under the Plan may be exercised at any time after its term.
The Committee may provide that Stock Options granted under this Article V may be
exercised in installments and upon such terms, conditions and restrictions as it
may determine.
 
    5.5   PAYMENT.  Full  payment for shares purchased  upon exercise of a Stock
Option shall be made in (i) cash, (ii) by certified or cashier's check, (iii) if
permitted by  the  Committee, by  Ordinary  Shares,  (iv) if  permitted  by  the
Committee,  and  if permitted  under  applicable law,  by  cash or  certified or
cashier's check for the par value of  the shares plus a promissory note for  the
balance  of  the purchase  price,  which note  shall  provide for  full personal
liability of the maker and shall contain such other
 
                                      A-6
<PAGE>
terms  and  provisions  as  the  Committee  may  determine,  including   without
limitation the right to repay the note partially or wholly with Ordinary Shares,
or (v) by delivery of a copy of irrevocable instructions from the Participant to
a broker or dealer, reasonably acceptable to the Company, to sell certain of the
shares  purchased  upon  exercise of  the  Stock  Option or  to  pledge  them as
collateral for a loan and promptly deliver to the Company the amount of sale  or
loan  proceeds  necessary to  pay such  purchase  price. If  any portion  of the
purchase price or  a note  given at  the time of  exercise is  paid in  Ordinary
Shares, those shares shall be valued at the then Fair Market Value.
 
    5.6   EXERCISE OF STOCK OPTION.  Stock Options granted under the Plan may be
exercised during  the option  period, at  such  times and  in such  amounts,  in
accordance with the terms and conditions and subject to such restrictions as are
set  forth  herein and  in  the applicable  Stock  Option Agreements.  Except as
otherwise contained herein, Stock Options may  not be exercised, nor may  shares
be  issued under  a Stock  Option (i) until  the Plan  has been  approved by the
shareholders of the Company, if necessary to comply with Rule 16b-3 or with  the
applicable  rules or regulations of any stock exchange or inter-dealer quotation
system on  which  the Ordinary  Shares  are listed  or  quoted or  (ii)  if  any
necessary  listing of the shares  on a stock exchange  or any registration under
state or federal securities laws required  under the circumstances has not  been
accomplished.
 
    Subject to the provisions of Section 2.1, the foregoing paragraph and unless
the Committee determines otherwise, the Stock Options granted hereunder shall be
exercisable in the following cumulative installments:
 
        FIRST  INSTALLMENT.  Up to 25% of  the total optioned shares at any time
    after one (1) year following the Date of Grant.
 
        SECOND INSTALLMENT.   Up  to an  additional 25%  of the  total  optioned
    shares at any time after two (2) years following the Date of Grant.
 
        THIRD INSTALLMENT.  Up to an additional 25% of the total optioned shares
    at any time after three (3) years following the Date of Grant.
 
        FOURTH  INSTALLMENT.   Up  to an  additional 25%  of the  total optioned
    shares at any time after four (4) years following the Date of Grant.
 
    Notwithstanding the  foregoing,  the  Committee  shall  have  the  right  to
accelerate the time at which any Stock Option granted under this Article V shall
become   exercisable.  If  an  installment   covers  a  fractional  share,  such
installment will be  rounded off  to the next  highest share,  except the  final
installment,  which will  be for  the balance of  the total  optioned shares. No
Stock Option granted under the Plan may be exercised at any time after ten years
from the Date of Grant.
 
    Subject to such administrative regulations as the Committee may from time to
time adopt, a Stock  Option will be  deemed exercised for  purposes of the  Plan
when  (i) written  notice of  exercise has been  received by  the Company (which
notice shall set forth the number of  Ordinary Shares with respect to which  the
Stock  Option is  to be  exercised and  the date  of exercise  thereof) and (ii)
payment of the Option  Exercise Price is received  by the Company in  accordance
with  Section 5.5 above; provided  that, with respect to  a cashless exercise of
any Stock Option  (in accordance  with clause (v)  of Section  5.5 above),  such
Stock  Option will be deemed  exercised for purposes of the  Plan on the date of
sale of the Ordinary Shares received upon exercise.
 
                                   ARTICLE VI
 
                     LIMITATIONS ON INCENTIVE STOCK OPTIONS
 
    Notwithstanding the terms of Article  V hereof, the following provisions  of
this  Article VI shall  apply to all  Incentive Stock Options  granted under the
Plan.
 
    6.1  STOCK OWNERSHIP LIMITATION.  In the case of an Incentive Stock  Option,
the  Stock Option  Agreement shall include  provisions that may  be necessary to
assure that the option is an incentive
 
                                      A-7
<PAGE>
stock option under  the Code. No  Incentive Stock  Option may be  granted to  an
Employee  who  owns more  than 10%  of the  total combined  voting power  of all
classes of shares of the Company  or its Subsidiaries. This limitation will  not
apply  if the  option price is  at least  110% of the  fair market  value of the
Ordinary Shares on the Date of Grant and the option is not exercisable more than
five years from the Date of Grant.
 
    6.2  OPTION PERIOD.  Notwithstanding the provisions of Sections 4.4 and  5.4
hereof,  if an Employee owns  or is deemed to own  (by reason of the attribution
rules of Section 424(d) of the Code) more than 10% of the combined voting  power
of  all classes of  shares of the  Company (or any  Subsidiary) and an Incentive
Stock Option  is granted  to such  Employee, the  term of  such Incentive  Stock
Option  (to the extent  required by the Code  at the time of  grant) shall be no
more than five years from the Date of Grant.
 
    6.3   LIMITATION ON  EXERCISE OF  INCENTIVE STOCK  OPTIONS.   To the  extent
required  by the  Code for  incentive stock  options, the  exercise of Incentive
Stock Options granted under the Plan  shall be subject to the $100,000  calendar
year limit as set forth in Section 422(d) of the Code.
 
    6.4   LIMITATION ON INCENTIVE STOCK  OPTION CHARACTERIZATION.  To the extent
that any Stock Option fails to qualify as an Incentive Stock Option, such  Stock
Option will be considered a Nonqualified Stock Option.
 
                                  ARTICLE VII
 
                      TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT OR SERVICE
 
    In  the  event  a Participant  who  is an  Employee  of the  Company  or any
Subsidiary shall cease  to be  employed by  the Company  or a  Subsidiary, or  a
Participant  who is a Director or Advisor, shall cease to serve as a Director or
Advisor, for any reason other than  death, retirement, Disability or for  cause,
(i)  the  Committee shall  have the  ability  to accelerate  the vesting  of the
Participant's Stock Option (other than a Non-discretionary Stock Option) in  its
sole  discretion, and (ii) such Participant's  Stock Option shall be exercisable
(to the extent exercisable on the  date of termination of employment or  service
as  a  Director  or  Advisor,  or, if  the  Committee,  in  its  discretion, has
accelerated the  vesting  of  such  Stock  Option,  to  the  extent  exercisable
following  such acceleration)  (a) if  such Stock  Option is  an Incentive Stock
Option, at  any  time within  three  months after  the  date of  termination  of
employment, unless by its terms the Stock Option expires earlier; or (b) if such
Stock  Option is a Nonqualified Stock Option,  at any time within one year after
the date  of termination  of employment  or service  as a  Director or  Advisor,
unless  by its terms  the Stock Option  expires earlier or  unless the Committee
agrees, in its sole discretion  (except with respect to Non-discretionary  Stock
Options), to further extend the term of such Nonqualified Stock Option; provided
that the term of any such Nonqualified Stock Option shall not be extended beyond
its  initial term. In addition, a Participant's Stock Option may be exercised as
follows in the event such Participant  ceases to serve as an Employee,  Director
or Advisor due to death, disability, retirement or for cause:
 
        (a)  DEATH.  Except as otherwise limited by the Committee at the time of
    the  grant of a  Stock Option, if  a Participant dies  while employed by the
    Company or  a Subsidiary,  or while  serving as  a Director  or Advisor,  or
    within  three months after  ceasing to be an  Employee, Director or Advisor,
    his Stock Option shall become fully exercisable on the date of his death and
    shall expire 12 months thereafter, unless by its terms it expires sooner  or
    the  Committee agrees, in its sole discretion, to further extend the term of
    such Stock Option (other than an Incentive Stock Option); provided that  the
    term of any such Stock Option shall not be extended beyond its initial term.
    During  such period, the Stock Option may  be fully exercised, to the extent
    that it  remains unexercised  on the  date of  death, by  the  Participant's
    personal  representative or  by the  distributees to  whom the Participant's
    rights under the Stock Option shall pass  by will or by the laws of  descent
    and distribution.
 
                                      A-8
<PAGE>
        (b)   RETIREMENT.  If a Participant ceases to be employed by the Company
    or a Subsidiary, or ceases to serve as a Director or Advisor, as a result of
    retirement, (i)  the Committee  shall  have the  ability to  accelerate  the
    vesting  of the Participant's  Stock Option (other  than a Non-discretionary
    Stock  Option,  which  shall  automatically  be  accelerated)  in  its  sole
    discretion, and (ii) the Participant's Stock Option shall be exercisable (to
    the  extent exercisable on the effective date  of such retirement or, if the
    vesting of such Stock Option has been accelerated, to the extent exercisable
    following such acceleration) (a) if such Stock Option is an Incentive  Stock
    Option,  at  any  time  three  months  after  the  effective  date  of  such
    retirement, unless by its terms the Stock Option expires earlier, and (b) if
    such Stock Option  is a Nonqualified  Stock Option, at  any time within  one
    year  after the effective date  of such retirement, unless  by its terms the
    Stock Option expires sooner or the Committee agrees, in its sole  discretion
    (except  with respect to Non-discretionary Stock Options), to further extend
    the term of such  Nonqualified Stock Option; provided  that the term of  any
    such  Nonqualified Stock  Option shall  not be  extended beyond  its initial
    term.
 
        (c)  DISABILITY.  If a Participant ceases to be employed by the  Company
    or a Subsidiary, or ceases to serve as a Director or Advisor, as a result of
    Disability,  the Participant's  Stock Option shall  become fully exercisable
    and shall expire 12 months thereafter, unless by its terms it expires sooner
    or, unless the Committee agrees, in its sole discretion, to extend the  term
    of   such  Stock   Option  (other   than  an   Incentive  Stock   Option  or
    Non-discretionary Stock Option); provided that the term of any Stock  Option
    shall not be extended beyond its initial term.
 
        (d)   CAUSE.  If a Participant ceases to be employed by the Company or a
    Subsidiary, or  ceases  to serve  as  a  Director or  Advisor,  because  the
    Participant  is terminated for  Cause, the Participant's  Stock Option shall
    automatically expire  unless  the Committee  otherwise  agrees in  its  sole
    discretion.
 
                                  ARTICLE VIII
 
                          AMENDMENT OR DISCONTINUANCE
 
    The  Plan may be amended or discontinued by  the Board, or, if the Board has
specifically delegated  this  authority  to the  Committee,  by  the  Committee,
without  the  approval of  the shareholders  or  Participants; provided  that no
amendment shall be made without approval  of the shareholders of the Company  if
such  approval is required under  the Code, Rule 16b-3,  the requirements of any
exchange upon which the Company's securities are listed, or any other applicable
law or regulation.  In addition, no  termination or amendment  of the Plan  may,
without  the consent of the Participant to whom any Stock Option has theretofore
been granted, adversely affect  the rights of such  Participant with respect  to
such  Stock Option. The  Board may not  amend the provisions  of Article IV more
than once during any six month period unless to comply with changes in the  Code
or  ERISA,  or any  rules or  regulations  promulgated thereunder.  In addition,
notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  neither  the  Board  nor  the  Committee   may
substitute new Stock Options for previously granted Stock Options where such new
Stock  Options would  have a lower  exercise price than  such previously granted
Stock Options unless the shareholders of the Company approve such substitution.
 
                                   ARTICLE IX
 
                               EFFECT OF THE PLAN
 
    Neither the  adoption of  this  Plan nor  any action  of  the Board  or  the
Committee  shall  be deemed  to give  any Officer  or Employee  any right  to be
granted a Stock Option to purchase or receive Ordinary Shares of the Company  or
any  other rights except as may be evidenced by a Stock Option Agreement, or any
amendment thereto, duly authorized  by the Committee and  executed on behalf  of
the  Company  and then  only to  the extent  and upon  the terms  and conditions
expressly set forth therein.
 
                                      A-9
<PAGE>
                                   ARTICLE X
 
                                      TERM
 
    The Plan  shall  be  submitted  to  the  Company's  shareholders  for  their
approval; however, Stock Options may be granted under the Plan prior to the time
of  shareholder approval. Unless  sooner terminated by action  of the Board, the
Plan will terminate on the 15th day of September, 2003. Stock Options under  the
Plan  may not be granted after that  date, but Stock Options granted before that
date  will  continue  to  be  effective  in  accordance  with  their  terms  and
conditions.
 
                                   ARTICLE XI
 
                              CAPITAL ADJUSTMENTS
 
    If  at any time while the Plan is in effect or unexercised Stock Options are
outstanding there shall be any increase or decrease in the number of issued  and
outstanding  Ordinary  Shares through  the declaration  of  a share  dividend or
through any  recapitalization  resulting  in  a  stock  split,  combination,  or
exchange of Ordinary Shares, then and in such event:
 
        (i)  An appropriate  adjustment shall be  made in the  maximum number of
    Ordinary Shares then subject to being  awarded under grants pursuant to  the
    Plan,  to  the end  that the  same  proportion of  the Company's  issued and
    outstanding Ordinary  Shares  shall  continue  to be  subject  to  being  so
    awarded;
 
        (ii)  An appropriate adjustment shall be  made in the number of Ordinary
    Shares subject to being awarded to each Non-Employee Director of the Company
    under Article  IV, to  the end  that the  same proportion  of the  Company's
    issued and outstanding Ordinary Shares shall continue to be subject to being
    so awarded; and
 
        (iii)  Appropriate adjustments shall  be made in  the number of Ordinary
    Shares and the  exercise price per  share thereof then  subject to  purchase
    pursuant  to each such  Stock Option previously  granted and unexercised, to
    the end that  the same proportion  of the Company's  issued and  outstanding
    Ordinary  Shares in  each instance shall  remain subject to  purchase at the
    same aggregate exercise price.
 
    Any fractional shares resulting  from any adjustment  made pursuant to  this
Article  XI shall be rounded to the nearest whole share for the purposes of such
adjustment. Except as otherwise expressly  provided herein, the issuance by  the
Company  of shares of  any class, or  securities convertible into  shares of any
class, either in connection with direct sale  or upon the exercise of rights  or
warrants  to subscribe therefor, or upon  conversion of shares or obligations of
the Company convertible into such shares or other securities, shall not  affect,
and no adjustment by reason thereof shall be made with respect to, the number of
or  exercise price of Ordinary Shares  then subject to outstanding Stock Options
granted under the Plan.
 
                                  ARTICLE XII
 
                   RECAPITALIZATION, MERGER AND CONSOLIDATION
 
        (a) The existence of this Plan and Stock Options granted hereunder shall
    not affect in any way the right or power of the Company or its  shareholders
    to   make   or  authorize   any   or  all   adjustments,  recapitalizations,
    reorganizations or other changes in  the Company's capital structure or  its
    business,  or any merger, share exchange or consolidation of the Company, or
    any issue of bonds, debentures, preferred or prior preference shares ranking
    prior to or otherwise  affecting the Ordinary Shares  or the rights  thereof
    (or any rights, options or warrants to purchase same), or the dissolution or
    liquidation  of the Company, or  any sale or transfer of  all or any part of
    its assets or business, or any other corporate act or proceeding, whether of
    a similar character or otherwise.
 
                                      A-10
<PAGE>
        (b) Subject to any required action  by the shareholders, if the  Company
    shall  be  the  surviving  or resulting  corporation  in  any  merger, share
    exchange or consolidation,  any outstanding Stock  Option granted  hereunder
    shall  pertain to  and apply  to the  securities or  rights (including cash,
    property or  assets) to  which a  holder of  the number  of Ordinary  Shares
    subject to the Stock Option would have been entitled.
 
        (c) In the event of any merger, share exchange or consolidation pursuant
    to  which the Company  is not the surviving  or resulting corporation, there
    shall be  substituted for  each Ordinary  Share subject  to the  unexercised
    portions  of such  outstanding Stock  Option that  number of  shares of each
    class of shares  or other  securities or that  amount of  cash, property  or
    assets  of the surviving  or consolidated company  which were distributed or
    distributable to the shareholders of the Company in respect of each Ordinary
    Share held  by  them,  such  outstanding  Stock  Options  to  be  thereafter
    exercisable for such shares, securities, cash or property in accordance with
    their  terms. Notwithstanding the foregoing, however, all such Stock Options
    may be  cancelled  by  the Board  as  of  the effective  date  of  any  such
    reorganization,  merger  or  consolidation,  or  of  any  proposed  sale  of
    substantially all of  the assets of  the Company, or  of any dissolution  or
    liquidation  of the Company, by giving notice  to each holder thereof or his
    personal representative of  its intention  to do  so and  by permitting  the
    purchase  during the  thirty (30) day  period next  preceding such effective
    date of any or all of the shares subject to such outstanding Stock  Options,
    whether or not vested in accordance with their original terms.
 
        (d)  In  the  event  of  a  Change  in  Control  of  the  Company, then,
    notwithstanding any  other  provision  in  the Plan  to  the  contrary,  all
    unmatured   installments  of  Stock   Options  outstanding  shall  thereupon
    automatically be accelerated and exercisable in full.
 
        (e) In case the Company shall, at any time while any Stock Option  under
    this  Plan  shall  be  in  force  and  remain  unexpired,  (i)  sell  all or
    substantially all of its property, or  (ii) dissolve, liquidate, or wind  up
    its  affairs,  then each  Participant may  thereafter receive  upon exercise
    thereof (in lieu of  each Ordinary Share which  such Participant would  have
    been  entitled to  receive) the  same kind and  amount of  any securities or
    assets as may  be issuable,  distributable or  payable upon  any such  sale,
    dissolution, liquidation, or winding up with respect to each Ordinary Share.
    In  the event that the Company shall, at any time prior to the expiration of
    any Stock Option make any partial  distribution of its assets in the  nature
    of  a partial liquidation, whether payable in cash or in kind (but excluding
    the distribution of  a cash  dividend payable  out of  retained earnings  or
    earned  surplus and  designated as  such), then  in such  event the exercise
    prices then in effect with  respect to each option  shall be reduced, as  of
    the  payment  date of  such distribution,  in  proportion to  the percentage
    reduction in the tangible book value  of the Ordinary Shares (determined  in
    accordance  with  generally  accepted  accounting  principles)  resulting by
    reason of such distribution; provided, that in no event shall any adjustment
    of exercise prices in accordance  with the terms of  the Plan result in  any
    exercise prices being reduced below the par value per Ordinary Share.
 
        (f)  Upon the  occurrence of each  event requiring an  adjustment of the
    exercise price and/or  the number  of shares purchasable  pursuant to  Stock
    Options granted pursuant to the terms of this Plan, the Committee shall mail
    forthwith  to each Participant a copy  of its computation of such adjustment
    which shall be conclusive and shall be binding upon each such Participant.
 
                                  ARTICLE XIII
 
                   OPTIONS IN SUBSTITUTION FOR STOCK OPTIONS
                         GRANTED BY OTHER CORPORATIONS
 
    Stock  Options  may  be  granted  under  the  Plan  from  time  to  time  in
substitution  for stock options held by employees of a corporation who become or
are about to become Employees of the Company or a Subsidiary as the result of  a
merger  or  consolidation of  the employing  corporation with  the Company  or a
Subsidiary, the acquisition by either of the foregoing of stock of the employing
corporation as the
 
                                      A-11
<PAGE>
result of which it becomes  a Subsidiary or a sale  of substantially all of  the
assets  of the employing corporation. The terms and conditions of the substitute
options so granted may vary from the terms and conditions set forth in this Plan
to such extent as  the Committee at  the time of grant  may deem appropriate  to
conform,  in whole or in part, to  the provisions of the options in substitution
for which they are granted.
 
                                  ARTICLE XIV
 
                            MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS
 
    14.1  TRANSFERABILITY OF STOCK OPTIONS.
 
    (a)    INCENTIVE  STOCK  OPTIONS.    Incentive  Stock  Options  may  not  be
transferred  or  assigned  other  than  by  will  or  the  laws  of  descent and
distribution and may be exercised during the lifetime of the Participant only by
the Participant or the Participant's legally authorized representative, and each
Stock Option Agreement in respect of an Incentive Stock Option shall so provide.
The designation by a Participant of a beneficiary will not constitute a transfer
of the Stock Option. The Company may waive or modify any limitation contained in
this Section 14.1 that is  not required for compliance  with Section 422 of  the
Code.
 
    (b)  NONQUALIFIED STOCK OPTIONS.
 
        (1)   PARTICIPANTS OTHER  THAN REPORTING PARTICIPANTS.   With respect to
    Nonqualified Stock Options granted hereunder to any Participant who is not a
    Reporting Participant, the Committee may, in its sole discretion, provide in
    any Stock Option Agreement (or in an amendment to any existing Stock  Option
    Agreement)  such  provisions regarding  transferability of  the Nonqualified
    Stock Options as the Committee, in its sole discretion, deems appropriate.
 
        (2)   REPORTING  PARTICIPANTS.    Except as  may  be  specified  by  the
    Committee  in accordance with the  following paragraph, a Nonqualified Stock
    Option granted to a Reporting Participant may not be transferred or assigned
    other than by will or  the laws of descent  and distribution or pursuant  to
    the terms of a qualified domestic relations order, as defined by the Code or
    Title  I of ERISA, or  the rules thereunder. The  designation by a Reporting
    Participant of a  beneficiary will not  constitute a transfer  of the  Stock
    Option.
 
        The  Committee may, in its sole  discretion, provide in any Stock Option
    Agreement (or in an amendment to  any existing Stock Option Agreement)  that
    Nonqualified  Stock Options granted hereunder to a Reporting Participant may
    be transferred to members of  the Reporting Participant's immediate  family,
    trusts  for the benefit of such immediate family members and partnerships in
    which such immediate  family members  are the only  partners, provided  that
    there  cannot be any consideration for the transfer. The Committee may waive
    or modify any limitation  contained in this Section  14.1(b)(2) that is  not
    required for compliance with Rule 16b-3.
 
    14.2  INVESTMENT INTENT.  The Company may require that there be presented to
and  filed with it by any Participant(s) under the Plan, such evidence as it may
deem necessary  to establish  that the  Stock Options  granted or  the  Ordinary
Shares  to be purchased or transferred are being acquired for investment and not
with a view to their distribution.
 
    14.3  NO RIGHT TO CONTINUE EMPLOYMENT.  Nothing in the Plan or the grant  of
any  Stock Option confers upon any Employee  the right to continue in the employ
of the Company  or interferes  with or  restricts in any  way the  right of  the
Company to discharge any Employee at any time (subject to any contract rights of
such Employee).
 
    14.4  SHAREHOLDERS' RIGHTS.  The holder of a Stock Option shall have none of
the  rights or privileges of  a shareholder except with  respect to shares which
have been actually issued.
 
    14.5  TAX WITHHOLDING.
 
                                      A-12
<PAGE>
        (a) Whenever Ordinary Shares are to be issued in satisfaction of a Stock
    Option granted hereunder, the  Company shall have the  right to require  the
    Participant to remit to the Company an amount sufficient to satisfy federal,
    state,  local or other withholding tax  requirements (whether so required to
    secure for the Company  an otherwise available  tax deduction or  otherwise)
    prior to the delivery of any certificate or certificates for such shares.
 
        (b)  When a  Participant is  required to  pay to  the Company  an amount
    required to be withheld under applicable tax laws in connection with a Stock
    Option, such  payment may  be made  (i) in  cash, (ii)  by check,  (iii)  if
    permitted  by the Committee,  by delivery to the  Company of Ordinary Shares
    already owned by the Participant having a Fair Market Value on the date  the
    amount  of tax to be withheld is to  be determined (the "Tax Date") equal to
    the amount required  to be  withheld, (iv)  through the  withholding by  the
    Company ("Company Withholding") of a portion of the Ordinary Shares acquired
    upon  the exercise of the Stock Options  (provided that, with respect to any
    Stock Option  held by  a  Reporting Participant,  at  least six  months  has
    elapsed  between the  Date of  Grant of such  Stock Option  and the exercise
    involving tax withholding) having a Fair Market Value on the Tax Date  equal
    to  the amount required  to be withheld, or  (v) in any  other form of valid
    consideration, as permitted  by the  Committee in  its discretion;  provided
    that  a Reporting Participant shall  not be permitted to  satisfy his or her
    withholding obligation through Company Withholding unless required to do  so
    by  the Committee, in its sole discretion. The Committee may waive or modify
    any limitation contained in this Section that is not required for compliance
    with Rule 16b-3.
 
        (c) As a  condition to the  issuance of Ordinary  Shares covered by  any
    Incentive  Stock Option, the party exercising such Stock Option shall give a
    written representation to  the Company,  which is satisfactory  in form  and
    substance  to its  counsel and upon  which the Company  may reasonably rely,
    that he or she  will report to  the Company any  disposition of such  shares
    prior  to  the  expiration  of  the  holding  periods  specified  by Section
    422(a)(1) of the Code. If and to  the extent that the realization of  income
    in  such a  disposition imposes  upon the  Company federal,  state, local or
    other withholding tax requirements, or  any such withholding is required  to
    secure  for the  Company an otherwise  available tax  deduction, the Company
    shall have the right to require that  the recipient remit to the Company  an
    amount sufficient to satisfy those requirements; and the Company may require
    as  a condition to the  issuance of Ordinary Shares  covered by an Incentive
    Stock Option that the party exercising such Stock Option give a satisfactory
    written representation promising to make such a remittance.
 
    14.6  INDEMNIFICATION OF BOARD AND COMMITTEE.  No member of the Board or the
Committee, nor any Officer or  Employee of the Company  acting on behalf of  the
Board   or  the   Committee,  shall  be   personally  liable   for  any  action,
determination, or interpretation taken or made in good faith with respect to the
Plan, and all members of the Board or the Committee and each and any Officer  or
Employee of the Company acting on their behalf shall, to the extent permitted by
law,  be fully indemnified and  protected by the Company  in respect of any such
action, determination or interpretation.
 
    14.7  GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS.  Notwithstanding any of the provisions hereof,
or of any  written agreements  evidencing Stock Options  granted hereunder,  the
obligation  of the Company  to sell and  deliver shares shall  be subject to all
applicable laws, rules and regulations and  to such approvals by any  government
agencies  or national securities  exchanges as may  be required. The Participant
shall agree not  to exercise  any Stock  Option, and  the Company  shall not  be
obligated  to issue any  shares, if the  exercise thereof or  if the issuance of
shares shall constitute  a violation by  the Participant or  the Company of  any
provision of any law or regulation of any governmental authority.
 
                                      A-13
<PAGE>

                            TRITON ENERGY LIMITED
                    PROXY-ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

The undersigned hereby appoints Thomas G. Finck and Robert B. Holland, III, 
each with power to act without the other and with full power of substitution, 
as Proxies to represent and to vote, as designated on the reverse side, all 
shares of Triton Energy Limited owned by the undersigned, at the Annual 
Meeting of Shareholders to be held at the Royal Oaks Country Club, 7915 
Greenville Avenue, Dallas, Texas 75231 on Tuesday, May 7, 1996, 10:00 a.m., 
local time, upon such business as may properly come before the meeting or any 
adjournment including the following as set forth on the reverse side. 


THIS PROXY WHEN PROPERLY EXECUTED WILL BE VOTED IN THE MANNER DIRECTED HEREIN 
BY THE UNDERSIGNED SHAREHOLDER. IF NO SPECIFIC DIRECTION IS GIVEN, THIS PROXY 
WILL BE VOTED (i) FOR THE ELECTION OF THE NOMINEES FOR DIRECTOR, (ii) FOR 
THE APPROVAL OF THE PROPOSAL TO ADOPT THE SECOND AMENDED AND RESTATED 1992 
STOCK OPTION PLAN, (iv) FOR APPROVAL OF THE PROPOSAL TO APPROVE THE MATERIAL 
TERMS OF THE PERFORMANCE GOALS AND (v) AT THE DISCRETION OF THE PROXY HOLDERS 
WITH REGARD TO ANY OTHER MATTER THAT MAY PROPERLY COME  BEFORE THE MEETING OR 
ANY ADJOURNMENT THEREOF, AS SUCH PROPOSALS ARE MORE FULLY DESCRIBED IN THE 
ACCOMPANYING PROXY STATEMENT (THE "PROXY STATEMENT") 


        (Continued, and to be signed and dated on reverse side)




<PAGE>

                                                          /X/ PLEASE MARK
                                                              YOUR VOTES AS
                                                              IN THIS EXAMPLE

            THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF 
            THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

                   ____________________
                        ORDINARY

1. Election as Directors of the 
   nominees listed below 
   (except as indicated to the 
   contrary below).

    FOR     WITHHELD 
    / /       / /

Nominees: Thomas G. Finck, Jesse E. Hendricks 
and Michael E. McMahon

/ /
______________________________________
For all nominees except as noted above

2. Adoption of the second amended and restated 1992 Stock
   Option Plan.

    FOR     AGAINST     ABSTAIN
    / /       / /         / /

3. Amendment of the amended and restated 1985 Restricted
   Stock Plan to increase by 50,000 shares the number of shares 
   available for issuance pursuant to the plan.   

    FOR     AGAINST     ABSTAIN
    / /       / /         / /

4. Approval of the material terms of the performance goals as
   described in the Proxy Statement.

    FOR     AGAINST     ABSTAIN
    / /       / /         / /

5. In their discretion on any other matter that may properly come   
   before the meeting or any adjournment thereof.

Please date, sign exactly as shown hereon and mail promptly this proxy
in the enclosed envelope. When there is more than one owner, each 
should sign. When signing as an attorney, administrator, executor, 
guardian or trustee, please add your title as such. If executed by a 
corporation or trustee, the proxy should be signed by a duly authorized
officer. If executed by a partnership, please sign in the partnership 
name by an authorized person.

Signature __________________________________  Date _______________________
Signature __________________________________  Date _______________________


             This proxy may be revoked prior to the 
         exercise of the powers conferred by the proxy.




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