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UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
Form 10-K
 
     
(Mark One)    
þ
  ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
    For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009
or
o
  TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
    For the transition period from          to
 
Commission file no. 1-7615
Kirby Corporation
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
 
     
Nevada   74-1884980
(State or other jurisdiction of
incorporation or organization)
  (I.R.S. Employer
Identification No.)
     
55 Waugh Drive, Suite 1000
Houston, Texas
(Address of principal executive offices)
  77007
(Zip Code)
 
Registrant’s telephone number, including area code:
(713) 435-1000
 
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
 
     
Title of Each Class
 
Name of Each Exchange on Which Registered
 
Common Stock — $.10 Par Value Per Share
  New York Stock Exchange
 
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:
None
 
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act.  Yes þ     No o
 
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Exchange Act.  Yes o     No þ
 
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.  Yes þ     No o
 
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically and posted on its corporate Web site, if any, every Interactive Data File required to be submitted and posted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit and post such files).  Yes o     No o
 
Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 of Regulation S-K is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the best of the registrant’s knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K.  o
 
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer” and “smaller reporting company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act. (Check one):
 
             
Large accelerated filer þ
  Accelerated filer o   Non-accelerated filer o   Smaller reporting company o
        (Do not check if a smaller reporting company)    
 
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).  Yes o     No þ
 
The aggregate market value of common stock held by nonaffiliates of the registrant as of June 30, 2009, based on the closing sales price of such stock on the New York Stock Exchange on June 30, 2009 was $1,624,291,000. For purposes of this computation, all executive officers, directors and 10% beneficial owners of the registrant are deemed to be affiliates. Such determination should not be deemed an admission that such executive officers, directors and 10% beneficial owners are affiliates.
 
As of February 26, 2010, 54,011,000 shares of common stock were outstanding.
 
DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
 
The Company’s definitive proxy statement in connection with the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held April 27, 2010, to be filed with the Commission pursuant to Regulation 14A, is incorporated by reference into Part III of this report.
 


TABLE OF CONTENTS

PART I
Item 1. Business
THE COMPANY
Documents and Information Available on Web Site
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY
MARINE TRANSPORTATION
Marine Transportation Industry Fundamentals
Inland Tank Barge Industry
Competition in the Inland Tank Barge Industry
Marine Transportation Acquisitions
Products Transported
Demand Drivers in the Inland Tank Barge Industry
Marine Transportation Operations
Contracts and Customers
Employees
Properties
Governmental Regulations
Environmental Regulations
DIESEL ENGINE SERVICES
Diesel Engine Services Acquisitions
Marine Operations
Marine Customers
Marine Competitive Conditions
Power Generation Operations
Power Generation Customers
Power Generation Competitive Conditions
Railroad Operations
Railroad Customers
Railroad Competitive Conditions
Employees
Properties
Executive Officers of the Registrant
Item 1A. Risk Factors
Item 1B. Unresolved Staff Comments
Item 2. Properties
Item 3. Legal Proceedings
Item 4. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders
PART II
Item 5. Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities
Item 6. Selected Financial Data
Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk
Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data
Item 9. Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure
Item 9A. Controls and Procedures
PART III
Items 10 Through 14.
EX-10.7
EX-21.1
EX-23.1
EX-31.1
EX-31.2
EX-32


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PART I
 
Item 1.   Business
 
THE COMPANY
 
Kirby Corporation (the “Company”) was incorporated in Nevada on January 31, 1969 as a subsidiary of Kirby Industries, Inc. (“Industries”). The Company became publicly owned on September 30, 1976 when its common stock was distributed pro rata to the stockholders of Industries in connection with the liquidation of Industries. At that time, the Company was engaged in oil and gas exploration and production, marine transportation and property and casualty insurance. Since then, through a series of acquisitions and divestitures, the Company has become primarily a marine transportation and diesel engine services company and is no longer engaged in the oil and gas or the property and casualty insurance businesses. In 1990, the name of the Company was changed from “Kirby Exploration Company, Inc.” to “Kirby Corporation” because of the changing emphasis of its business.
 
Unless the context otherwise requires, all references herein to the Company include the Company and its subsidiaries.
 
The Company’s principal executive office is located at 55 Waugh Drive, Suite 1000, Houston, Texas 77007, and its telephone number is (713) 435-1000. The Company’s mailing address is P.O. Box 1745, Houston, Texas 77251-1745.
 
Documents and Information Available on Web Site
 
The Internet address of the Company’s web site is www.kirbycorp.com. The Company makes available free of charge through its web site, all of its filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), including its annual report on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current reports on Form 8-K and amendments to those reports, as soon as reasonably practicable after they are electronically filed with or furnished to the SEC.
 
The following documents are available on the Company’s web site in the Investor Relations section under Corporate Governance:
 
  •  Audit Committee Charter
 
  •  Compensation Committee Charter
 
  •  Governance Committee Charter
 
  •  Business Ethics Guidelines
 
  •  Corporate Governance Guidelines
 
The Company is required to make prompt disclosure of any amendment to or waiver of any provision of its Business Ethics Guidelines that applies to any director or executive officer or to its chief executive officer, chief financial officer, chief accounting officer or controller or persons performing similar functions. The Company will make any such disclosure that may be necessary by posting the disclosure on its web site in the Investor Relations section under Corporate Governance.
 
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY
 
The Company, through its subsidiaries, conducts operations in two business segments: marine transportation and diesel engine services.
 
The Company’s marine transportation segment is engaged in the inland transportation of petrochemicals, black oil products, refined petroleum products and agricultural chemicals by tank barges, and, to a lesser extent, the offshore transportation of dry-bulk cargoes by barge. The segment is a provider of transportation services for its customers and, in almost all cases, does not assume ownership of the products that it transports. All of the segment’s vessels operate under the United States flag and are qualified for domestic trade under the Jones Act.


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The Company’s diesel engine services segment is engaged in the overhaul and repair of medium-speed and high-speed diesel engines and reduction gears, and related parts sales in three distinct markets: the marine market, providing aftermarket service for vessels powered by diesel engines utilized in the various inland and offshore marine industries; the power generation market, providing aftermarket service for diesel engines that provide standby, peak and base load power generation for users of industrial reduction gears and for standby generation components of the nuclear industry; and the railroad market, providing aftermarket service and parts for shortline, industrial, Class II and certain transit railroads.
 
The Company and its marine transportation and diesel engine services segments have approximately 2,675 employees, all of whom are in the United States.
 
The following table sets forth by segment the revenues, operating profits and identifiable assets attributable to the principal activities of the Company for the years indicated (in thousands):
 
                         
    2009     2008     2007  
 
Revenues from unaffiliated customers:
                       
Marine transportation
  $ 881,298     $ 1,095,475     $ 928,834  
Diesel engine services
    200,860       264,679       243,791  
                         
Consolidated revenues
  $ 1,082,158     $ 1,360,154     $ 1,172,625  
                         
Operating profits:
                       
Marine transportation
  $ 208,086     $ 244,866     $ 196,112  
Diesel engine services
    21,005       39,587       37,948  
General corporate expenses
    (12,239 )     (14,099 )     (12,889 )
Impairment of goodwill
    (1,901 )            
Gain (loss) on disposition of assets
    1,079       142       (383 )
                         
      216,030       270,496       220,788  
Equity in earnings of affiliates
    874       134       266  
Other expense
    (266 )     (649 )     (221 )
Interest expense
    (11,080 )     (14,064 )     (20,284 )
                         
Earnings before taxes on income
  $ 205,558     $ 255,917     $ 200,549  
                         
Identifiable assets:
                       
Marine transportation
  $ 1,336,358     $ 1,289,689     $ 1,199,869  
Diesel engine services
    185,573       208,993       213,062  
                         
      1,521,931       1,498,682       1,412,931  
Investment in affiliates
    3,052       2,056       1,921  
General corporate assets
    110,980       25,360       15,623  
                         
Consolidated assets
  $ 1,635,963     $ 1,526,098     $ 1,430,475  
                         


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MARINE TRANSPORTATION
 
The marine transportation segment is primarily a provider of transportation services by barge for the inland and offshore markets. As of February 26, 2010, the equipment owned or operated by the marine transportation segment consisted of 863 active inland tank barges, 213 active inland towboats, four offshore dry-cargo barges, four offshore tugboats and one offshore shifting tugboat with the following specifications and capacities:
 
                         
    Number
    Average age
    Barrel
 
Class of equipment
  in class     (in years)     capacities  
 
Inland tank barges:
                       
Active:
                       
Regular double hull:
                       
20,000 barrels and under
    373       25.6       4,327,000  
Over 20,000 barrels
    407       16.6       11,198,000  
Specialty double hull
    83       34.6       1,205,000  
                         
Total active inland tank barges
    863       22.2       16,730,000  
                         
Inactive
    4       43.8       64,000  
                         
Inland towboats:
                       
Active (owned and chartered):
                       
Less than 800 horsepower
    1       41.0          
800 to 1300 horsepower
    96       32.3          
1400 to 1900 horsepower
    74       28.4          
2000 to 2400 horsepower
    18       19.7          
2500 to 3200 horsepower
    13       36.2          
3300 to 4900 horsepower
    9       33.0          
Greater than 5000 horsepower
    1       45.0          
Spot charters (chartered trip to trip)
    1                
                         
Total active inland towboats
    213       30.3          
                         
Inactive
    15       31.2          
                         
 
                         
            Deadweight
            Tonnage
 
Offshore dry-cargo barges
    4       29.9       70,000  
                         
Offshore tugboats and shifting tugboat
    5       32.7          
                         
 
The 213 active inland towboats, four offshore tugboats and one offshore shifting tugboat provide the power source and the 863 active inland tank barges and four offshore dry-cargo barges provide the freight capacity. When the power source and freight capacity are combined, the unit is called a tow. The Company’s inland tows generally consist of one towboat and from one to 25 tank barges, depending upon the horsepower of the towboat, the river or canal capacity and conditions, and customer requirements. The Company’s offshore tows consist of one tugboat and one dry-cargo barge.
 
Marine Transportation Industry Fundamentals
 
The United States inland waterway system, composed of a network of interconnected rivers and canals that serve the nation as water highways, is one of the world’s most efficient transportation systems. The nation’s waterways are vital to the United States distribution system, with over 1.1 billion short tons of cargo moved annually on United States shallow draft waterways. The inland waterway system extends approximately 26,000 miles, 12,000 miles of which are generally considered significant for domestic commerce, through 38 states, with 635 shallow draft ports. These navigable inland waterways link the United States heartland to the world.


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Based on cost and safety, inland barge transportation is often the most efficient and safest means of transporting bulk commodities compared with railroads and trucks. The cargo capacity of a 90,000 barrel three barge tow is the equivalent of 150 railroad tank cars or 470 tractor-trailer tank trucks. A typical Company lower Mississippi River linehaul tow of 15 barges has the carrying capacity of approximately 260 railroad tank cars or approximately 825 tractor-trailer tank trucks. The 260 railroad tank cars would require a freight train approximately 23/4 miles long and the 825 tractor-trailer tank trucks would stretch approximately 35 miles, assuming a safety margin of 150 feet between the trucks. The Company’s active tank barge fleet capacity of 16.7 million barrels equates to approximately 27,900 railroad tank cars or approximately 87,400 tractor-trailer tank trucks. In addition, studies comparing inland water transportation to railroads and trucks have proven shallow draft water transportation to be the most energy efficient and environmentally friendly method of moving bulk materials. One ton of bulk product can be carried 576 miles by inland barge on one gallon of fuel, compared with 413 miles by railroad or 155 miles by truck.
 
Inland barge transportation is also one of the safest modes of transportation in the United States. It generally involves less urban exposure than railroad or truck. It operates on a system with few crossing junctures and in areas relatively remote from population centers. These factors generally reduce both the number and impact of waterway incidents.
 
Inland Tank Barge Industry
 
The Company’s marine transportation segment operates within the United States inland tank barge industry, a diverse and independent mixture of large integrated transportation companies and small operators, as well as captive fleets owned by United States refining and petrochemical companies. The inland tank barge industry provides marine transportation of bulk liquid cargoes for customers and, in the case of captives, for their own account, along the Mississippi River and its tributaries and the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway. The most significant markets in this industry include the transportation of petrochemicals, black oil products, refined petroleum products and agricultural chemicals. The Company operates in each of these markets. The use of marine transportation by the petroleum and petrochemical industry is a major reason for the location of United States refineries and petrochemical facilities on navigable inland waterways. Texas and Louisiana currently account for approximately 80% of the United States production of petrochemicals. Much of the United States farm belt is likewise situated with access to the inland waterway system, relying on marine transportation of farm products, including agricultural chemicals. The Company’s principal distribution system encompasses the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway from Brownsville, Texas, to Port St. Joe, Florida, the Mississippi River System and the Houston Ship Channel. The Mississippi River System includes the Arkansas, Illinois, Missouri, Ohio, Red, Tennessee, Yazoo, Ouachita and Black Warrior Rivers and the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway.
 
The number of tank barges that operate on the inland waterways of the United States declined from approximately 4,200 in 1982 to approximately 2,900 in 1993, remained relatively constant at 2,900 until 2002, decreased to 2,750 from 2002 through 2006 and increased to approximately 3,050 by the end of 2008 and an estimated 3,100 by the end of 2009. The Company believes the decrease from 4,200 in 1982 to 2,750 in 2006 primarily resulted from: the increasing age of the domestic tank barge fleet, resulting in scrapping; rates inadequate to justify new construction; a reduction in tax incentives, which previously encouraged speculative construction of new equipment; stringent operating standards to adequately cope with safety and environmental risk; the elimination of government regulations and programs supporting the many new small refineries and a proliferation of oil traders which created a strong demand for tank barge services; an increase in the average capacity per barge; and an increase in environmental regulations that mandate expensive equipment modification, which some owners were unwilling or unable to undertake given capital constraints and the age of their fleets. The cost of tank barge hull work for required periodic United States Coast Guard (“USCG”) certifications, as well as general safety and environmental concerns, force operators to periodically reassess their ability to recover maintenance costs. The increase from 2,750 in 2006 to an estimated 3,100 by the end of 2009 primarily resulted from increased barge construction and deferred retirements due to strong demand and resulting capacity shortages through the 2008 third quarter.
 
From 2003 through 2006, the Company believes that new tank barge construction approximated retirements. During 2007 and 2008, sustained favorable market conditions stimulated additional new capacity. During the first


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nine months of 2008 and prior to the deterioration of the marine transportation markets in the 2008 fourth quarter, the Company and many competitors signed tank barge construction contracts with shipyards for 2009 deliveries. During 2009, the Company estimated that between 180 to 200 new tank barges were delivered and placed in service, with an estimated 130 tank barges retired; however, the current reduction of petrochemical and refining production has resulted in excess barge capacity, lower utilization and the acceleration of the retirement of older barges. Weaker market conditions may constrain industry wide new barge orders for 2010 and the retirement of older barges may be further accelerated. Also decreasing the risk of an oversupply of barges is the fact that the tank barge industry has a mature fleet, with approximately 925 tank barges over 30 years old and 500 of those over 35 years old, which may lead to early retirement of some older tank barges.
 
The average age of the nation’s tank barge fleet is 22 years, with 26% of the fleet built in the last 10 years. Single hull barges comprise approximately 2% of the nation’s tank barge fleet, with an average age of 37 years. Single hull barges are being driven from the nation’s tank barge fleet by market forces, stringent environmental regulations and rising maintenance costs. Single hull tank barges are required by current federal law to be retrofitted with double hulls or phased out of domestic service by 2015. Due to a market bias against single hull tank barges, the Company retired its nine remaining single hull tank barges in 2009. Market bias and current weak market conditions may also result in reduced lives for single hull tank barges industry wide.
 
The Company’s marine transportation segment is also engaged in offshore dry-cargo barge operations transporting dry-bulk cargoes. Such cargoes are transported primarily between domestic ports along the Gulf of Mexico.
 
The Company’s marine transportation segment also owns a two-thirds interest in Osprey Line, L.L.C. (“Osprey”), transporter of project cargoes and cargo containers by barge on the United States inland waterway system.
 
Competition in the Inland Tank Barge Industry
 
The inland tank barge industry remains very competitive. Competition in this business has historically been based primarily on price; however, the industry’s customers, through an increased emphasis on safety, the environment, quality and a trend toward a “single source” supply of services, are more frequently requiring that their supplier of inland tank barge services have the capability to handle a variety of tank barge requirements, offer distribution capability throughout the inland waterway system, and offer flexibility, safety, environmental responsibility, financial responsibility, adequate insurance and quality of service consistent with the customer’s own operational standards.
 
The Company’s direct competitors are primarily noncaptive inland tank barge operators. “Captive” fleets are owned by major oil and/or petrochemical companies which occasionally compete in the inland tank barge market, but primarily transport cargoes for their own account. The Company is the largest inland tank barge carrier, both in terms of number of barges and total fleet barrel capacity. The Company’s inland tank barge fleet has grown from 71 tank barges in 1988 to 863 active tank barges as of February 26, 2010. It currently operates approximately 28% of the total number of domestic inland tank barges.
 
While the Company competes primarily with other tank barge companies, it also competes with companies who operate refined product and petrochemical pipelines, railroad tank cars and tractor-trailer tank trucks. As noted above, the Company believes that inland marine transportation of bulk liquid products of adequate volume enjoys a substantial cost advantage over railroad and truck transportation. The Company believes that refined product and petrochemical pipelines, although often a less expensive form of transportation than inland tank barges, are not as adaptable to diverse products and are generally limited to fixed point-to-point distribution of commodities in high volumes over extended periods of time.
 
Marine Transportation Acquisitions
 
On March 18, 2008, the Company purchased six inland tank barges from OFS Marine One, Inc. (“ORIX”) for $1,800,000 in cash. The Company had been leasing the barges from ORIX prior to their purchase.


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On October 1, 2007, the Company purchased nine inland tank barges from Siemens Financial, Inc. (“Siemens”) for $4,500,000 in cash. The Company had been leasing the barges since 1994 when the leases were assigned to the Company as part of the Company’s purchase of the tank barge fleet of The Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”).
 
On January 3, 2007, the Company purchased the stock of Coastal Towing, Inc. (“Coastal”), the owner of 37 inland tank barges, for $19,474,000 in cash. The Company had been operating the Coastal tank barges since October 2002 under a barge management agreement.
 
On January 2, 2007, the Company purchased 21 inland tank barges from Cypress Barge Leasing, LLC (“Cypress”) for $14,965,000 in cash. The Company had been leasing the barges since 1994 when the leases were assigned to the Company as part of the Company’s purchase of the tank barge fleet of Dow.
 
Products Transported
 
During 2009, the Company’s marine transportation segment moved over 48 million tons of liquid cargo on the United States inland waterway system. Products transported for its customers comprised the following: petrochemicals, black oil products, refined petroleum products and agricultural chemicals.
 
Petrochemicals.  Bulk liquid petrochemicals transported include such products as benzene, styrene, methanol, acrylonitrile, xylene and caustic soda, all consumed in the production of paper, fibers and plastics. Pressurized products, including butadiene, isobutane, propylene, butane and propane, all requiring pressurized conditions to remain in stable liquid form, are transported in pressure barges. The transportation of petrochemical products represented approximately 68% of the segment’s 2009 revenues. Customers shipping these products are refining and petrochemical companies.
 
Black Oil Products.  Black oil products transported include such products as asphalt, residual fuel oil, No. 6 fuel oil, coker feedstock, vacuum gas oil, carbon black feedstock, crude oil and ship bunkers (ship engine fuel). Such products represented approximately 19% of the segment’s 2009 revenues. Black oil customers are refining companies, marketers and end users that require the transportation of black oil products between refineries and storage terminals. Ship bunkers customers are oil companies and oil traders in the bunkering business.
 
Refined Petroleum Products.  Refined petroleum products transported include the various blends of finished gasoline, jet fuel, No. 2 oil, naphtha, heating oil and diesel fuel, and represented approximately 9% of the segment’s 2009 revenues. Customers are oil and refining companies and marketers.
 
Agricultural Chemicals.  Agricultural chemicals transported represented approximately 4% of the segment’s 2009 revenues. They include anhydrous ammonia and nitrogen-based liquid fertilizer, as well as industrial ammonia. Agricultural chemical customers consist mainly of domestic and foreign producers of such products.
 
Demand Drivers in the Inland Tank Barge Industry
 
Demand for inland tank barge transportation services is driven by the production volumes of the bulk liquid commodities transported by barge. Demand for inland marine transportation of the segment’s four primary commodity groups, petrochemicals, black oil products, refined petroleum products and agricultural chemicals, is based on differing circumstances. While the demand drivers of each commodity are different, the Company has the flexibility in many cases of re-allocating equipment between the petrochemical and refined products markets as needed.
 
Bulk petrochemical volumes generally track the general domestic economy and correlate to the United States Gross Domestic Product. Volumes also track the production volumes of United States petrochemical plants whose products may also be exported. These products are used primarily in consumer durable and non-durable goods. The other component of petrochemical production consists of gasoline blending components, the demand for which closely parallels United States gasoline consumption.
 
The demand for black oil products, including ship bunkers, varies with the type of product transported. Demand for transportation of residual oil, a heavy by-product of refining operations, varies with refinery utilization. Asphalt shipments are generally seasonal, with higher volumes shipped during April through November, months when weather allows for efficient road construction. Carbon black feedstock shipments generally track the general


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domestic economy and are used in the production of automobiles and related parts, and in housing applications. Other black oil shipments are more constant and service the United States oil refineries.
 
Refined petroleum products volumes are driven by United States gasoline consumption, principally vehicle usage, air travel and weather conditions. Volumes also relate to gasoline inventory imbalances within the United States. Generally, gasoline and No. 2 oil are exported from the Gulf Coast where refining capacity exceeds demand. The Midwest is a net importer of such products. Demand for tank barge transportation from the Gulf Coast to the Midwest region can also be impacted by the gasoline price differential between the Gulf Coast and the Midwest.
 
Demand for marine transportation of agricultural fertilizer is directly related to domestic nitrogen-based liquid fertilizer consumption, driven by the production of corn, cotton and wheat. The manufacturing of nitrogen-based liquid fertilizer in the United States is curtailed significantly in periods of high natural gas prices. During these periods, imported products, which normally involve longer barge trips, replace the domestic products to meet Midwest and south Texas demands. Such products are delivered to the numerous small terminals and distributors throughout the United States farm belt.
 
Marine Transportation Operations
 
The marine transportation segment operates a fleet of 863 active inland tank barges and 213 active inland towboats. The segment also owns and operates four offshore dry-cargo barges, four offshore tugboats and one offshore shifting tugboat, and a small bulk liquid terminal.
 
Inland Operations.  The segment’s inland operations are conducted through a wholly owned subsidiary, Kirby Inland Marine, LP (“Kirby Inland Marine”). Kirby Inland Marine’s operations consist of the Canal, Linehaul and River fleets, as well as barge fleeting services.
 
The Canal fleet transports petrochemical feedstocks, processed chemicals, pressurized products, black oil products and refined petroleum products along the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway, the Mississippi River below Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and the Houston Ship Channel. Petrochemical feedstocks and certain pressurized products are transported from one refinery to another refinery for further processing. Processed chemicals and certain pressurized products are moved to waterfront terminals and chemical plants. Certain black oil products are transported to waterfront terminals and products such as No. 6 fuel oil are transported directly to the end users. Refined petroleum products are transported to waterfront terminals along the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway for distribution.
 
The Linehaul fleet transports petrochemical feedstocks, processed chemicals, agricultural chemicals and lube oils along the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway, Mississippi River and the Illinois and Ohio Rivers. Loaded tank barges are staged in the Baton Rouge area from Gulf Coast refineries and petrochemical plants, and are transported from Baton Rouge to waterfront terminals and plants on the Mississippi, Illinois and Ohio Rivers, and along the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway, on regularly scheduled linehaul tows. Barges are dropped off and picked up going up and down river.
 
The River fleet transports petrochemical feedstocks, processed chemicals, refined petroleum products, agricultural chemicals and black oil products along the Mississippi River System above Baton Rouge. Petrochemical feedstocks and processed chemicals are transported to waterfront petrochemical and chemical plants, while black oil products, refined petroleum products and agricultural chemicals are transported to waterfront terminals. The River fleet operates unit tows, where a towboat and generally a dedicated group of barges operate on consecutive voyages between loading and discharge points.
 
The transportation of petrochemical feedstocks, processed chemicals and pressurized products is generally consistent throughout the year. Transportation of refined petroleum products, certain black oil products and agricultural chemicals is generally more seasonal. Movements of black oil products, such as asphalt, generally increase in the spring through fall months. Movements of refined petroleum products, such as gasoline blends, generally increase during the summer driving season, while heating oil movements generally increase during the winter months. Movements of agricultural chemicals generally increase during the spring and fall planting seasons.


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The marine transportation segment moves and handles a broad range of sophisticated cargoes. To meet the specific requirements of the cargoes transported, the tank barges may be equipped with self-contained heating systems, high-capacity pumps, pressurized tanks, refrigeration units, stainless steel tanks, aluminum tanks or specialty coated tanks. Of the 863 active tank barges currently operated, 665 are petrochemical and refined products barges, 118 are black oil barges, 64 are pressure barges, 11 are refrigerated anhydrous ammonia barges and 5 are specialty barges. Of the 863 active tank barges, 814 are owned by the Company and 49 are leased.
 
The fleet of 213 active inland towboats ranges from 600 to 5,600 horsepower. Of the 213 active inland towboats, 164 are owned by the Company and 49 are chartered. Towboats in the 600 to 1900 horsepower classes provide power for barges used by the Canal and Linehaul fleets on the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway and the Houston Ship Channel. Towboats in the 1400 to 6000 horsepower classes provide power for both the River and Linehaul fleets on the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway and the Mississippi River System. Towboats above 3600 horsepower are typically used on the Mississippi River System to move River fleet unit tows and provide Linehaul fleet towing. Based on the capabilities of the individual towboats used in the Mississippi River System, the tows range in size from 10,000 to 30,000 tons.
 
Marine transportation services are conducted under long-term contracts, ranging from one to five years with renewal options, with customers with whom the Company has traditionally had long-standing relationships, as well as under spot contracts. During the first nine months of 2009 and the 2008 year, approximately 80% of marine transportation revenues were derived from term contracts and 20% from spot contracts. During the 2009 fourth quarter, approximately 75% of marine transportation revenues were from term contracts and 25% from spot contracts. This decrease in term contract revenue mix was due to certain customers switching to spot contracts when their term contracts expired.
 
Inland tank barges used in the transportation of petrochemicals are of double hull construction and, where applicable, are capable of controlling vapor emissions during loading and discharging operations in compliance with occupational health and safety regulations and air quality concerns.
 
The marine transportation segment is one of the few inland tank barge operators with the ability to offer to its customers distribution capabilities throughout the Mississippi River System and the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway. Such distribution capabilities offer economies of scale resulting from the ability to match tank barges, towboats, products and destinations more efficiently.
 
Through the Company’s proprietary vessel management computer system, the fleet of barges and towboats is dispatched from centralized dispatch at the corporate office. The towboats are equipped with satellite positioning and communication systems that automatically transmit the location of the towboat to the Company’s traffic department located in its corporate office. Electronic orders are communicated to the vessel personnel, with reports of towing activities communicated electronically back to the traffic department. The electronic interface between the traffic department and the vessel personnel enables more effective matching of customer needs to barge capabilities, thereby maximizing utilization of the tank barge and towboat fleet. The Company’s customers are able to access information concerning the movement of their cargoes, including barge locations, through the Company’s web site.
 
Kirby Inland Marine operates the largest commercial tank barge fleeting service (temporary barge storage facilities) in numerous ports, including Houston, Corpus Christi and Freeport, Texas, and in numerous ports on the Mississippi River, including Baton Rouge and New Orleans, Louisiana. Kirby Inland Marine provides service for its own barges, as well as outside customers, transferring barges within the areas noted, as well as fleeting barges.
 
Kirby Logistics Management Division (“KLM”) provides shore tankering services for barge transfers, marine dock operations, railroad tank car and tank truck loading and unloading, tank farm operations, and other ancillary functions, including railroad switching operations. KLM services the Company and third parties. KLM serves three regional areas; the Gulf Coast region (Brownsville, Texas, to Pensacola, Florida); the Mississippi River region (Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to Memphis, Tennessee); and the Ohio Valley region (Paducah, Kentucky, to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania). During 2009, approximately 120 KLM tankermen conducted more than 22,700 barge transfers and provided approximately 70 operators for in-plant services for petrochemical companies, refineries and terminal operators.


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The Company owns a two-thirds interest in Osprey, which transports project cargoes and cargo containers by barge on the United States inland waterway system.
 
Offshore Operations.  The segment’s offshore operations are conducted through a wholly owned subsidiary, Kirby Ocean Transport Company (“Kirby Ocean Transport”). Kirby Ocean Transport owns and operates a fleet of four ocean-going dry-bulk barges, four ocean-going tugboats and one offshore shifting tugboat. Kirby Ocean Transport operates primarily under term contracts of affreightment, including a contract that expires in 2015 with Progress Fuels Corporation (“PFC”) to transport coal across the Gulf of Mexico to PFC’s power generation facility at Crystal River, Florida.
 
Kirby Ocean Transport also has a long-term contract with Holcim (US) Inc. (“Holcim”) to transport Holcim’s limestone requirements from a facility adjacent to the PFC facility at Crystal River to Holcim’s plant in Theodore, Alabama. The Holcim contract, which expires in 2012, provides cargo for a portion of the return voyage for the vessels that carry coal to PFC’s Crystal River facility. Kirby Ocean Transport is also engaged in the transportation of coal, fertilizer and other bulk cargoes on a short-term basis between domestic ports and occasionally the transportation of grain from domestic ports to ports primarily in the Caribbean Basin.
 
Contracts and Customers
 
Marine transportation services are conducted under term contracts, ranging from one to five years with renewal options, with customers whom the Company has traditionally had long-standing relationships, as well as under spot contracts. The majority of the marine transportation contracts with its customers are for terms of one year. Most have been customers of the Company’s marine transportation segment for several years and management anticipates continued relationships; however, there is no assurance that any individual contract will be renewed.
 
A term contract is an agreement with a specific customer to transport cargo from a designated origin to a designated destination at a set rate (affreightment) or at a daily rate (time charter). The rate may or may not escalate during the term of the contract; however, the base rate generally remains constant and contracts often include escalation provisions to recover changes in specific costs such as fuel. Time charters, which insulate the Company from revenue fluctuations caused by weather and navigational delays and temporary market declines, represented approximately 56% of the revenue under term contracts during 2009 and 2008. A spot contract is an agreement with a customer to move cargo from a specific origin to a designated destination for a rate negotiated at the time the cargo movement takes place. Spot contract rates are at the current “market” rate and are subject to market volatility. The Company typically maintains a higher mix of term contracts to spot contracts to provide the Company with a predictable revenue stream while maintaining spot market exposure to take advantage of new business opportunities and existing customers’ peak demands. During the first nine months of 2009 and the 2008 year, approximately 80% of marine transportation revenues were derived from term contracts and 20% from spot contracts. During the 2009 fourth quarter, approximately 75% of marine transportation revenues were from term contracts and 25% from spot contracts. This decrease in term contract revenue mix was due to certain customers switching to spot contracts when their term contracts expired.
 
SeaRiver Maritime, Inc. (“SeaRiver”), the United States transportation affiliate of Exxon Mobil Corporation, with which the Company has a contract through 2013, including renewal options, accounted for 10% of the Company’s revenues in 2009, 2008 and 2007. Dow, with which the Company has a contract through 2016, including renewal options, accounted for 11% of the Company’s revenues in 2009, 9% in 2008 and 10% in 2007.
 
Employees
 
The Company’s marine transportation segment has approximately 2,050 employees, of which approximately 1,400 are vessel crew members. None of the segment’s operations are subject to collective bargaining agreements.
 
Properties
 
The principal office of Kirby Inland Marine, Kirby Ocean Transport and Osprey is located in Houston, Texas, in the Company’s facilities under a lease that expires in December 2015. Kirby Inland Marine’s operating locations are on the Mississippi River at Baton Rouge, Louisiana, New Orleans, Louisiana, and Greenville, Mississippi, two locations in Houston, Texas, on and near the Houston Ship Channel, and one in Corpus Christi, Texas. The New Orleans and Houston facilities are owned, and the Baton Rouge, Greenville and Corpus Christi facilities are leased.


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KLM’s principal office is located in a facility owned by Kirby Inland Marine in Houston, Texas, near the Houston Ship Channel.
 
Governmental Regulations
 
General.  The Company’s marine transportation operations are subject to regulation by the USCG, federal laws, state laws and certain international conventions.
 
Most of the Company’s inland tank barges are inspected by the USCG and carry certificates of inspection. The Company’s inland and offshore towing vessels and offshore dry-bulk barges are not currently subject to USCG inspection requirements; however, regulations are currently under development that would subject inland and offshore towing vessels to USCG inspection requirements. The Company’s offshore towing vessels and offshore dry-bulk barges are built to American Bureau of Shipping (“ABS”) classification standards and are inspected periodically by ABS to maintain the vessels in class. The crews employed by the Company aboard vessels, including captains, pilots, engineers, tankermen and ordinary seamen, are licensed by the USCG.
 
The Company is required by various governmental agencies to obtain licenses, certificates and permits for its vessels depending upon such factors as the cargo transported, the waters in which the vessels operate and other factors. The Company is of the opinion that the Company’s vessels have obtained and can maintain all required licenses, certificates and permits required by such governmental agencies for the foreseeable future.
 
The Company believes that additional security and environmental related regulations may be imposed on the marine industry in the form of contingency planning requirements. Generally, the Company endorses the anticipated additional regulations and believes it is currently operating to standards at least the equal of such anticipated additional regulations.
 
Jones Act.  The Jones Act is a federal cabotage law that restricts domestic marine transportation in the United States to vessels built and registered in the United States, manned by United States citizens, and owned and operated by United States citizens. For a corporation to qualify as United States citizens for the purpose of domestic trade, 75% of the corporation’s beneficial stockholders must be United States citizens. The Company presently meets all of the requirements of the Jones Act for its owned vessels.
 
Compliance with United States ownership requirements of the Jones Act is important to the operations of the Company, and the loss of Jones Act status could have a significant negative effect on the Company. The Company monitors the citizenship requirements under the Jones Act of its employees and beneficial stockholders, and will take action as necessary to ensure compliance with the Jones Act requirements.
 
User Taxes.  Federal legislation requires that inland marine transportation companies pay a user tax based on propulsion fuel used by vessels engaged in trade along the inland waterways that are maintained by the United States Army Corps of Engineers. Such user taxes are designed to help defray the costs associated with replacing major components of the inland waterway system, such as locks and dams. A significant portion of the inland waterways on which the Company’s vessels operate is maintained by the Army Corps of Engineers.
 
The Company presently pays a federal fuel tax of 20.1 cents per gallon consisting of a .1 cent per gallon leaking underground storage tank tax and a 20 cents per gallon waterway user tax.
 
Security Requirements.  The Maritime Transportation Security Act of 2002 requires, among other things, submission to and approval by the USCG of vessel and waterfront facility security plans (“VSP” and “FSP”, respectively). The Company’s VSP and FSP have been approved and the Company is operating in compliance with the plans for all of its vessels and facilities that are subject to the requirements.
 
Environmental Regulations
 
The Company’s operations are affected by various regulations and legislation enacted for protection of the environment by the United States government, as well as many coastal and inland waterway states.
 
Water Pollution Regulations.  The Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1972, as amended by the Clean Water Act of 1977, the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act of 1981


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(“CERCLA”) and the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (“OPA”) impose strict prohibitions against the discharge of oil and its derivatives or hazardous substances into the navigable waters of the United States. These acts impose civil and criminal penalties for any prohibited discharges and impose substantial strict liability for cleanup of these discharges and any associated damages. Certain states also have water pollution laws that prohibit discharges into waters that traverse the state or adjoin the state, and impose civil and criminal penalties and liabilities similar in nature to those imposed under federal laws.
 
The OPA and various state laws of similar intent substantially increased over historic levels the statutory liability of owners and operators of vessels for oil spills, both in terms of limit of liability and scope of damages.
 
One of the most important requirements under the OPA is that all newly constructed tank barges engaged in the transportation of oil and petroleum in the United States be double hulled, and all existing single hull tank barges be retrofitted with double hulls or phased out of domestic service by 2015.
 
The Company manages its exposure to losses from potential discharges of pollutants through the use of well maintained and equipped vessels, the safety, training and environmental programs of the Company, and the Company’s insurance program. In addition, the Company’s fleet consists entirely of double hull barges. There can be no assurance, however, that any new regulations or requirements or any discharge of pollutants by the Company will not have an adverse effect on the Company.
 
Financial Responsibility Requirement.  Commencing with the Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1972, as amended, vessels over 300 gross tons operating in the Exclusive Economic Zone of the United States have been required to maintain evidence of financial ability to satisfy statutory liabilities for oil and hazardous substance water pollution. This evidence is in the form of a Certificate of Financial Responsibility (“COFR”) issued by the USCG. The majority of the Company’s tank barges are subject to this COFR requirement, and the Company has fully complied with this requirement since its inception. The Company does not foresee any current or future difficulty in maintaining the COFR certificates under current rules.
 
Clean Air Regulations.  The Federal Clean Air Act of 1979 requires states to draft State Implementation Plans (“SIPs”) designed to reduce atmospheric pollution to levels mandated by this act. Several SIPs provide for the regulation of barge loading and discharging emissions. The implementation of these regulations requires a reduction of hydrocarbon emissions released into the atmosphere during the loading of most petroleum products and the degassing and cleaning of barges for maintenance or change of cargo. These regulations require operators who operate in these states to install vapor control equipment on their barges. The Company expects that future emission regulations will be developed and will apply this same technology to many chemicals that are handled by barge. Most of the Company’s barges engaged in the transportation of petrochemicals, chemicals and refined products are already equipped with vapor control systems. Although a risk exists that new regulations could require significant capital expenditures by the Company and otherwise increase the Company’s costs, the Company believes that, based upon the regulations that have been proposed thus far, no material capital expenditures beyond those currently contemplated by the Company and no material increase in costs are likely to be required.
 
Contingency Plan Requirement.  The OPA and several state statutes of similar intent require the majority of the vessels and terminals operated by the Company to maintain approved oil spill contingency plans as a condition of operation. The Company has approved plans that comply with these requirements. The OPA also requires development of regulations for hazardous substance spill contingency plans. The USCG has not yet promulgated these regulations; however, the Company anticipates that they will not be significantly more difficult to comply with than the oil spill plans.
 
Occupational Health Regulations.  The Company’s inspected vessel operations are primarily regulated by the USCG for occupational health standards. Uninspected vessel operations and the Company’s shore personnel are subject to the United States Occupational Safety and Health Administration regulations. The Company believes that it is in compliance with the provisions of the regulations that have been adopted and does not believe that the adoption of any further regulations will impose additional material requirements on the Company. There can be no assurance, however, that claims will not be made against the Company for work related illness or injury, or that the further adoption of health regulations will not adversely affect the Company.


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Insurance.  The Company’s marine transportation operations are subject to the hazards associated with operating vessels carrying large volumes of bulk cargo in a marine environment. These hazards include the risk of loss of or damage to the Company’s vessels, damage to third parties as a result of collision, fire or explosion, loss or contamination of cargo, personal injury of employees and third parties, and pollution and other environmental damages. The Company maintains insurance coverage against these hazards. Risk of loss of or damage to the Company’s vessels is insured through hull insurance currently insuring approximately $1.3 billion in hull values. Liabilities such as collision, cargo, environmental, personal injury and general liability are insured up to $1 billion per occurrence.
 
Environmental Protection.  The Company has a number of programs that were implemented to further its commitment to environmental responsibility in its operations. In addition to internal environmental audits, one such program is environmental audits of barge cleaning vendors principally directed at management of cargo residues and barge cleaning wastes. Others are the participation by the Company in the American Waterways Operators Responsible Carrier program and the American Chemistry Council Responsible Care program, both of which are oriented towards continuously reducing the barge industry’s and chemical and petroleum industries’ impact on the environment, including the distribution services area.
 
Safety.  The Company manages its exposure to the hazards associated with its business through safety, training and preventive maintenance efforts. The Company places considerable emphasis on safety through a program oriented toward extensive monitoring of safety performance for the purpose of identifying trends and initiating corrective action, and for the purpose of rewarding personnel achieving superior safety performance. The Company believes that its safety performance consistently places it among the industry leaders as evidenced by what it believes are lower injury frequency and pollution incident levels than many of its competitors.
 
Training.  The Company believes that among the major elements of a successful and productive work force are effective training programs. The Company also believes that training in the proper performance of a job enhances both the safety and quality of the service provided. New technology, regulatory compliance, personnel safety, quality and environmental concerns create additional demands for training. The Company fully endorses the development and institution of effective training programs.
 
Centralized training is provided through the Operations Personnel and Training Department, which is charged with developing, conducting and maintaining training programs for the benefit of all of the Company’s operating entities. It is also responsible for ensuring that training programs are both consistent and effective. The Company’s training facility includes state-of-the-art equipment and instruction aids, including a working towboat, three tank barges and a tank barge simulator for tankermen training. During 2009, approximately 2,575 certificates were issued for the completion of courses at the training facility.
 
Quality.  The Company has made a substantial commitment to the implementation, maintenance and improvement of Quality Assurance Systems in compliance with the International Quality Standard, ISO 9001. Currently, all of the Company’s marine transportation units have been certified. These Quality Assurance Systems have enabled both shore and vessel personnel to effectively manage the changes which occur in the working environment. In addition, such Quality Assurance Systems have enhanced the Company’s already excellent safety and environmental performance.


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DIESEL ENGINE SERVICES
 
The Company is engaged in the overhaul and repair of medium-speed and high-speed diesel engines and reduction gears, and related parts sales through Kirby Engine Systems, Inc. (“Kirby Engine Systems”), a wholly owned subsidiary of the Company, and its three wholly owned operating subsidiaries, Marine Systems, Inc. (“Marine Systems”), Engine Systems, Inc. (“Engine Systems”) and Rail Systems, Inc. (“Rail Systems”). Through these three operating subsidiaries, the Company sells Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEM) replacement parts, provides service mechanics to overhaul and repair engines and reduction gears, and maintains facilities to rebuild component parts or entire engines and entire reduction gears. The Company serves the marine market and standby power generation market throughout the United States and parts of the Caribbean, the shortline, industrial, Class II and certain transit railroad markets throughout the United States, components of the nuclear industry worldwide and to a lesser extent other industrial markets such as cement, paper and mining in the Midwest. No single customer of the diesel engine services segment accounted for more than 10% of the Company’s revenues in 2009, 2008 or 2007. The diesel engine services segment also provides service to the Company’s marine transportation segment, which accounted for approximately 5% of the diesel engine services segment’s 2009 revenues and 3% for 2008 and 2007. Such revenues are eliminated in consolidation and not included in the table below.
 
The following table sets forth the revenues for the diesel engine services segment for the three years ended December 31, 2009 (dollars in thousands):
 
                                                 
    2009     2008     2007  
    Amounts     %     Amounts     %     Amounts     %  
 
Overhaul and repairs
  $ 122,847       61 %   $ 167,196       63 %   $ 158,599       65 %
Direct parts sales
    78,013       39       97,483       37       85,192       35  
                                                 
    $ 200,860       100 %   $ 264,679       100 %   $ 243,791       100 %
                                                 
 
Diesel Engine Services Acquisitions
 
On June 30, 2008, the Company purchased substantially all of the assets of Lake Charles Diesel, Inc. (“Lake Charles Diesel”) for $3,680,000 in cash. Lake Charles Diesel was a Gulf Coast high-speed diesel engine services provider operating factory-authorized full service marine dealerships for Cummins, Detroit Diesel and Volvo engines, as well as an authorized marine dealer for Caterpillar engines in Louisiana.
 
On July 20, 2007, the Company purchased substantially all of the assets of Saunders Engine and Equipment Company, Inc. (“Saunders”) for $13,288,000 in cash and the assumption of $245,000 of debt. Saunders was a Gulf Coast high-speed diesel engine services provider operating factory-authorized full service marine dealerships for Cummins, Detroit Diesel and John Deere engines, as well as an authorized marine dealer for Caterpillar engines in Alabama.
 
On February 23, 2007, the Company purchased the assets of P&S Diesel Service, Inc. (“P&S”) for $1,622,000 in cash. P&S was a Gulf Coast high-speed diesel engine services provider operating as a factory-authorized marine dealer for Caterpillar in Louisiana.
 
On February 13, 2007, the Company purchased from NAK Engineering, Inc. (“NAK Engineering”) for a net $3,540,000 in cash, the assets and technology necessary to support the Nordberg medium-speed diesel engines used in nuclear applications. As part of the transaction, Progress Energy Carolinas, Inc. (“Progress Energy”) and Duke Energy Carolinas, LLC (“Duke Energy”) made payments to the Company for non-exclusive rights to the technology and entered into ten-year exclusive parts and service agreements with the Company. Nordberg engines are used to power emergency diesel generators used in nuclear power plants owned by Progress Energy and Duke Energy.
 
Marine Operations
 
The Company is engaged in the overhaul and repair of medium-speed and high-speed diesel engines and reduction gears, line boring, block welding services and related parts sales for customers in the marine industry. Medium-speed diesel engines have an engine speed of 400 to 1,000 revolutions per minute (“RPM”) with a


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horsepower range of 800 to 32,000. High-speed diesel engines have an engine speed of over 1,000 RPM and a horsepower range of 50 to 8,375. The Company services medium-speed and high-speed diesel engines utilized in the inland and offshore barge industries. It also services marine equipment and offshore drilling equipment used in the offshore petroleum exploration and oil service industry, marine equipment used in the offshore commercial fishing industry and vessels owned by the United States government.
 
The Company has marine operations throughout the United States providing in-house and in-field repair capabilities and related parts sales. The Company’s emphasis is on service to its customers, and it sends its crews from any of its locations to service customers’ equipment anywhere in the world. The medium-speed operations are located in Houma, Louisiana, Chesapeake, Virginia, Paducah, Kentucky, Seattle, Washington and Tampa, Florida. The operations based in Chesapeake, Virginia and Tampa, Florida are authorized distributors for 17 eastern states and the Caribbean for Electro-Motive Diesel, Inc. (“EMD”). The marine operations based in Houma, Louisiana, Paducah, Kentucky and Seattle, Washington are nonexclusive authorized service centers for EMD providing service and related parts sales. All of the marine locations are authorized distributors for Falk Corporation (“Falk”) reduction gears, Oil States Industries, Inc. clutches and Alco engines. The Chesapeake, Virginia operation concentrates on East Coast inland and offshore dry-bulk, tank barge and harbor docking operators, the USCG and United States Navy (“Navy”). The Houma, Louisiana operation concentrates on the inland and offshore barge and oil services industries. The Tampa, Florida operation concentrates on Gulf of Mexico offshore dry-bulk, tank barge and harbor docking operators. The Paducah, Kentucky operation concentrates on the inland river towboat and barge operators and the Great Lakes carriers. The Seattle, Washington operation concentrates on the offshore commercial fishing industry, tugboat and barge industry, the USCG and Navy, and other customers in Alaska, Hawaii and the Pacific Rim.
 
The high-speed operations are located in Houma, Baton Rouge, Belle Chasse, Lake Charles, Morgan City and New Iberia, Louisiana, Paducah, Kentucky, Mobile, Alabama and Houston, Texas. The Company serves as a factory-authorized marine dealer for Caterpillar diesel engines in Alabama, Kentucky and Louisiana. The Company also operates factory-authorized full service marine dealerships for Cummins, Detroit Diesel and John Deere diesel engines, as well as Allison and Twin Disk transmissions. High-speed diesel engines provide the main propulsion for approximately 75% of the United States flag commercial vessels and other marine applications, including engines for power generators and barge pumps.
 
Marine Customers
 
The Company’s major marine customers include inland and offshore barge operators, oil service companies, offshore fishing companies, other marine transportation entities, and the USCG and Navy.
 
Since the marine business is linked to the relative health of the diesel power tugboat and towboat industry, the offshore supply boat industry, the oil and gas drilling industry, the military and the offshore commercial fishing industry, there is no assurance that its present gross revenues can be maintained in the future. The results of the diesel engine services industry are largely tied to the industries it serves and, therefore, are influenced by the cycles of such industries.
 
Marine Competitive Conditions
 
The Company’s primary competitors are independent diesel engine services companies and other factory-authorized distributors, authorized service centers and authorized marine dealers. Certain operators of diesel powered marine equipment also elect to maintain in-house service capabilities. While price is a major determinant in the competitive process, reputation, consistent quality, expeditious service, experienced personnel, access to parts inventories and market presence are significant factors. A substantial portion of the Company’s business is obtained by competitive bids. However, the Company has entered into preferential service agreements with certain large operators of diesel powered marine equipment, providing such operators with one source of support and service for all of their requirements at pre-negotiated prices.
 
Many of the parts sold by the Company are generally available from other service providers, but the Company is one of a limited number of authorized resellers of EMD, Caterpillar, Cummins, Detroit Diesel and John Deere


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parts. The Company is also the only marine distributor for Falk reduction gears and the only marine distributor for Alco engines throughout the United States.
 
Power Generation Operations
 
The Company is engaged in the overhaul and repair of diesel engines and reduction gears, line boring, block welding service and related parts sales for power generation customers. The Company is also engaged in the sale and distribution of parts for diesel engines and governors to the nuclear industry. The Company services users of diesel engines that provide standby, peak and base load power generation, as well as users of industrial reduction gears such as the cement, paper and mining industries.
 
The Company provides in-house and in-field repair capabilities and safety-related products to power generation operators from its Rocky Mount, North Carolina, Paducah, Kentucky and Seattle, Washington locations. The operation based in Rocky Mount, North Carolina is an EMD authorized distributor for 17 eastern states and the Caribbean for power generation applications, and provides in-house and in-field service. The Rocky Mount operation is also the exclusive worldwide distributor of EMD products to the nuclear industry, the exclusive worldwide distributor for Woodward Governor (“Woodward”) products to the nuclear industry, the exclusive worldwide distributor of Cooper Energy Services, Inc. (“Cooper”) products to the nuclear industry, and owns the assets and technology necessary to support the Nordberg medium-speed diesel engines used in nuclear applications. In addition, the Rocky Mount operation is a non-exclusive distributor for Honeywell International Incorporated (“Honeywell”) industrial measurement and control products to the nuclear industry, an exclusive distributor for Norlake Manufacturing Company (“Norlake”) transformer products to the nuclear industry and a non-exclusive distributor of analog Weschler Instruments (“Weschler”) metering products and an exclusive distributor of digital Weschler metering products to the nuclear industry. The Paducah, Kentucky operation provides in-house and in-field repair services for Falk industrial reduction gears in the Midwest. The Seattle, Washington operation provides in-house and in-field repair services for Alco engines located on the West Coast and the Pacific Rim.
 
Power Generation Customers
 
The Company’s power generation customers are primarily domestic utilities and the worldwide nuclear power industry.
 
Power Generation Competitive Conditions
 
The Company’s primary competitors are other independent diesel services companies and industrial reduction gear repair companies and manufacturers. While price is a major determinant in the competitive process, reputation, consistent quality, expeditious service, experienced personnel, access to parts inventories and market presence are significant factors. A substantial portion of the Company’s business is obtained by competitive bids. However, the Company has entered into preferential service agreements with certain large operators of diesel powered generation equipment, providing such operators with one source of support and service for all of their requirements at pre-negotiated prices.
 
As noted under Power Generation Operations above, the Company is the exclusive worldwide distributor of EMD, Cooper, Woodward, Nordberg and Norlake parts for the nuclear industry, and non-exclusive distributor for Honeywell and Weschler parts for the nuclear industry. Specific regulations relating to equipment used in nuclear power generation require extensive testing and certification of replacement parts. Non-genuine parts and parts not properly tested and certified cannot be used in nuclear applications.
 
Railroad Operations
 
The Company is engaged in the overhaul and repair of locomotive diesel engines and the sale of replacement parts for locomotives serving shortline, industrial, Class II and certain transit railroads within the continental United States. The Company serves as an exclusive distributor for EMD providing replacement parts, service and support to these markets. EMD is one of the world’s largest manufacturers of diesel-electric locomotives, a position it has held for over 87 years.


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Railroad Customers
 
The Company’s railroad customers are United States shortline, industrial, Class II and transit operators. The shortline and industrial operators are located throughout the United States, and are primarily branch or spur railroad lines that provide the final connection between plants or mines and the major railroad operators. The shortline railroads are independent operators. The plants and mines own the industrial railroads. The Class II railroads are larger regionally operated railroads. The transit railroads are primarily located in larger cities in the Northeast and West Coast of the United States. Transit railroads are operated by cities, states and Amtrak.
 
Railroad Competitive Conditions
 
As an exclusive United States distributor for EMD parts, the Company provides EMD parts sales to the shortline, industrial, Class II and certain transit railroads, as well as providing rebuilt parts and service work. There are several other companies providing service for shortline and industrial locomotives. In addition, the industrial companies, in some cases, provide their own service.
 
Employees
 
Marine Systems, Engine Systems and Rail Systems together have approximately 525 employees.
 
Properties
 
The principal offices of the diesel engine services segment are located in Houma, Louisiana. The Company operates 16 parts and service facilities, with four facilities located in Houma, Louisiana, and one facility each located in Baton Rouge, Belle Chasse, Lake Charles, New Iberia and Morgan City, Louisiana, Mobile, Alabama, Houston, Texas, Chesapeake, Virginia, Rocky Mount, North Carolina, Paducah, Kentucky, Tampa, Florida and Seattle, Washington. All of these facilities are leased except the Houma, Belle Chasse, New Iberia and Morgan City, Louisiana facilities, which are owned by the Company.
 
Executive Officers of the Registrant
 
The executive officers of the Company are as follows:
 
             
Name
 
Age
 
Positions and Offices
 
C. Berdon Lawrence
    67     Chairman of the Board of Directors
Joseph H. Pyne
    62     President, Director and Chief Executive Officer
Norman W. Nolen(1)
    67     Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer
David W. Grzebinski(1)
    48     Executive Vice President - Finance
Gregory R. Binion
    45     President — Kirby Inland Marine
Dorman L. Strahan
    53     President — Kirby Engine Systems
Ronald A. Dragg
    46     Vice President and Controller
G. Stephen Holcomb
    64     Vice President — Investor Relations and Assistant Secretary
Amy D. Husted
    41     Vice President — Legal
David R. Mosley
    45     Vice President and Chief Information Officer
Jack M. Sims
    67     Vice President — Human Resources
Renato A. Castro(1)
    38     Treasurer
 
 
(1)  On January 19, 2010, the Company announced the retirement of Mr. Nolen effective March 31, 2010. Mr. Grzebinski will assume the role of Chief Financial Officer of the Company after the filing of the Company’s 2009 Form 10-K. Mr. Castro will succeed Mr. Nolen as Treasurer.
 
No family relationship exists among the executive officers or among the executive officers and the directors. Officers are elected to hold office until the annual meeting of directors, which immediately follows the annual meeting of stockholders, or until their respective successors are elected and have qualified.


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C. Berdon Lawrence holds an M.B.A. degree and a B.B.A. degree in business administration from Tulane University. He has served the Company as Chairman of the Board since October 1999. Prior to joining the Company in October 1999, he served for 30 years as President of Hollywood Marine, an inland tank barge company of which he was the founder and principal shareholder and which was acquired by the Company in October 1999. On October 12, 2009, the Company announced the retirement of Mr. Lawrence effective April 27, 2010.
 
Joseph H. Pyne holds a degree in liberal arts from the University of North Carolina and has served as President and Chief Executive Officer of the Company since April 1995. He has served the Company as a Director since 1988. He served as Executive Vice President of the Company from 1992 to April 1995 and as President of Kirby Inland Marine from 1984 to November 1999. He also served in various operating and administrative capacities with Kirby Inland Marine from 1978 to 1984, including Executive Vice President from January to June 1984. Prior to joining the Company, he was employed by Northrop Services, Inc. and served as an officer in the Navy.
 
Norman W. Nolen is a Certified Public Accountant and holds an M.B.A. degree from the University of Texas and a degree in electrical engineering from the University of Houston. He has served the Company as Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer since October 1999 and served as Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer from February 1999 to October 1999. Prior to joining the Company, he served as Senior Vice President, Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer of Weatherford International, Inc. from 1991 to 1998. He served as Corporate Treasurer of Cameron Iron Works from 1980 to 1990 and as a corporate banker with Texas Commerce Bank from 1968 to 1980.
 
David W. Grzebinski is a Chartered Financial Analyst and holds an M.B.A. degree from Tulane University and a degree in chemical engineering from the University of South Florida. He has served as Executive Vice President — Finance since February 2010. Prior to joining the Company, he served in various administrative positions since 1988 with FMC Technologies Inc. (“FMC”), including Controller, Energy Services, Treasurer, and Director of Global SAP and Industry Relations. Prior to joining FMC, he was employed by The Dow Chemical Company.
 
Gregory R. Binion holds a degree in business administration from the University of Texas. He has served the Company as President of Kirby Inland Marine since October 2008, as Vice President of Corporate Development and Strategy from September 2007 to October 2008, and previously as Kirby Inland Marine’s Vice President — Sales from 2003 to 2007 and Vice President — Canal Operations from 1999 to 2003. Prior to joining the Company in October of 1999, he served Hollywood Marine for 11 years in a variety of sales and operational roles.
 
Dorman L. Strahan attended Nicholls State University and has served the Company as President of Kirby Engine Systems since May 1999, President of Marine Systems since 1986, President of Rail Systems since 1993 and President of Engine Systems since 1996. After joining the Company in 1982 in connection with the acquisition of Marine Systems, he served as Vice President of Marine Systems until 1985.
 
Ronald A. Dragg is a Certified Public Accountant and holds a Master of Science in Accountancy degree from the University of Houston and a degree in finance from Texas A&M University. He has served the Company as Vice President and Controller since January 2007. He also served as Controller from November 2002 to January 2007, Controller — Financial Reporting from January 1999 to October 2002, and Assistant Controller — Financial Reporting from October 1996 to December 1998. Prior to joining the Company, he was employed by Baker Hughes Incorporated.
 
G. Stephen Holcomb holds a degree in business administration from Stephen F. Austin State University and has served the Company as Vice President — Investor Relations and Assistant Secretary since November 2002. He also served as Vice President, Controller and Assistant Secretary from 1989 to November 2002, Controller from 1987 through 1988 and as Assistant Controller from 1976 through 1986. Prior to that, he was Assistant Controller of Kirby Industries from 1973 to 1976. Prior to joining the Company in 1973, he was employed by Cooper Industries, Inc.
 
Amy D. Husted holds a doctorate of jurisprudence from South Texas College of Law and a degree in political science from the University of Houston. She has served the Company as Vice President — Legal since January 2008 and served as Corporate Counsel from November 1999 through December 2007. Prior to joining the Company, she served as Corporate Counsel of Hollywood Marine from 1996 to 1999 after joining Hollywood Marine in 1994.


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David R. Mosley holds a degree in computer science from Texas A&M University and has served the Company as Vice President and Chief Information Officer since May 2007. Prior to joining the Company in 2007, he served as Vice President and Chief Information Officer for Prudential Real Estate Services Company from 2005 to May 2007, Vice President — Service Delivery for Iconixx Corporation from 1999 to 2005, Vice President — Product Development and Services for ADP Dealer Services from 1995 to 1999 and in various information technology development and management positions from 1987 to 1995.
 
Jack M. Sims holds a degree in business administration from the University of Miami and has served the Company, or one of its subsidiaries, as Vice President — Human Resources since 1993. Prior to joining the Company in March 1993, he served as Vice President — Human Resources for Virginia Indonesia Company from 1982 through 1992, Manager — Employee Relations for Houston Oil and Minerals Corporation from 1977 through 1981 and in various professional and managerial positions with Shell Oil Company from 1967 through 1977. On February 25, 2010, Mr. Sims announced his retirement effective March 31, 2010.
 
Renato A. Castro is a Certified Public Accountant and holds an M.B.A. degree from Tulane University and a degree in civil engineering from the National Autonomous University of Honduras. He has served the Company as Manager of Financial Analysis since 2007. He also served as Financial Analyst from 2005 through 2006 and Assistant Controller of Kirby Inland Marine from 2001 through 2004. Prior to joining the Company, he was employed by a subsidiary of Astaldi S.p.A. in their transport infrastructure division.
 
Item 1A.   Risk Factors
 
The following risk factors should be considered carefully when evaluating the Company, as its businesses, results of operations, or financial condition could be materially adversely affected by any of these risks. The following discussion does not attempt to cover factors, such as trends in the United States and global economies or the level of interest rates among others, that are likely to affect most businesses.
 
The Inland Waterway infrastructure is aging and may result in increased costs and disruptions to the Company’s marine transportation segment.  Maintenance of the United States inland waterway system is vital to the Company’s operations. The system is composed of over 12,000 miles of commercially navigable waterway, supported by over 240 locks and dams designed to provide flood control, maintain pool levels of water in certain areas of the country and facilitate navigation on the inland river system. The United States inland waterway infrastructure is aging, with more than half of the locks over 50 years old. As a result, due to the age of the locks, scheduled and unscheduled maintenance outages may be more frequent in nature, resulting in delays and additional operating expenses. One-half of the cost of new construction and major rehabilitation of locks and dams is paid by marine transportation companies through a 20 cent per gallon diesel fuel tax and the remaining 50% is paid from general federal tax revenue. Failure of the federal government to adequately fund infrastructure maintenance and improvements in the future would have a negative impact on the Company’s ability to deliver products for its customers on a timely basis. In addition, any additional user taxes that may be imposed in the future to fund infrastructure improvements would increase the Company’s operating expenses.
 
The Company is subject to adverse weather conditions in its marine transportation business.  The Company’s marine transportation segment is subject to weather conditions on a daily basis. Adverse weather conditions such as high water, low water, fog and ice, tropical storms and hurricanes can impair the operating efficiencies of the marine fleet. Such adverse weather conditions can cause a delay, diversion or postponement of shipments of products and are totally beyond the control of the Company. In addition, adverse water conditions can negatively affect towboat speed, tow size, loading drafts, fleet efficiency, place limitations on night passages and dictate horsepower requirements. During 2009, the Company experienced more favorable weather conditions and water levels than in 2008, when the Company experienced high water conditions throughout the Mississippi River System during the majority of the second quarter and Hurricanes Gustav and Ike negatively impacted the 2008 third quarter by an estimated $.09 per share. The Company experienced normal weather conditions and water levels during 2007. The Company’s operations for 2009 and 2007 were not materially affected by Gulf Coast hurricanes and tropical storms.
 
The Company could be adversely impacted by a marine accident or spill event.  A marine accident or spill event could close a portion of the inland waterway system for a period of time. Although statistically marine


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transportation is the safest means of transporting bulk commodities, accidents do occur, both involving Company equipment and equipment owned by other inland marine carriers.
 
The Company transports a wide variety of petrochemicals, black oil products, refined petroleum products and agricultural chemicals throughout the Mississippi River System and along the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway. The Company manages its exposure to losses from potential discharges of pollutants through the use of well maintained and equipped double hull tank barges and towboats, through safety, training and environmental programs, and the Company’s insurance program, but a discharge of pollutants by the Company could have an adverse effect on the Company.
 
The Company’s marine transportation segment is dependent on its ability to adequately crew its towboats.  The Company’s towboats are crewed with employees who are licensed or certified by the USCG, including its captains, pilots, engineers and tankermen. The success of the Company’s marine transportation segment is dependent on the Company’s ability to adequately crew its towboats. As a result, the Company invests significant resources in training its crews and providing each crew member an opportunity to advance from a deckhand to the captain of a Company towboat. Lifestyle issues are a deterrent for employment as crew members are required to work a 20 days on, 10 days off rotation, or a 30 days on, 15 days off rotation. The success of the Company’s marine transportation segment will depend on its ability to adequately crew its towboats.
 
With the rising unemployment rates during 2008 and 2009, associated with the economic recession, crewing levels have remained adequate. During 2007, high United States employment made for a tight Gulf Coast labor market. As a result, the Company, as well as the Company’s charter boat operators, experienced vessel personnel shortages. During 2007, the Company stepped up its recruiting and training of vessel personnel and addressed the vessel personnel pay scales in an effort to recruit new vessel personnel, and retain and promote existing vessel personnel.
 
Reduction in the number of acquisitions made by the Company may curtail future growth.  Since 1987, the Company has been successful in the integration of 25 acquisitions in its marine transportation segment and 15 acquisitions in its diesel engine services segment. Acquisitions have played a significant part in the growth of the Company. The Company’s marine transportation revenue in 1987 was $40.2 million compared with $881.3 million in 2009. Diesel engine services revenue in 1987 was $7.1 million compared with $200.9 million in 2009. While the Company is of the opinion that future acquisition opportunities exist in both its marine transportation and diesel engine services segments, the Company may not be able to continue to grow through acquisitions to the extent that it has in the past.
 
The Company’s marine transportation segment is subject to the Jones Act.  The Company’s marine transportation segment competes principally in markets subject to the Jones Act, a federal cabotage law that restricts domestic marine transportation in the United States to vessels built and registered in the United States, and manned and owned by United States citizens. The Company presently meets all of the requirements of the Jones Act for its owned vessels. The loss of Jones Act status could have a significant negative effect on the Company. The requirements that the Company’s vessels be United States built and manned by United States citizens, the crewing requirements and material requirements of the USCG, and the application of United States labor and tax laws significantly increase the cost of United States flag vessels when compared with comparable foreign flag vessels. The Company’s business could be adversely affected if the Jones Act were to be modified so as to permit foreign competition that is not subject to the same United States government imposed burdens. Since the events of September 11, 2001, the United States government has taken steps to increase security of United States ports, coastal waters and inland waterways. The Company feels that it is unlikely that the current cabotage provisions of the Jones Act would be modified or eliminated in the foreseeable future.
 
The Company’s marine transportation segment is subject to regulation by the USCG, federal laws, state laws and certain international conventions, as well as numerous environmental regulations.  The majority of the Company’s vessels are subject to inspection by the USCG and carry certificates of inspection. The crews employed by the Company aboard vessels are licensed or certified by the USCG. The Company is required by various governmental agencies to obtain licenses, certificates and permits for its vessels. The Company’s operations are also affected by various United States and state regulations and legislation enacted for protection of the environment. The Company incurs significant expenses to comply with applicable laws and regulations and any significant new regulation or legislation, including climate change laws or regulations, could have an adverse effect on the Company.


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The Company is subject to risks associated with possible climate change legislation, regulation and international accords.  Greenhouse gas emissions have increasingly become the subject of a large amount of international, national, regional, state and local attention. On December 7, 2009 the United States Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) furthered its focus on greenhouse gas emissions when it issued its endangerment finding in response to a decision of the Supreme Court of the United States. The EPA found that the emission of six greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide (which is emitted from the combustion of fossil fuels), may reasonably be anticipated to endanger public health and welfare. Based on this finding, the EPA defined the mix of these six greenhouse gases to be “air pollution” subject to regulation under the Clean Air Act. Although the EPA has stated a preference that greenhouse gas regulation be based on new federal legislation rather than the existing Clean Air Act, many sources of greenhouse gas emissions may be regulated without the need for further legislation.
 
The United States Congress is considering legislation that would create an economy-wide “cap-and-trade” system that would establish a limit (or cap) on overall greenhouse gas emissions and create a market for the purchase and sale of emissions permits or “allowances.” Proposed cap-and-trade legislation would likely affect the chemical industry due to anticipated increases in energy costs as fuel providers pass on the cost of the emissions allowances, which they would be required to obtain under cap and trade to cover the emissions from fuel production and the eventual use of fuel by the Company or its energy suppliers. In addition, cap-and-trade proposals would likely increase the cost of energy, including purchases of diesel fuel, steam and electricity, and certain raw materials used or transported by the Company. Proposed domestic and international cap-and-trade systems could materially increase raw material and operating costs of the Company’s customer base. Future environmental regulatory developments related to climate change in the United States that restrict emissions of greenhouse gases could entail financial impacts on the Company’s operations that cannot be predicted with certainty at this time.
 
The Company’s marine transportation segment is subject to volatility in the United States production of petrochemicals.  For 2009, 68% of the marine transportation segment’s revenues were from the movement of petrochemicals, including the movement of raw materials and feedstocks from one refinery and petrochemical plant to another, as well as the movement of more finished products to end users. During 2009, petrochemical volumes declined when compared with the first nine months of 2008, mirroring the general downward performance trend of the United States economy. A weaker United States and global economy during 2009 and 2008 resulted in lower worldwide consumer spending, as well as lower exports of petrochemicals which reduced the volumes of petrochemicals transported by the Company.
 
A weaker economy could also impact the Company’s collectability of certain customers’ trade receivables which could have a negative effect on the Company’s results of operations.
 
The Company’s marine transportation segment could be adversely impacted by the construction of inland tank barges by its competitors.  At the present time, there are an estimated 3,100 inland tank barges in the United States, of which the Company operates 863, or 28%. The number of tank barges peaked at approximately 4,200 in early 1980s, slowly declined to approximately 2,750 in 2003 and with the favorable market conditions over recent years has gradually increased to an estimated 3,100 in late 2009. The Company believes that approximately 180 to 200 new tank barges were delivered and placed in service in 2009, with an estimated 130 tank barges retired. During 2007 and the first nine months of 2008, strong tank barge transportation markets absorbed the additional capacity built by the industry. During the first nine months of 2008 and prior to the deterioration of the marine transportation markets in the 2008 fourth quarter, the Company and many competitors signed tank barge construction contracts with shipyards for 2009 deliveries. The Company believes that the large increase in new tank barge construction in 2008 and 2009, coupled with the decrease in demand in 2009 caused by the economic downturn, has resulted in an oversupply of tank barge capacity in the industry. However, approximately 30% of the industry fleet is over 30 years old and approximately 16% is over 35 years old. The Company believes that the high cost of maintaining the USCG certification requirements for older tank barges and the current low term contract and spot contract rate environment limiting recovery of maintenance costs will result in the retirement of sufficient tank barges to lessen the impact of overcapacity.
 
Higher fuel prices could increase operating expenses.  The cost of fuel during 2009 was approximately 9% of marine transportation revenue, as the Company consumed 41.8 million gallons of diesel fuel at an average price of $1.72 per gallon. This compares with 2008 when the cost of fuel was approximately 15% of marine transportation


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revenue, and the Company consumed 48.5 million gallons of diesel fuel at an average price of $3.21 per gallon. All marine transportation term contracts contain fuel escalation clauses. However, there is generally a 30 to 90 day delay before contracts are adjusted depending on the specific contract. In general, the fuel escalation clauses are effective over the long-term in allowing the Company to recover changes in fuel costs due to fuel price changes; however, the short-term effectiveness of the fuel escalation clauses can be affected by a number of factors including, but not limited to, specific terms of the fuel escalation formulas, fuel price volatility, navigating conditions, tow sizes, trip routing, and the location of loading and discharge ports that may result in the Company over or under recovering its fuel costs. Spot contract rates generally reflect current fuel prices at the time the contract is signed but do not have escalators for fuel.
 
Loss of a large customer or other significant business relationship could adversely affect the Company.  Two marine transportation customers, SeaRiver and Dow, accounted for approximately 21% of the Company’s 2009 revenue and 19% of 2008 revenue. Although the Company considers its relationships with SeaRiver and Dow to be strong, the loss of either customer could have an adverse effect on the Company. The Company’s diesel engine services segment has a 44-year relationship with EMD, the largest manufacturer of medium-speed diesel engines. The Company serves as both an EMD distributor and service center for select markets and locations for both service and parts. Sales and service of EMD products account for approximately 5% of the Company’s revenue. Although the Company considers its relationship with EMD to be strong, the loss of the EMD distributorship and service rights, or a disruption of the supply of EMD parts, could have a negative impact on the Company’s ability to service its customers.
 
The Company is subject to competition in both its marine transportation and diesel engine services businesses.  The inland tank barge industry remains very competitive despite continued consolidation. The Company’s primary competitors are noncaptive inland tank barge operators. The Company also competes with companies who operate refined product and petrochemical pipelines, railroad tank cars and tractor-trailer tank trucks. Increased competition from any significant expansion of or additions to facilities or equipment by the Company’s competitors could have a negative impact on the Company’s results of operations.
 
The diesel engine services industry is also very competitive. The segment’s primary marine competitors are independent diesel services companies and other factory-authorized distributors, authorized service centers and authorized marine dealers. Certain operators of diesel powered marine equipment also elect to maintain in-house service capabilities. In the power generation and railroad markets, the primary competitors are other independent service companies. Increased competition in the diesel engine services industry could result in lower rates for service and parts pricing and result in less service and repair opportunities and parts sales.
 
Significant increases in the construction cost of inland tank barges and towboats may limit the Company’s ability to earn an adequate return on its investment in new tank barges and towboats.  The price of steel increased significantly over the last few years, thereby increasing the construction cost of new tank barges and towboats. The Company’s average construction price for a new 30,000 barrel capacity inland tank barge ordered in 2008 for 2009 delivery was approximately 90% higher than in 2000, primarily due to the increase in steel prices. During 2009, the United States and global recession negatively impacted demand levels for inland tank barges. The construction price of inland tank barges for 2010 delivery fell significantly, primarily due to a significant decrease in steel prices, as well as a decrease in the number of tank barges ordered. In addition, the likelihood of increased costs for new tank barges in the near future has abated because the economic downturn has had a significant negative impact on the demand for new tank barge construction, which should place downward pressure on the cost of new tank barges until excess capacity in the industry has been absorbed.
 
Item 1B.   Unresolved Staff Comments
 
Not applicable.
 
Item 2.   Properties
 
The information appearing in Item 1 is incorporated herein by reference. The Company, Kirby Inland Marine, Kirby Ocean Transport and Osprey currently occupy leased office space at 55 Waugh Drive, Suite 1000, Houston, Texas, under a lease that expires in December 2015. The Company believes that its facilities at 55 Waugh Drive are adequate for its needs and additional facilities would be available if required.


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Item 3.   Legal Proceedings
 
In 2000, the Company and a group of approximately 45 other companies were notified that they are Potentially Responsible Parties (“PRPs”) under CERCLA with respect to a Superfund site, the Palmer Barge Line Site (“Palmer”), located in Port Arthur, Texas. In prior years, Palmer had provided tank barge cleaning services to various subsidiaries of the Company. The Company and three other PRPs entered into an agreement with the EPA to perform a remedial investigation and feasibility study and, subsequently, a limited remediation was performed and is now complete. During the 2007 third quarter, five new PRP’s entered into an agreement with the EPA in regard to the Palmer Site. In July 2008, the EPA sent a letter to approximately 30 PRPs for the Palmer site, including the Company, indicating that it intends to pursue recovery of $2,949,000 of costs it incurred in relation to the site. The Company and the other PRPs have participated in meetings with the EPA and the United States Department of Justice and suggested pro rata allocations to the PRPs of the EPA’s incurred costs. Based on these initial discussions, the Company is unable to estimate its potential liability, if any, for any portion of such costs.
 
In addition, the Company is involved in various legal and other proceedings which are incidental to the conduct of its business, none of which in the opinion of management will have a material effect on the Company’s financial condition, results of operations or cash flows. Management believes that it has recorded adequate reserves and believes that it has adequate insurance coverage or has meritorious defenses for these other claims and contingencies.
 
Item 4.   Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders
 
Not applicable.
 
PART II
 
Item 5.   Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities
 
The Company’s common stock is traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol KEX. The following table sets forth the high and low sales prices per share for the common stock for the periods indicated:
 
                 
    Sales Price  
    High     Low  
 
2010
               
First Quarter (through February 26, 2010)
  $ 36.04     $ 30.83  
2009
               
First Quarter
    31.16       19.46  
Second Quarter
    36.32       25.93  
Third Quarter
    39.16       28.71  
Fourth Quarter
    37.28       32.30  
2008
               
First Quarter
    58.10       37.72  
Second Quarter
    61.65       47.45  
Third Quarter
    51.09       34.13  
Fourth Quarter
    39.87       19.54  
 
As of February 26, 2010, the Company had 54,011,000 outstanding shares held by approximately 850 stockholders of record; however, the Company believes the number of beneficial owners of common stock exceeds this number.
 
The Company does not have an established dividend policy. Decisions regarding the payment of future dividends will be made by the Board of Directors based on the facts and circumstances that exist at that time. Since 1989, the Company has not paid any dividends on its common stock.


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During the 2009 fourth quarter, the Company purchased in the open market the following shares of its common stock:
 
                         
        Purchase
  Average Price
Date of Purchase
  Shares   Price   per Share
 
November 2, 2009
    20,000     $ 657,000     $ 32.83  
 
Item 6.   Selected Financial Data
 
The comparative selected financial data of the Company and consolidated subsidiaries is presented for the five years ended December 31, 2009. The information should be read in conjunction with Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations of the Company in Item 7 and the Financial Statements included under Item 8 (selected financial data in thousands, except per share amounts).
 
                                         
    December 31,  
    2009     2008     2007     2006     2005  
 
Revenues:
                                       
Marine transportation
  $ 881,298     $ 1,095,475     $ 928,834     $ 807,216     $ 685,999  
Diesel engine services
    200,860       264,679       243,791       177,002       109,723  
                                         
    $ 1,082,158     $ 1,360,154     $ 1,172,625     $ 984,218     $ 795,722  
                                         
Net earnings attributable to Kirby
  $ 125,941     $ 157,168     $ 123,341     $ 95,451     $ 68,781  
                                         
Net earnings per share attributable to Kirby common stockholders:
                                       
Basic
  $ 2.34     $ 2.92     $ 2.31     $ 1.81     $ 1.36  
                                         
Diluted
  $ 2.34     $ 2.91     $ 2.29     $ 1.79     $ 1.33  
                                         
Common stock outstanding:
                                       
Basic
    53,192       53,238       52,831       52,351       50,115  
Diluted
    53,313       53,513       53,263       52,855       51,214  
 
                                         
    December 31,  
    2009     2008     2007     2006     2005  
 
Property and equipment, net
  $ 1,085,057     $ 990,932     $ 906,098     $ 766,606     $ 642,381  
Total assets
  $ 1,635,963     $ 1,526,098     $ 1,430,475     $ 1,271,119     $ 1,025,548  
Long-term debt, including current portion
  $ 200,239     $ 247,307     $ 297,383     $ 310,362     $ 200,036  
Total equity
  $ 1,056,095     $ 893,555     $ 772,807     $ 635,013     $ 540,630  
 
Item 7.   Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
 
Statements contained in this Form 10-K that are not historical facts, including, but not limited to, any projections contained herein, are forward-looking statements and involve a number of risks and uncertainties. Such statements can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as “may,” “will,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “estimate” or “continue,” or the negative thereof or other variations thereon or comparable terminology. The actual results of the future events described in such forward-looking statements in this Form 10-K could differ materially from those stated in such forward-looking statements. Among the factors that could cause actual results to differ materially are: adverse economic conditions, industry competition and other competitive factors, adverse weather conditions such as high water, low water, tropical storms, hurricanes, fog and ice, marine accidents, lock delays, fuel costs, interest rates, construction of new equipment by competitors, government and environmental laws and regulations, and the timing, magnitude and number of acquisitions made by the Company. For a more detailed discussion of factors that could cause actual results to differ from those presented in forward-looking


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statements, see Item 1A-Risk Factors. Forward-looking statements are based on currently available information and the Company assumes no obligation to update any such statements.
 
For purposes of Management’s Discussion, all net earnings per share attributable to Kirby common stockholders are “diluted earnings per share.” The weighted average number of common shares applicable to diluted earnings per share for 2009, 2008 and 2007 were 53,313,000, 53,513,000 and 53,263,000, respectively. The decrease in the weighted average number of common shares for 2009 compared with 2008 primarily reflected common stock repurchases during 2009 and 2008, partially offset by the issuance of restricted stock and the exercise of stock options.
 
Overview
 
The Company is the nation’s largest domestic inland tank barge operator with a fleet of 863 active tank barges, including 49 leased barges, and 16.7 million barrels of capacity as of December 31, 2009. The Company operated an average of 220 towing vessels during 2009, of which an average of 56 were chartered. The Company uses the United States inland waterway system to transport bulk liquids including petrochemicals, black oil products, refined petroleum products and agricultural chemicals. The Company also owns and operates four ocean-going barge and tug units transporting dry-bulk commodities in United States coastwise trade. Through its diesel engine services segment, the Company provides after-market services for medium-speed and high-speed diesel engines used in marine, power generation and railroad applications.
 
For 2009, net earnings attributable to Kirby were $125,941,000, or $2.34 per share, on revenues of $1,082,158,000, compared with 2008 net earnings attributable to Kirby of $157,168,000, or $2.91 per share, on revenues of $1,360,154,000. The 2009 performance reflected lower demand in both its marine transportation and diesel engine services segments, driven by the United States and global economic recession. The decline in volumes in all four marine transportation markets resulted in lower tank barge utilization levels industry wide that led to increased downward pressure on term contract and spot contract pricing throughout 2009. The diesel engine services marine and railroad markets service levels and direct parts sales were below 2008 levels due to weak marine transportation, offshore oil services and railroad markets, that resulted in deferred maintenance on customers’ idled equipment.
 
Results for 2008 were negatively impacted by two major Gulf Coast hurricanes, Gustav on September 1 and Ike on September 13. Hurricane Gustav disrupted marine transportation and diesel engine services operations in Louisiana for several days. Hurricane Ike struck Houston/Galveston, significantly affecting the petrochemical and refining facilities in the path of the storm. The 2008 results included an estimated $.09 per share negative impact from Hurricanes Gustav and Ike.
 
As a result of the lower demand in both the marine transportation and diesel engine services segments, the Company took specific steps to reduce overhead and lower expenditures during the 2009 first and fourth quarters and 2010 first quarter. During the 2009 first quarter, the shore staffs of the marine transportation and diesel engine services segments were reduced by approximately 6% through early retirement incentives and staff reductions and this resulted in a charge of $3,953,000 before taxes, or $.05 per share. This staff reduction is expected to achieve an annual savings of approximately $7,000,000.
 
A charge of $4,800,000 before taxes, or $.05 per share, was taken in the 2009 fourth quarter and an estimated charge of $3,900,000 before taxes, or $.04 per share will be taken in the 2010 first quarter for additional shore staff reductions. The 2009 fourth quarter and 2010 first quarter charges will result in an additional reduction of 7% in the shore staffs of the marine transportation and diesel engine services segments. This is expected to result in an annual savings of approximately $8,700,000. As of January 31, 2010, the shore staffs of the marine transportation segment, including shore tankering services, and the diesel engine services segment were down 21% compared with the Company’s peak headcount in October 2008 due to early retirement incentives, staff reductions and employee attrition. Employee attrition since October 2008 is expected to result in an annual savings of approximately $11,200,000.
 
The marine transportation segment operated an average of 220 towboats during 2009 compared with an average of 256 during 2008. As demand softened during the 2008 fourth quarter and throughout 2009, the Company


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released chartered towboats and laid up Company owned towboats in an effort to balance horsepower needs with current requirements. Going forward, the Company will continue to monitor towboat requirements and downsize or increase the towboat fleet as market changes warrant.
 
Marine Transportation
 
For 2009, 81% of the Company’s revenue was generated by its marine transportation segment. The segment’s customers include many of the major petrochemical and refining companies that operate in the United States. Products transported include raw materials for many of the end products used widely by businesses and consumers every day — plastics, fiber, paints, detergents, oil additives and paper, among others. Consequently, the Company’s business tends to mirror the general performance of the United States economy and volumes produced by the Company’s customer base, enhanced by the inherent efficiencies of barge transportation which is generally the lowest cost mode of surface transportation.
 
The following table shows the marine transportation markets serviced by the Company, the marine transportation revenue distribution for 2009, products moved and the drivers of the demand for the products the Company transports:
 
             
    2009
       
    Revenue
       
Markets Serviced   Distribution   Products Moved   Drivers
 
Petrochemicals
  68%   Benzene, Styrene, Methanol,
Acrylonitrile, Xylene, Caustic
Soda, Butadiene, Propylene
  Consumer non-durables — 70%
Consumer durables — 30%
Black Oil Products
  19%   Residual Fuel Oil, Coker
Feedstock, Vacuum Gas Oil,
Asphalt, Carbon Black
Feedstock, Crude Oil, Ship
Bunkers
  Fuel for Power Plants and Ships, Feedstock for Refineries, Road Construction
Refined Petroleum Products
  9%   Gasoline, No. 2 Oil, Jet Fuel,
Heating Oil, Diesel Fuel,
Naphtha
  Vehicle Usage, Air Travel,
Weather Conditions, Refinery Utilization
Agricultural Chemicals
  4%   Anhydrous Ammonia,
Nitrogen-Based Liquid
Fertilizer, Industrial Ammonia
  Corn, Cotton and Wheat
Production, Chemical
Feedstock Usage
 
Marine transportation revenue and operating income for 2009 decreased 20% and 15%, respectively, when compared with 2008. All four marine transportation markets, petrochemicals, black oil products, refined products and agricultural chemicals, saw demand for the movement of products soften, driven by the current economic recession. Term contract and spot contract pricing declined throughout 2009 as overall industry demand declined. Favorable operating conditions during 2009 offset to some degree the impact of the lower demand, but also drove down barge utilization due to faster trip times. In addition, lower diesel fuel prices resulted in lower 2009 revenues associated with the pass through of diesel fuel to customers through fuel escalation and de-escalation clauses in term contracts when compared with 2008. During the 2009 second and third quarters, petrochemical demand of more finished products into the Midwest improved modestly and demand along the Gulf Coast stabilized when compared with the 2009 first quarter. Black oil products and refined products demand stabilized during the 2009 third quarter, but remained well below prior year levels. Fourth quarter demand levels in the petrochemical, black oil products and refined products were slightly weaker when compared with the 2009 third quarter. Agricultural chemical demand was weak throughout 2009 due to high Midwest inventory levels.
 
During 2009, approximately 80% of the marine transportation revenues were under term contracts and 20% were spot contract revenues. With the decline in industry-wide demand, excess equipment throughout the industry was moved into the spot market, placing downward pressure on spot contract pricing, as well as on contract renewals. Time charters, which insulate the Company from revenue fluctuations caused by weather and navigational delays and temporary market declines, represented approximately 56% of marine transportation revenues


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under term contracts during 2009 and 2008. Rates on term contracts, net of fuel, renewed during the 2009 first quarter were generally renewed at existing rates and in some cases rates were traded for longer terms, while 2009 second, third and fourth quarter contract renewals declined in the zero to 8%, 7% to 15% and 7% to 15% range, respectively, when compared with the corresponding quarters of 2008. Spot contract rates for 2009, which include the cost of fuel, decreased an average of 3% to 4% in the first quarter, 10% to 15% in second quarter, 10% to 20% in the third quarter and 20% to 30% in the fourth quarter when compared with the corresponding quarters of 2008. In 2009, the Company estimates that approximately 40% to 50% of the spot contract rate decreases were fuel related. Effective January 1, 2009, annual escalators for labor and the producer price index on a number of multi-year contracts resulted in rate increases on those contracts by 4% to 5%, excluding fuel.
 
The marine transportation operating margin for 2009 was 23.6% compared with 22.4% for 2008, reflecting lower fuel costs, lower shoreside headcount, reduction of towboats operated, reduced maintenance on laid up equipment, ongoing cost reduction initiatives, more efficient operations at lower utilization levels and more favorable operating conditions, partially offset by the marine transportation’s portion of the 2009 first and fourth quarters early retirement and staff reduction charges of $6,050,000. The 2008 operating margin included the loss of revenue and additional operating expenses associated with Hurricanes Gustav and Ike.
 
Diesel Engine Services
 
During 2009, 19% of the Company’s revenue was generated by its diesel engine services segment, of which 61% was generated through service and 39% from direct parts sales. The results of the diesel engine services segment are largely influenced by the economic cycles of the industries it serves.
 
The following table shows the markets serviced by the Company, the revenue distribution for 2009, and the customers for each market:
 
             
    2009
     
    Revenue
     
Markets Serviced   Distribution     Customers
 
Marine
    73 %   Inland River Carriers — Dry and Liquid, Offshore Towing — Dry and Liquid, Offshore Oilfield Services — Drilling Rigs & Supply Boats, Harbor Towing, Dredging, Great Lakes Ore Carriers
Power Generation
    19 %   Standby Power Generation, Pumping Stations
Railroad
    8 %   Passenger (Transit Systems), Class II, Shortline, Industrial
 
Diesel engine services revenue and operating income for 2009 decreased 24% and 47%, respectively, compared with 2008. Demand levels for service and direct parts sales across all segments of the inland and offshore marine markets and offshore oil services markets remained weak as customers deferred maintenance on equipment in response to the economic slowdown. The medium-speed railroad parts and service market was also weak as industrial and shortline railroad customers deferred maintenance in response to lower railroad traffic. The medium-speed power generation market benefited from favorable service and parts sales in the 2009 first half but revenues declined in the 2009 second half. The 2008 results were negatively impacted by Hurricane Gustav, as noted above, which resulted in the closure of the segment’s facilities for several days, as well as customers’ facilities and operations.
 
The diesel engine services segment’s operating margin for 2009 was 10.5% compared with 15.0% for 2008. The lower operating margin for 2009 reflected lower service levels and direct parts sales and resulting lower labor utilization. The 2009 first and fourth quarters charges for early retirements and staff reductions of $2,342,000 also lowered the operating margin.
 
Cash Flow and Capital Expenditures
 
The Company continued to generate strong operating cash flow during 2009 with net cash provided by operating activities of $319,885,000 compared with net cash provided by operating activities for 2008 of $245,947,000. The 30% increase was aided by a decline in accounts receivable caused by lower business activity levels during 2009. In addition during 2009, the Company generated cash of $2,774,000 from the exercise of stock options and $7,388,000 from proceeds from the disposition of assets. During 2009, cash and borrowings under the


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Company’s revolving credit facility were used for capital expenditures of $192,660,000, including $142,384,000 for new tank barge and towboat construction and $50,276,000 primarily for upgrading the existing marine transportation fleet. The Company’s debt-to-capitalization ratio decreased to 15.9% at December 31, 2009 from 21.7% at December 31, 2008, primarily due to the increase in equity from net earnings attributable to Kirby for 2009 of $125,941,000, the exercise of stock options, issuance of restricted stock and lower outstanding debt. As of December 31, 2009, the Company had no outstanding balance under its $250,000,000 revolving credit facility and had $97,836,000 of cash and cash equivalents.
 
During 2009, the Company took delivery of 43 new barges and seven new chartered barges with a total capacity of 1,125,000 barrels, and four 1800 horsepower towboats. The Company projects that capital expenditures for 2010 will be in the $125,000,000 to $135,000,000 range, including approximately $60,000,000 for new tank barge and towboat construction. For 2010, new construction commitments from 2007 and 2008 orders include six barges with a total capacity of 116,000 barrels and three 1800 horsepower towboats. New construction for 2010 will also include 55 barges, with a total capacity of 665,000 barrels, ordered in late 2009 for delivery throughout 2010.
 
The Company’s strong cash flow and unutilized loan facilities position the Company to take advantage of internal and external growth opportunities in its marine transportation and diesel engine services segments. The marine transportation segment’s external growth opportunities include potential acquisitions of independent inland tank barge operators and captive fleet owners seeking to outsource tank barge requirements. Increasing the fleet size through external growth opportunities would allow the Company to improve asset utilization through more backhaul opportunities, faster barge turnarounds, more efficient use of horsepower, barges positioned closer to cargoes, less cleaning due to operating more barges with compatible prior cargoes, lower incremental costs due to enhanced purchasing power and minimal incremental administrative staff. The diesel engine services segment’s external growth opportunities include further consolidation of strategically located diesel service providers, and expanded service capability for other engine and marine gear related products.
 
As a result of the global recession, petrochemical and refining production during 2009 was well below 2008 levels. Petrochemical demand of more finished products into the Midwest improved modestly as the 2009 year progressed and demand along the Gulf Coast stabilized when compared with the 2009 first half; however, the United States economy will have to start expanding before the Company sees any significant improvement in demand. During the first nine months of 2009, 80% of marine transportation revenues were under term contracts. During the 2009 fourth quarter, the term contract portion of marine transportation revenues declined to 75% as certain customers switched to spot contracts when their term contracts expired. Based on current market conditions, the Company anticipates that term contracts will continue to be renewed during 2010 at lower rates until utilization improves. Spot contract rates for 2010 will be driven by volumes and equipment utilization. The Company believes that during 2008 and 2009, some incremental capacity was likely added to the industry fleet and that the current reduction of petrochemical and refining production has resulted in excess barge capacity and lower utilization. During 2009, the Company retired 101 older tank barges. With the weak market conditions, the age of the industry fleet and the high cost of maintaining older barges, industry tank barge capacity may decline in 2010 as fewer new barges are anticipated to be built and the retirement of older barges may be accelerated. The Company anticipates that the diesel engine services segment may see some improvement in 2010, as the segment likely reached the bottom of its business cycle in late 2009.
 
Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates
 
The preparation of financial statements in conformity with United States generally accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. The Company evaluates its estimates and assumptions on an ongoing basis based on a combination of historical information and various other assumptions that are believed to be reasonable under the particular circumstances. Actual results may differ from these estimates based on different assumptions or conditions. The Company believes the critical accounting policies that most impact the consolidated financial statements are described below. It is also suggested that the Company’s significant accounting policies, as described in the Company’s financial statements in Note 1, Summary of Significant Accounting Policies, be read in conjunction with this Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.


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Accounts Receivable.  The Company extends credit to its customers in the normal course of business. The Company regularly reviews its accounts and estimates the amount of uncollectible receivables each period and establishes an allowance for uncollectible amounts. The amount of the allowance is based on the age of unpaid amounts, information about the current financial strength of customers, and other relevant information. Estimates of uncollectible amounts are revised each period, and changes are recorded in the period they become known. Historically, credit risk with respect to these trade receivables has generally been considered minimal because of the financial strength of the Company’s customers; however, the current United States and global recession could impact the collectability of certain customers’ trade receivables which could have a material effect on the Company’s results of operations.
 
Property, Maintenance and Repairs.  Property is recorded at cost. Improvements and betterments are capitalized as incurred. Depreciation is recorded on the straight-line method over the estimated useful lives of the individual assets. When property items are retired, sold or otherwise disposed of, the related cost and accumulated depreciation are removed from the accounts with any gain or loss on the disposition included in the statement of earnings. Maintenance and repairs are charged to operating expense as incurred. The Company reviews long-lived assets for impairment by vessel class whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of the assets may not be recoverable. Recoverability of the assets is measured by a comparison of the carrying amount of the assets to future net cash expected to be generated by the assets. If such assets are considered to be impaired, the impairment to be recognized is measured by the amount by which the carrying amount of the assets exceeds the fair value of the assets. Assets to be disposed of are reported at the lower of the carrying amount or fair value less costs to sell. There are many assumptions and estimates underlying the determination of an impairment event or loss, if any. The assumptions and estimates include, but are not limited to, estimated fair market value of the assets and estimated future cash flows expected to be generated by these assets, which are based on additional assumptions such as asset utilization, length of service the asset will be used, and estimated salvage values. Although the Company believes its assumptions and estimates are reasonable, deviations from the assumptions and estimates could produce a materially different result.
 
Goodwill.  The excess of the purchase price over the fair value of identifiable net assets acquired in transactions accounted for as a purchase are included in goodwill. Management monitors the recoverability of goodwill on an annual basis, or whenever events or circumstances indicate that interim impairment testing is necessary. The amount of goodwill impairment, if any, is typically measured based on projected discounted future operating cash flows using a discount rate reflecting the Company’s average weighted cost of capital. The assessment of the recoverability of goodwill will be impacted if estimated future operating cash flows are not achieved. There are many assumptions and estimates underlying the determination of an impairment event or loss, if any. Although the Company believes its assumptions and estimates are reasonable, deviations from the assumptions and estimates could produce a materially different result.
 
Accrued Insurance.  The Company is subject to property damage and casualty risks associated with operating vessels carrying large volumes of bulk liquid and dry cargo in a marine environment. The Company maintains insurance coverage against these risks subject to a deductible, below which the Company is liable. In addition to expensing claims below the deductible amount as incurred, the Company also maintains a reserve for losses that may have occurred but have not been reported to the Company, or are not yet fully developed. The Company uses historic experience and actuarial analysis by outside consultants to estimate an appropriate level of reserves. If the actual number of claims and magnitude were substantially greater than assumed, the required level of reserves for claims incurred but not reported or fully developed could be materially understated. The Company records receivables from its insurers for incurred claims above the Company’s deductible. If the solvency of the insurers became impaired, there could be an adverse impact on the accrued receivables and the availability of insurance.
 
Acquisitions
 
On June 30, 2008, the Company purchased substantially all of the assets of Lake Charles Diesel for $3,680,000 in cash. Lake Charles Diesel was a Gulf Coast high-speed diesel engine services provider operating factory-authorized full service marine dealerships for Cummins, Detroit Diesel and Volvo engines, as well as an authorized marine dealer for Caterpillar engines in Louisiana. Financing of the acquisition was through the Company’s revolving credit facility.


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On March 18, 2008, the Company purchased six inland tank barges from ORIX for $1,800,000 in cash. The Company had been leasing the barges from ORIX prior to their purchase. Financing of the equipment acquisition was through the Company’s revolving credit facility.
 
On October 1, 2007, the Company purchased nine inland tank barges from Siemens for $4,500,000 in cash. The Company had been leasing the barges since 1994 when the leases were assigned to the Company as part of the Company’s purchase of the tank barge fleet of Dow. Financing of the equipment acquisition was through the Company’s revolving credit facility.
 
On July 20, 2007, the Company purchased substantially all of the assets of Saunders for $13,288,000 in cash and the assumption of $245,000 of debt. Saunders was a Gulf Coast high-speed diesel engine services provider operating factory-authorized full service marine dealerships for Cummins, Detroit Diesel and John Deere engines, as well as an authorized marine dealer for Caterpillar engines in Alabama. Financing of the cash portion of the acquisition was through the Company’s revolving credit facility.
 
On February 23, 2007, the Company purchased the assets of P&S for $1,622,000 in cash. P&S was a Gulf Coast high-speed diesel engine services provider operating as a factory-authorized marine dealer for Caterpillar in Louisiana. Financing of the acquisition was through the Company’s revolving credit facility.
 
On February 13, 2007, the Company purchased from NAK Engineering for a net $3,540,000 in cash, the assets and technology necessary to support the Nordberg medium-speed diesel engines used in nuclear applications. As part of the transaction, Progress Energy and Duke Energy made payments to the Company for non-exclusive rights to the technology and entered into ten-year exclusive parts and service agreements with the Company. Nordberg engines are used to power emergency diesel generators used in nuclear power plants owned by Progress Energy and Duke Energy. Financing of the acquisition was through the Company’s revolving credit facility.
 
On January 3, 2007, the Company purchased the stock of Coastal, the owner of 37 inland tank barges, for $19,474,000 in cash. The Company had been operating the Coastal tank barges since October 2002 under a barge management agreement. Financing of the acquisition was through the Company’s revolving credit facility.
 
On January 2, 2007, the Company purchased 21 inland tank barges from Cypress for $14,965,000 in cash. The Company had been leasing the barges since 1994 when the leases were assigned to the Company as part of the Company’s purchase of the tank barge fleet of Dow. Financing of the equipment acquisition was through the Company’s revolving credit facility.
 
Results of Operations
 
The Company reported 2009 net earnings attributable to Kirby of $125,941,000, or $2.34 per share, on revenues of $1,082,158,000, compared with 2008 net earnings attributable to Kirby of $157,168,000, or $2.91 per share, on revenues of $1,360,154,000, and 2007 net earnings attributable to Kirby of $123,341,000, or $2.29 per share, on revenues of $1,172,625,000.
 
Marine transportation revenues for 2009 were $881,298,000, or 81% of total revenues, compared with $1,095,475,000, or 81% of total revenues for 2008 and $928,834,000, or 79% of total revenues for 2007. Diesel engine services revenues for 2009 were $200,860,000, or 19% of total revenues, compared with $264,679,000, or 19% of total revenues for 2008 and $243,791,000, or 21% of total revenues for 2007.
 
As a result of the lower demand in both the marine transportation and diesel engine services segments, the Company took specific steps to reduce overhead and lower expenditures during the 2009 first and fourth quarters and 2010 first quarter. During the 2009 first quarter, the shore staffs of the marine transportation and diesel engine services segments were reduced by approximately 6% through early retirement incentives and staff reductions and this resulted in a charge of $3,953,000 before taxes, or $.05 per share. This staff reduction is expected to achieve an annual savings of approximately $7,000,000.
 
A charge of $4,800,000 before taxes, or $.05 per share, was taken in the 2009 fourth quarter and an estimated charge of $3,900,000 before taxes, or $.04 per share will be taken in the 2010 first quarter for additional shore staff reductions. The 2009 fourth quarter and 2010 first quarter charges will result in an additional reduction of 7% in the shore staffs of the marine transportation and diesel engine services segments. This is expected to result in an annual


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savings of approximately $8,700,000. As of January 31, 2010, the shore staffs of the marine transportation segment, including shore tankering services, and the diesel engine services segment were down 21% compared with the Company’s peak headcount in October 2008 due to early retirement incentives, staff reductions and employee attrition. Employee attrition since October 2008 is expected to result in an annual savings of approximately $11,200,000.
 
Marine Transportation
 
The Company, through its marine transportation segment, is a provider of marine transportation services, operating inland tank barges and towing vessels, transporting petrochemicals, black oil products, refined petroleum products and agricultural chemicals along the United States inland waterways. As of December 31, 2009, the Company operated 863 active inland tank barges, with a total capacity of 16.7 million barrels, compared with 914 active inland tank barges at December 31, 2008, with a total capacity of 17.5 million barrels. The Company operated 213 active inland towing vessels at February 26, 2010, an average of 220 during 2009 and 256 during 2008. The Company owns and operates four offshore dry-bulk barge and tug units engaged in the offshore transportation of dry-bulk cargoes. The Company also owns a two-thirds interest in Osprey, which transports cargo containers and project cargoes by barge on the United States inland waterway system.
 
The following table sets forth the Company’s marine transportation segment’s revenues, costs and expenses, operating income and operating margins for the three years ended December 31, 2009 (dollars in thousands):
 
                                         
                % Change
          % Change
 
                2008 to
          2007 to
 
    2009     2008     2009     2007     2008  
 
Marine transportation revenues
  $ 881,298     $ 1,095,475       (20 )%   $ 928,834       18 %
                                         
Costs and expenses:
                                       
Costs of sales and operating expenses
    494,139       657,078       (25 )     562,769       17  
Selling, general and administrative
    80,897       96,960       (17 )     82,454       18  
Taxes, other than on income
    10,587       12,034       (12 )     12,188       (1 )
Depreciation and amortization
    87,589       84,537       4       75,311       12  
                                         
      673,212       850,609       (21 )     732,722       16  
                                         
Operating income
  $ 208,086     $ 244,866       (15 )%   $ 196,112       25 %
                                         
Operating margins
    23.6 %     22.4 %             21.1 %        
                                         
 
2009 Compared with 2008
 
Marine Transportation Revenues
 
Marine transportation revenues for 2009 decreased 20% compared with 2008, reflecting lower petrochemical, black oil products, refined petroleum products and agricultural chemical demand, driven by the current United States and global economic recession. The lower demand levels in all four marine transportation markets resulted in lower tank barge utilization levels industry wide that led to increased downward pressure on term contract and spot contract pricing over the last nine months of 2009. In addition, approximately 37% of the decrease in marine transportation revenues in 2009 compared with 2008 was due to negative term contract diesel fuel price escalation adjustments associated with the pass through of diesel fuel to customers through fuel escalation and de-escalation clauses in term contracts.
 
The petrochemical market, the Company’s largest market, contributed 68% of the marine transportation revenue for 2009. During 2009, petrochemical transportation demand was soft, driven by the deteriorating economic environment, with demand levels well below 2008 levels. Movements of more finished petrochemical products to the Midwest improved modestly during the 2009 second and third quarters compared with the 2009 first and 2008 fourth quarters, when significant destocking of inventories occurred. The Gulf Intracoastal Waterway petrochemical demand for the 2009 second and third quarters stabilized when compared with the 2009 first quarter. The black oil products market, which contributed 19% of 2009 marine transportation revenue, and the refined


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products market, which contributed 9% of 2009 marine transportation revenue, also stabilized during the 2009 second and third quarters but remained well below prior year levels. Fourth quarter demand levels in the petrochemical, black oil products and refined products markets were slightly weaker when compared with the 2009 third quarter. The agricultural chemical market, which contributed 4% of 2009 marine transportation revenue, was weak throughout the year due to high Midwest inventory levels, fueled by heavy rain events which reduced the farmer’s ability to apply fertilizer.
 
For 2009, the marine transportation segment incurred 5,201 delay days, 37% less than 2008 delay days of 8,267. Delay days measure the lost time incurred by a tow (towboat and one or more tank barges) during transit when the tow is stopped due to weather, lock conditions and other navigational factors. The 2009 delay days reflected milder winter weather conditions and more normal water levels compared with 2008 that experienced ice and high water conditions in the Midwest throughout the 2008 first quarter, high water conditions throughout the Mississippi River System during the majority of the 2008 second quarter and Hurricanes Gustav and Ike during the 2008 third quarter. The lower 2009 delay days led to a reduction of operating expenses compared with 2008 and helped offset some of the financial impact of the lower demand levels.
 
During the 2009 first nine months, approximately 80% of marine transportation revenues were under term contracts and 20% were spot contract revenues. During the 2009 fourth quarter, the term contract portion of marine transportation revenues declined to 75% as certain customers switched to spot contracts when their term contracts expired. Time charters, which insulate the Company from revenue fluctuations caused by weather and navigational delays and temporary market declines, represented approximately 56% of the revenues under term contracts during 2009 and 2008. The 75% to 80% term contract and 20% to 25% spot contract mix provides the Company with a predictable revenue stream. Rates on term contracts, net of fuel, renewed during the 2009 first quarter were generally renewed at existing rates and in some cases rates were traded for longer terms, while 2009 second, third and fourth quarter contract renewals declined in the zero to 8%, 7% to 15% and 7% to 15% range, respectively, when compared with the corresponding quarters of 2008. Spot contract rates for 2009, which include the cost of fuel, decreased an average of 3% to 4% in the first quarter, 10% to 15% in second quarter, 10% to 20% in the third quarter and 20% to 30% in the fourth quarter when compared with the corresponding quarters of 2008. In 2009, the Company estimates that approximately 40% to 50% of the spot contract rate decreases were fuel related. All marine transportation term contracts contain fuel escalation clauses designed to recover additional fuel costs when fuel prices rise and rebate fuel costs when prices decline. However, there is generally a 30 to 90 day delay before contracts are adjusted. Spot contracts do not have escalators for fuel. Effective January 1, 2009, escalators for labor and the producer price index on a number of multi-year contracts increased rates on those contracts by 4% to 5%.
 
Marine Transportation Costs and Expenses
 
Costs and expenses for 2009 decreased 21% compared with 2008, primarily reflecting the lower costs and expenses associated with decreased marine transportation demand, lower towboat requirements and lower diesel fuel prices. The 2009 year included a $2,527,000 charge applicable to the marine transportation segment for early retirements and staff reductions in the first quarter and a $3,523,000 charge for staff reductions in the fourth quarter. More favorable weather and operating conditions during 2009 compared with 2008 also reduced operating expenses.
 
Costs of sales and operating expenses for 2009 decreased 25% compared with 2008, reflecting lower expenses associated with the decreased demand and more favorable weather operating conditions, fewer towboats operated, lower insurance claims losses and the positive impact of enhanced cost saving and efficiency initiatives. The significantly lower price of diesel fuel and less consumption, resulted in lower fuel costs during 2009.
 
The marine transportation segment operated an average of 220 towboats during 2009, of which an average of 56 were chartered, compared with 256 during 2008, of which an average of 84 were chartered. Since the fourth quarter of 2008 and continuing throughout 2009, as demand weakened the Company released chartered towboats and laid up Company owned towboats in an effort to balance horsepower needs with volume demand. The Company has historically used chartered towboats for approximately one-third of its horsepower requirements.
 
During 2009, the Company consumed 41.8 million gallons of diesel fuel compared to 48.5 million gallons consumed during 2008. The lower fuel consumption was a reflection of weaker demand in all four of the segment’s


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marine transportation markets and the use of more fuel efficient engines in the towboats. The average price per gallon of diesel fuel consumed during 2009 was $1.72, a decrease of 46% compared with $3.21 per gallon for 2008. Fuel escalation clauses are designed to rebate fuel costs when prices decline and recover additional fuel costs when fuel prices rise; however, there is generally a 30 to 90 day delay before the contracts are adjusted. Spot contracts do not have escalators for fuel.
 
Selling, general and administrative expenses for 2009 decreased 17% compared with 2008. The decrease primarily reflected lower employee incentive compensation accruals, the cost savings of the 2009 first quarter early retirements and staff reductions, and a lower provision for doubtful accounts, partially offset by the 2009 first and fourth quarter charges for early retirements and staff reductions.
 
Taxes, other than on income, for 2009 decreased 12% compared with 2008, primarily the reflection of lower waterway user taxes from reduced mileage associated with the weaker demand on taxable waterways and lower property taxes.
 
Depreciation and amortization for 2009 increased 4% compared with 2008. The increase was primarily attributable to increased capital expenditures, including new tank barges and towboats.
 
Marine Transportation Operating Income and Operating Margins
 
The marine transportation operating income for 2009 decreased 15% compared with 2008, reflecting lower demand in all four of the marine transportation segment’s markets and the 2009 first and fourth quarters charge for early retirements and staff reductions. In addition, 2008 included the loss of revenue and additional operating expenses associated with Hurricanes Gustav and Ike. Despite the lower demand and first and fourth quarter charges, the operating margin increased to 23.6% for 2009 compared with 22.4% for 2008. The higher margin for 2009 reflected lower fuel costs, lower shoreside headcount, reduction of towboats operated, reduced maintenance on laid up equipment, lower insurance claims losses, more efficient operations at lower utilization rates, the January 1, 2009 escalators on numerous multi-year contracts, a lower provision for doubtful accounts, ongoing cost reduction and efficiency initiatives and favorable 2009 operating conditions.
 
2008 Compared with 2007
 
Marine Transportation Revenues
 
Marine transportation revenues for 2008 increased 18% compared with 2007, reflecting continued strong demand in the majority of its markets through the first nine months, the recovery of higher diesel fuel costs, the increased equipment on time charters, 2007 and 2008 term contract and spot contract rate increases, and labor and producer price index escalators effective January 1, 2008 on multi-year contracts. Demand for the upriver movements of petrochemicals weakened during the 2008 fourth quarter. The 2008 third quarter was negatively impacted by Hurricanes Gustav and Ike, more fully described above.
 
The petrochemical market, the Company’s largest market, contributed 67% of the marine transportation revenue for 2008. During the first nine months of 2008, the demand for the movement of petrochemical products remained strong, with term contract customers continuing to operate their plants and facilities at high utilization rates until the September hurricanes, resulting in high tank barge utilization. With the deteriorating economic environment during the 2008 fourth quarter, petrochemical customers responded with numerous plant closures and volume reductions in order to reduce inventories, thereby reducing upriver movements of more finished petrochemical products to the end users. The black oil products market contributed 18% of 2008 marine transportation revenue reflecting relatively strong demand throughout 2008. Refined petroleum products contributed 10% of 2008 marine transportation revenue, experiencing softness in the movement of products from the Gulf Coast to the Midwest, driven by higher gasoline prices and resulting lower gasoline demand, but benefiting from more Gulf Intracoastal Waterway movements. The agricultural chemical market, which contributed 5% of 2008 marine transportation revenue, was unseasonably strong during the first quarter in advance of the traditional spring planting season, remained strong during the first two months of the second quarter until upper Mississippi River flooding in June and July curtailed the traditional spring planting season. High Midwest inventory levels negatively impacted the second half of 2008.


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The marine transportation segment operated an average of 256 towboats during 2008 compared with 253 during 2007. The Company continued to make progress in the crewing of its towboats as essentially all Company owned towboats were fully crewed during 2008. The Company operated an average of 258 during the 2008 first nine months and operated an average of 250 towboats in the 2008 fourth quarter. The Company has historically used chartered towboats for approximately one-third of its horsepower requirements. During the 2008 fourth quarter, the Company began releasing chartered towboats as demand softened, thereby balancing horsepower needs with current requirements.
 
For 2008, the marine transportation segment incurred 8,267 delay days, in line with the 8,157 delay days for 2007. Delay days measure the lost time incurred by a tow (towboat and one or more tank barges) during transit when the tow is stopped due to weather, lock congestion and other navigational factors. The 2008 delay days do not reflect the lost time incurred during Hurricane Ike as the Houston and Port Arthur/Beaumont area petrochemical and refining facilities closed in advance of the hurricane and, due to lack of power or facility damage, did not reopen until several days after the hurricane and in some cases did not reopen or operated at reduced levels. Excluding the hurricanes, delay days for 2008 reflected ice and high water conditions in the Midwest and frontal systems along the Gulf Coast in the first quarter, high water conditions throughout the Mississippi River System during the majority of the 2008 second quarter and favorable operating conditions during July and August 2008 and the 2008 fourth quarter. This compares with 2007 which reflected milder winter weather conditions and more normal water levels. The delay days recorded in the 2008 second quarter did not reflect the slower transit times caused by weather issues and high water conditions, which in some cases, resulted in the deployment of additional towboats in order to meet customer delivery schedules.
 
During 2008, approximately 80% of marine transportation revenues were under term contracts and 20% were spot contract revenues, compared with a 75% term contract and 25% spot contract mix for the 2007 first half and 80% contract and 20% spot contract mix for the 2007 second half. Time charters, which insulate the Company from revenue fluctuations caused by weather and navigational delays and temporary market declines, averaged 56% of the revenues under term contracts during 2008. The increase during 2008 in the term contract percentage was attributable to heavier demand for marine transportation services by the Company’s term contract customers. The 80% term contract and 20% spot contract mix provides the Company with a predictable revenue stream while maintaining spot contract exposure to take advantage of new business opportunities and existing customers’ peak demands. Rates on term contract renewals, net of fuel, increased during 2008 in the 8% to 11% average range, primarily the result of continued strong industry demand and high utilization of tank barges, when compared with 2007. Spot contract rates, which include fuel, increased in the 8% to 15% range for 2008 when compared with 2007. Effective January 1, 2008, escalators for labor and the producer price index on a number of multi-year contracts increased rates on those contracts by 5% to 6%.
 
Marine Transportation Costs and Expenses
 
Costs and expenses for the 2008 increased 16% compared with 2007, primarily reflecting the higher costs and expenses associated with increased marine transportation demand noted above.
 
Costs of sales and operating expenses for 2008 increased 17% compared with 2007, reflecting increased salaries and related expenses, additional expenses associated with the increased demand, additional towboats being operated during the 2008 first nine months, higher maintenance expenditures, increased rates for chartered towboats and the costs and damages of Hurricanes Gustav and Ike. The significantly higher price of diesel fuel consumed, as noted below, resulted in higher fuel costs during the 2008 first nine months.
 
During 2008, the Company consumed 48.5 million gallons of diesel fuel compared with 53.5 million gallons consumed during 2007. The lower fuel consumption was a reflection of the use of more fuel efficient engines in the towboats, less petrochemical, refined products and agricultural chemical movements into the Midwest from the Gulf Coast, as discussed above, and less activity along the Gulf Coast in preparation for, during and after Hurricanes Gustav and Ike. The average price per gallon of diesel fuel consumed during 2008 was $3.21, an increase of 53% compared with $2.10 per gallon for 2007. Fuel escalation clauses are designed to recover additional fuel costs when fuel prices rise and rebate fuel costs when prices decline; however, there is generally a 30 to 90 day delay before the contracts are adjusted. Spot contracts do not have escalators for fuel.


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Selling, general and administrative expenses for 2008 increased 18% compared with 2007. The increase was primarily the result of higher employee incentive compensation accruals and January 1, 2008 salary increases and related expenses. The 2008 year also included a $7,800,000 increase in the allowance for doubtful accounts, $6,000,000 of which was recorded in the fourth quarter, the result of the deteriorating United States and global economic environment.
 
Taxes, other than on income, for 2008 decreased 1% compared with 2007, primarily the reflection of lower waterway user taxes, partially offset by higher state franchise taxes and property taxes.
 
Depreciation and amortization for 2008 increased 12% compared with 2007. The increases were primarily attributable to increased capital expenditures, including new tank barges and towboats, and the acquisitions in 2007 and 2008 of marine equipment that was previously leased.
 
Marine Transportation Operating Income and Operating Margins
 
The marine transportation operating income for 2008 increased 25% compared with 2007. The marine transportation operating margin for 2008 was 22.4% compared with 21.1% for 2007. Strong demand in the majority of the segment’s markets through the first nine months of 2008, higher term contract and spot contract pricing, the January 1, 2008 escalators on numerous multi-year contracts, operating efficiencies from continued improvement in vessel crewing and the increased percentage of time charters which protects revenues from navigational and weather delays and temporary market declines, had a positive impact on the operating income and operating margin. Partially offsetting these positive factors was the loss of revenue and additional operating expenses associated with Hurricanes Gustav and Ike. During the 2008 fourth quarter, demand for upriver movements of petrochemicals weakened and the allowance for doubtful accounts was increased, partially offset by a reduction in the number of charter boats operated and lower diesel fuel prices.
 
Diesel Engine Services
 
The Company, through its diesel engine services segment, sells genuine replacement parts, provides service mechanics to overhaul and repair medium-speed and high-speed diesel engines and reduction gears, and maintains facilities to rebuild component parts or entire medium-speed and high-speed diesel engines, and entire reduction gears. The Company services the marine, power generation and railroad markets.
 
The following table sets forth the Company’s diesel engine services segment’s revenues, costs and expenses, operating income and operating margins for the three years ended December 31, 2009 (dollars in thousands):
 
                                         
                % Change
          % Change
 
                2008 to
          2007 to
 
    2009     2008     2009     2007     2008  
 
Diesel engine services revenues
  $ 200,860     $ 264,679       (24 )%   $ 243,791       9 %
                                         
Costs and expenses:
                                       
Costs of sales and operating expenses
    143,694       186,232       (23 )     172,658       8  
Selling, general and administrative
    30,440       33,014       (8 )     28,196       17  
Taxes, other than on income
    1,474       1,016       45       856       19  
Depreciation and amortization
    4,247       4,830       (12 )     4,133       17  
                                         
      179,855       225,092       (20 )     205,843       9  
                                         
Operating income
  $ 21,005     $ 39,587       (47 )%   $ 37,948       4 %
                                         
Operating margins
    10.5 %     15.0 %             15.6 %        
                                         
 
2009 Compared with 2008
 
Diesel Engine Services Revenues
 
Diesel engine services revenues for 2009 decreased 24% compared 2008, reflecting the lower demand levels for service and direct parts sales in the medium-speed and high-speed diesel engine markets as Gulf Coast oil


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service customers and Gulf Intracoastal Waterway and Mississippi River inland marine customers deferred maintenance in response to the economic slowdown. The medium-speed railroad parts and service revenues were also weak as industrial and shortline railroad customers deferred maintenance in response to lower railroad traffic. The medium-speed power generation revenues benefited from several engine-generator set upgrades and direct parts sales in the 2009 first half, but revenues decreased in the 2009 second half. The East Coast marine revenues benefited from engine overhaul projects in the 2009 first quarter and the international offshore oil services market was stronger during the 2009 second quarter.
 
Diesel Engine Services Costs and Expenses
 
Costs and expenses for 2009 decreased 20% compared with 2008, reflecting lower service and direct parts sales across all three of the diesel engine services markets. Partially offsetting the decrease in 2009 were the increased costs and expenses attributable to Lake Charles Diesel, acquired in June 2008 and a $1,426,000 charge in the 2009 first quarter for early retirements and staff reductions and a $916,000 charge in the 2009 fourth quarter for staff reductions applicable to the diesel engine services segment.
 
Cost of sales and operating expenses for 2009 decreased 23% compared with 2008, reflecting the lower service and direct parts sales activity noted above, with the 2009 decrease being partially offset by $795,000 of 2009 first and fourth quarter early retirements and staff reduction charges.
 
Selling, general and administrative expenses for 2009 decreased 8% compared with 2008, reflecting the cost savings of the 2009 first and fourth quarter early retirements and staff reductions and lower employee incentive compensation accruals, partially offset by the early retirements and staff reduction charges of $1,547,000.
 
Diesel Engine Services Operating Income and Operating Margins
 
Operating income for the diesel engine services segment for 2009 decreased 47% compared with 2008, primarily reflecting the soft medium-speed and high-speed Gulf Coast oil services and inland marine markets, and the 2009 first and fourth quarter early retirements and staff reductions charges noted above. The operating margin for 2009 was 10.5% compared with 15.0% for 2008, reflecting lower service levels and direct parts sales and resulting lower labor utilization, and the first and fourth quarter charges for early retirements and staff reductions.
 
2008 Compared with 2007
 
Diesel Engine Services Revenues
 
Diesel engine services revenues for 2008 increased 9% compared with 2007. The results were positively impacted by strong engine overhaul and field repair activity and direct parts sales in its medium-speed market, benefiting from a seasonally higher first quarter volume of work for Midwest and Great Lakes marine customers, strong demand from Gulf Coast and Midwest marine customers in the second and third quarters and several large power generation modification projects during the 2008 third quarter and first nine months. For the 2008 fourth quarter, the medium-speed market saw service levels and direct parts sales weaken as its customers’ activities slowed, particularly in the power generation and railroad markets, and from seasonal fluctuations in the marine markets. The high-speed market, including the acquisition of Saunders in July 2007 and Lake Charles Diesel in June 2008, experienced continued softness in the Gulf Coast oil services market during 2008, but did reflect some modest improvement in the fourth quarter, primarily the result of repairs to customers’ equipment damaged by Hurricanes Gustav and Ike. In addition, the segment benefited from higher service rates and parts pricing implemented in both its medium-speed and high-speed markets during 2007 and 2008. The segment was negatively impacted by Hurricane Gustav in early September 2008, which resulted in the closure of the segment’s Gulf Coast facilities for several days, as well as customer facilities and operations in the path of the hurricane.
 
Diesel Engine Services Costs and Expenses
 
Costs and expenses for 2008 increased 9% compared with 2007. The increase in costs of sales and operating expenses reflected the higher service and direct parts sales activity noted above, as well as increases in salaries and other related benefit expenses effective January 1, 2008. Selling, general and administrative expenses also reflected


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increased salaries and related benefit expenses effective January 1, 2008. The increase in each cost and expense category was also attributable to the Saunders acquisition in July 2007 and Lake Charles Diesel in June 2008.
 
Diesel Engine Services Operating Income and Operating Margins
 
Operating income for the diesel engine services segment for 2008 increased 4% compared with 2007, primarily reflecting strong medium-speed service activity and direct parts sales in the majority of its markets and high labor utilization in its medium-speed market through the 2008 first nine months, and higher service rates and parts pricing implemented during 2008, partially offset by softness in its medium-speed market in the 2008 fourth quarter and continued softness throughout 2008 in its Gulf Coast high-speed market, primarily the Gulf Coast oil services market, and the negative impact of Hurricane Gustav as noted above. The diesel engine services operating margin for 2008 was 15.0%, a slight decrease when compared with 15.6% for 2007. The decrease reflected softness throughout 2008 in the Gulf Coast oil services sector of the high-speed market and resulting lower labor utilization, partially offset by continued strong demand, high labor utilization and stronger pricing for the first nine months of 2008 in the medium-speed markets. The medium-speed market slowed in the 2008 fourth quarter, primarily in the power generation and railroad markets, and a higher percentage of its revenues were from lower margin engine and equipment sales.
 
General Corporate Expenses
 
General corporate expenses for 2009, 2008 and 2007 were $12,239,000, $14,099,000 and $12,889,000 respectively. The 13% decrease for 2009 compared with 2008 primarily reflected lower employee incentive compensation accruals, partially offset by a 2009 fourth quarter charge for staff reductions of $361,000. The 9% increase for 2008 compared with 2007 reflected increases in salaries and related expenses effective January 1, 2008, higher legal and professional fees and higher employee incentive compensation accruals.
 
Impairment of Goodwill
 
During the 2009 fourth quarter, the Company took a $1,901,000 charge for the partial impairment of the goodwill recorded for Osprey. The partial impairment reflected the reduced profitability outlook of the container-on-barge operations due to the current economic environment.
 
Gain (Loss) on Disposition of Assets
 
The Company reported a net gain on disposition of assets of $1,079,000 and $142,000 in 2009 and 2008, respectively, and a net loss on disposition of assets of $383,000 in 2007. The net gains and loss were predominantly from the sale of retired marine equipment.
 
Other Income and Expenses
 
The following table sets forth equity in earnings of affiliates, other expense, noncontrolling interests and interest expense for the three years ended December 31, 2009 (dollars in thousands):
 
                                         
            % Change
      % Change
            2008 to
      2007 to
    2009   2008   2009   2007   2008
 
Equity in earnings of affiliates
  $ 874     $ 134       552 %   $ 266       (50 )%
Other expense
    (266 )     (649 )     (59 )%     (221 )     194 %
Noncontrolling interests
    (1,597 )     (1,305 )     22 %     (717 )     82 %
Interest expense
    (11,080 )     (14,064 )     (21 )%     (20,284 )     (31 )%
 
Equity in Earnings of Affiliates
 
Equity in earnings of affiliates consists primarily of the Company’s 50% ownership of a barge fleeting operation.


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Interest Expense
 
Interest expense for 2009 decreased 21% compared with 2008 and 2008 interest expense decreased 31% compared with 2007, primarily the result of lower average debt levels. During 2009, 2008 and 2007, the average debt and average interest rate, including the effect of interest rate collar and swaps, were $215,500,000 and 5.1%, $278,843,000 and 5.0%, and $344,296,000 and 5.9%, respectively.
 
Financial Condition, Capital Resources and Liquidity
 
Balance Sheet
 
Total assets as of December 31, 2009 were $1,635,963,000 compared with $1,526,098,000 at December 31, 2008 and $1,430,475,000 as of December 31, 2007. The following table sets forth the significant components of the balance sheet as of December 31, 2009 compared with 2008 and 2008 compared with 2007 (dollars in thousands):
 
                                         
                % Change
          % Change
 
                2008 to
          2007 to
 
    2009     2008     2009     2007     2008  
 
Assets:
                                       
Current assets
  $ 300,097     $ 279,511       7 %   $ 267,343       5 %
Property and equipment, net
    1,085,057       990,932       9       906,098       9  
Investment in affiliates
    3,052       2,056       48       1,921       7  
Goodwill, net
    228,873       230,774       (1 )     229,292       1  
Other assets
    18,884       22,825       (17 )     25,821       (12 )
                                         
    $ 1,635,963     $ 1,526,098       7 %   $ 1,430,475       7 %
                                         
Liabilities and stockholders’ equity:
                                       
Current liabilities
  $ 137,104     $ 173,066       (21 )%   $ 191,420       (10 )%
Long-term debt-less current portion
    200,204       246,064       (19 )     296,015       (17 )
Deferred income taxes
    200,397       145,568       38       130,899       11  
Other long-term liabilities
    42,163       67,845       (38 )     39,334       72  
Total equity
    1,056,095       893,555       18       772,807       16  
                                         
    $ 1,635,963     $ 1,526,098       7 %   $ 1,430,475       7 %
                                         
 
2009 Compared with 2008
 
Current assets as of December 31, 2009 increased 7% compared with December 31, 2008, primarily reflecting the significant increase in cash and cash equivalents to $97,836,000 as of December 31, 2009 compared with $8,647,000 as of December 31, 2008. Partially offsetting the overall increase was a 29% decrease in trade accounts receivable due to lower marine transportation and diesel engine services revenues related to lower business activity levels. In addition, inventory-finished goods decreased 18% from lower activities in both the medium-speed and high-speed diesel engine services segment in 2009.
 
Property and equipment, net of accumulated depreciation, at December 31, 2009 increased 9% compared with December 31, 2008. The increase reflected $192,660,000 of capital expenditures for 2009, more fully described under Capital Expenditures below, less $91,292,000 of depreciation expense for 2009 and $7,243,000 of property disposals during 2009.
 
Current liabilities as of December 31, 2009 decreased 21% compared with December 31, 2008. Accounts payable decreased 33%, a reflection of the declining business activity during 2009 in both the marine transportation and diesel engine services segments. Accrued liabilities decreased 18%, primarily from the payment during 2009 of higher employee incentive compensation accrued during 2008, lower employee incentive compensation bonuses accrued during 2009, and lower marine insurance claims.


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Long-term debt, less current portion, as of December 31, 2009 decreased 19% compared with December 31, 2008. During 2009, the Company had net cash provided by operating activities of $319,885,000, proceeds from the exercise of stock options of $2,774,000 and proceeds from the disposition of assets of $7,388,000, partially offset by capital expenditures of $192,660,000 and treasury stock purchases of $657,000. As of December 31, 2009, the Company had no outstanding balance under its $250,000,000 revolving credit facility.
 
Deferred income taxes as of December 31, 2009 increased 38% compared with December 31, 2008. The increase was primarily due to the 2009 deferred tax provision of $42,424,000, which included bonus tax depreciation on qualifying expenditures under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.
 
Other long-term liabilities as of December 31, 2009 decreased 38% compared with December 31, 2008, primarily reflecting decreased pension plan accruals and the recording of a $5,199,000 decrease in the fair value of interest swap agreements, more fully described under Fair Value of Derivative Instruments below.
 
Total equity as of December 31, 2009 increased 18% compared with December 31, 2008. The increase was the result of $125,941,000 of net earnings attributable to Kirby for 2009, a $7,884,000 decrease in treasury stock and an increase of $24,579,000 in accumulated other comprehensive income. The decrease in treasury stock was attributable to the exercise of stock options and the issuance of restricted stock, partially offset by the purchase during 2009 of $657,000 of Company common stock. The increase in accumulated other comprehensive income primarily resulted from the net change in fair value of interest rate swap agreements, net of taxes, more fully described under Fair Value of Derivative Instruments below, and the decrease in unrecognized losses related to the Company’s defined benefit plans.
 
2008 Compared with 2007
 
Current assets as of December 31, 2008 increased 5% compared with December 31, 2007, primarily reflecting a 6% increase in trade accounts receivable due to higher marine transportation and diesel engine services revenues, less a $6,000,000 increase in allowance for doubtful accounts in the 2008 fourth quarter due to the deteriorating United States and global economic environment. Other accounts receivable increased 68%, primarily due to a higher federal income tax receivable related to the timing of estimated federal income tax payments and an increase in insurance claims receivable, including claims associated with Hurricanes Gustav and Ike. These increases were partially offset by a 9% decrease in inventory-finished goods as increased inventory purchases in the 2007 fourth quarter were utilized in 2008 first quarter service projects and from lower activities in both the medium-speed and high-speed services markets in the 2008 fourth quarter. Prepaid expenses and other current assets decreased 35%, primarily a reflection of lower prepaid fuel due to lower fuel prices.
 
Property and equipment, net of accumulated depreciation, at December 31, 2008 increased 9% compared with December 31, 2007. The increase reflected $173,019,000 of capital expenditures for 2008, more fully described under Capital Expenditures below, the fair value of the equipment and property acquired in the Lake Charles Diesel and ORIX acquisitions of $1,922,000, less $88,034,000 of depreciation expense for 2008 and $2,073,000 of property disposals during 2008.
 
Current liabilities as of December 31, 2008 decreased 10% compared with December 31, 2007. Accounts payable decreased 23%, a reflection of the declining business activity levels in late 2008 in both the marine transportation and diesel engine services segments. Income taxes payable decreased 48%, principally due to timing of estimated federal income tax payments. Accrued liabilities increased 12%, primarily from higher employee incentive compensation accruals during 2008 and higher accrued marine insurance claims, including claims associated with Hurricanes Gustav and Ike.
 
Long-term debt, less current portion, as of December 31, 2008 decreased 17% compared with December 31, 2007. During 2008, the Company had net cash provided by operating activities of $245,947,000, proceeds from the exercise of stock options of $12,888,000, proceeds from the disposition of assets of $1,978,000, partially offset by capital expenditures of $173,019,000. The Company also spent $5,480,000 on the Lake Charles Diesel and ORIX acquisitions and $33,377,000 on common stock repurchases.
 
Deferred income taxes as of December 31, 2008 increased 11% compared with December 31, 2007. The increase was primarily due to the 2008 deferred tax provision of $34,280,000, partially offset by deferred tax


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benefits on unrecognized losses related to the Company’s defined benefit plans. The deferred tax provision was primarily due to bonus tax depreciation on qualifying expenditures due to the Economic Stimulus Act of 2008.
 
Other long-term liabilities as of December 31, 2008 increased 72% compared with December 31, 2007, primarily reflecting increased pension plan accruals and the recording of a $14,204,000 increase in the fair value of the interest rate swap agreements, more fully described under Fair Value of Derivative Instruments below.
 
Total equity as of December 31, 2008 increased 16% compared with December 31, 2007. The increase was the result of $157,168,000 of net earnings attributable to Kirby for 2008, an increase in additional paid-in capital of $13,735,000, a decrease of $32,525,000 in accumulated other comprehensive income, partially offset by an increase in treasury stock of $17,720,000. The increase in additional paid-in capital was attributable to the exercise of stock options and the issuance of restricted stock. The decrease in accumulated other comprehensive income primarily resulted from the net change in fair value of interest rate collar and swap agreements, net of taxes, more fully described under Fair Value of Derivative Instruments below, and the increase in unrecognized losses related to the Company’s defined benefit plans. The increase in treasury stock was attributable to the purchase during 2008 of $33,377,000 of Company common stock, partially offset by the exercise of stock options and the issuance of restricted stock during 2008.
 
Retirement Plans
 
The Company sponsors a defined benefit plan for vessel personnel and shore based tankermen. The plan benefits are based on an employee’s years of service and compensation. The plan assets consist primarily of equity and fixed income securities. The Company’s pension plan funding strategy has historically been to contribute an amount equal to the greater of the minimum required contribution under ERISA or the amount necessary to fully fund the plan on an accumulated benefit obligation basis (“ABO”) at the end of the fiscal year. No pension contribution was made in 2009 for the 2009 year as funding of the pension plan’s ABO was 107% at December 31, 2009. The Company elected to fund its 2008 pension contribution in accordance with the Pension Protection Act of 2006 (“PPA”) to be approximately fully funded on a PPA basis instead of the higher amount as determined by the ABO due to uncertainty in the economic and credit market environment in December 2008. The Company’s contribution of $32,000,000 in December 2008 resulted in funding 91% of the pension plan’s ABO at December 31, 2008. The fair value of plan assets was $126,490,000 and $99,722,000 at December 31, 2009 and December 31, 2008, respectively.
 
The Company’s investment strategy focuses on total return on invested assets (capital appreciation plus dividend and interest income). The primary objective in the investment management of assets is to achieve long-term growth of principal while avoiding excessive risk. Risk is managed through diversification of investments within and among asset classes, as well as by choosing securities that have an established trading and underlying operating history.
 
The Company makes various assumptions when determining defined benefit plan costs including, but not limited to, the current discount rate and the expected long-term return on plan assets. Discount rates are determined annually and are based on a yield curve that consists of a hypothetical portfolio of high quality corporate bonds with maturities matching the projected benefit cash flows. The Company assumed that plan assets would generate a long-term rate of return of 7.5% in 2009 and 8.0% in 2008. The Company developed its expected long-term rate of return assumption by evaluating input from investment consultants and comparing historical returns for various asset classes with its actual and targeted plan investments. The Company believes that long-term asset allocation, on average, will approximate the targeted allocation.
 
Long-Term Financing
 
The Company has a $250,000,000 unsecured revolving credit facility (“Revolving Credit Facility”) with a syndicate of banks, with JPMorgan Chase Bank as the agent bank, with a maturity date of June 14, 2011. The Revolving Credit Facility allows for an increase in the commitments of the banks from $250,000,000 up to a maximum of $325,000,000, subject to the consent of each bank that elects to participate in the increased commitment. The unsecured Revolving Credit Facility has a variable interest rate based on the London Interbank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”) that varies with the Company’s senior debt rating and the level of debt outstanding. The


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variable interest rate spread for 2009 was 40 basis points over LIBOR and the commitment fee and utilization fee were each .10%. At February 26, 2010, the interest rate spread was 40 basis points over LIBOR and the commitment fee and utilization fee were each .10%. The Revolving Credit Facility contains certain restrictive financial covenants including an interest coverage ratio and a debt-to-capitalization ratio. In addition to financial covenants, the Revolving Credit Facility contains covenants that, subject to exceptions, restrict debt incurrence, mergers and acquisitions, sales of assets, dividends and investments, liquidations and dissolutions, capital leases, transactions with affiliates and changes in lines of business. Borrowings under the Revolving Credit Facility may be used for general corporate purposes, the purchase of existing or new equipment, the purchase of the Company’s common stock, or for business acquisitions. As of December 31, 2009, the Company was in compliance with all Revolving Credit Facility covenants and had no borrowings outstanding under the Revolving Credit Facility. The average borrowings under the Revolving Credit Facility during 2009 was $14,788,000, computed by averaging the daily balance. The weighted average interest rate for 2009 was 0.9%, computed by dividing the interest expense under the Revolving Credit Facility by the average Revolving Credit Facility borrowing. The Revolving Credit Facility includes a $25,000,000 commitment which may be used for standby letters of credit. Outstanding letters of credit under the Revolving Credit Facility were $1,642,000 as of December 31, 2009.
 
The Company has $200,000,000 of unsecured floating rate senior notes (“Senior Notes”) due February 28, 2013. The Senior Notes pay interest quarterly at a rate equal to LIBOR plus a margin of 0.5%. The Senior Notes are callable, at the Company’s option, at par. No principal payments are required until maturity in February 2013. As of December 31, 2009, $200,000,000 was outstanding under the Senior Notes and the average interest rate was 0.8%. The Company was in compliance with all Senior Notes covenants as of December 31, 2009.
 
The Company has a $5,000,000 line of credit (“Credit Line”) with Bank of America, N.A. (“Bank of America”) for short-term liquidity needs and letters of credit with a maturity date of June 30, 2010. The Credit Line allows the Company to borrow at an interest rate agreed to by Bank of America and the Company at the time each borrowing is made or continued. The Company did not have any borrowings outstanding under the Credit Line as of December 31, 2009. Outstanding letters of credit under the Credit Line were $597,000 as of December 31, 2009.
 
Interest Rate Risk Management
 
From time to time, the Company has utilized and expects to continue to utilize derivative financial instruments with respect to a portion of its interest rate risks to achieve a more predictable cash flow by reducing its exposure to interest rate fluctuations. These transactions generally are interest rate collar and swap agreements and are entered into with large multinational banks. Derivative financial instruments related to the Company’s interest rate risks are intended to reduce the Company’s exposure to increases in the benchmark interest rates underlying the Company’s floating rate senior notes and variable rate bank credit facility.
 
From time to time, the Company hedges its exposure to fluctuations in short-term interest rates under its variable rate bank credit facility and floating rate senior notes by entering into interest rate collar and swap agreements. The interest rate collar and swap agreements are designated as cash flow hedges, therefore, the changes in fair value, to the extent the collar and swap agreements are effective, are recognized in other comprehensive income (“OCI”) until the hedged interest expense is recognized in earnings. The swap agreements effectively convert the Company’s interest rate obligation on a portion of the Company’s variable rate senior notes from quarterly floating rate payments based on the LIBOR to quarterly fixed rate payments. As of December 31, 2009, the Company had a total notional amount of $200,000,000 of interest rate swaps designated as cash flow hedges for its variable rate senior notes as follows (dollars in thousands):
 
                         
Notional
          Fixed
   
Amount
 
Effective date
  Termination date   pay rate   Receive rate
 
$ 100,000     March 2006   February 2013     5.45 %   Three-month LIBOR
$ 50,000     November 2008   February 2013     3.50 %   Three-month LIBOR
$ 50,000     May 2009   February 2013     3.795 %   Three-month LIBOR


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Foreign Currency Risk Management
 
From time to time, the Company has utilized and expects to continue to utilize derivative financial instruments with respect to its forecasted foreign currency transactions to attempt to reduce the risk of its exposure to foreign currency rate fluctuations in its future diesel engine services inventory purchase commitments. These transactions, which relate to foreign currency obligations for the purchase of equipment from foreign suppliers, generally are purchased call options and are entered into with large multinational banks.
 
As of December 31, 2009, the Company has purchased Euro call options with a 1.28 strike price in the amount of 264,090 Euros maturing on March 1, 2010 and 528,180 Euros maturing on December 1, 2010. The purchased call options are designated as cash flow hedges, therefore, the changes in fair value, to the extent the purchased call options agreements are effective, are recognized in OCI until the purchased call option expires and is recognized in cost of sales and operating expenses.
 
Fair Value of Derivative Instruments
 
The following table sets forth the fair value of the Company’s derivative instruments recorded as assets located on the consolidated balance sheet at December 31, 2009 and 2008 (in thousands):
 
                     
Asset Derivatives   Balance Sheet Location   2009     2008  
 
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments under ASC 815:
                   
Foreign exchange contracts
  Prepaid expenses and other current assets   $ 138     $  
Foreign exchange contracts
  Other assets           188  
                     
Total derivatives designated as hedging
instruments under ASC 815
  $ 138     $ 188  
                 
Total asset derivatives
  $ 138     $ 188  
                 
 
The following table sets forth the fair value of the Company’s derivative instruments recorded as liabilities located on the consolidated balance sheet at December 31, 2009 and 2008 (in thousands):
 
                     
Liability Derivatives   Balance Sheet Location   2009     2008  
 
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments under ASC 815:
                   
Interest rate contracts
  Accrued liabilities   $     $ 502  
Interest rate contracts
  Other long-term liabilities     15,301       20,500  
                     
Total derivatives designated as hedging
instruments under ASC 815
  $ 15,301     $ 21,002  
                 
Total liability derivatives
  $ 15,301     $ 21,002  
                 
 
Fair value amounts were derived as of December 31, 2009 and 2008 utilizing fair value models of the Company and its counterparties on the Company’s portfolio of derivative instruments. The fair value of the Company’s derivative instruments is described in the Company’s financial statements in Note 3, Fair Value Measurements.
 
Cash Flow Hedges
 
For derivative instruments that are designated and qualify as cash flow hedges, the effective portion of the gain or loss on the derivative is reported as a component of OCI and reclassified into earnings in the same period or periods during which the hedged transaction affects earnings. Gains and losses on the derivative representing either hedge ineffectiveness or hedge components excluded from the assessment of effectiveness are recognized in current earnings. Any ineffectiveness related to the Company’s hedges was not material for any of the periods presented.


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The following table sets forth the location and amount of gains and losses on the Company’s derivative instruments in the consolidated statements of earnings for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 (in thousands):
 
                             
    Location of Gain (Loss)
  Amount of Gain (Loss)
 
    Reclassified from
  Recognized in OCI on
 
    Accumulated OCI
  Derivatives (Effective
 
Derivatives in ASC 815 Cash
  into Income
  Portion)  
Flow Hedging Relationships:
  (Effective Portion)   2009     2008     2007  
 
Interest rate contracts
  Interest expense   $ 5,701     $ (14,514 )   $ (5,382 )
Foreign exchange contracts
  Cost of sales and operating expenses     (51 )     73        
                             
Total
  $ 5,650     $ (14,441 )   $ (5,382 )
                         
 
                             
        Amount of Gain (Loss)
 
        Reclassified from
 
        Accumulated OCI into
 
    Location of Gain (Loss) Reclassified from
  Income (Effective
 
Derivatives in ASC 815 Cash
  Accumulated OCI into Income
  Portion)  
Flow Hedging Relationships:
  (Effective Portion)   2009     2008     2007  
 
Interest rate contracts
  Interest expense   $ (7,356 )   $ (3,404 )   $ 633  
Foreign exchange contracts
  Cost of sales and operating expenses                  
                             
Total
  $ (7,356 )   $ (3,404 )   $ 633  
                         
 
The Company anticipates $5,297,000 of net losses on interest rate swap agreements included in accumulated OCI will be transferred into earnings over the next year based on current interest rates. Gains or losses on interest rate swap agreements offset increases or decreases in rates of the underlying debt, which results in a fixed rate for the underlying debt. The Company also expects $138,000 of net gains on foreign currency contracts included in accumulated OCI will be transferred into earnings over the next year based on the maturity dates being less than twelve months on the purchased call options.
 
Capital Expenditures
 
Capital expenditures for 2009 were $192,660,000 of which $142,384,000 was for construction of new tank barges and towboats, and $50,276,000 was primarily for upgrading of the existing marine transportation fleet. Capital expenditures for 2008 were $173,019,000 of which $89,181,000 was for construction of new tank barges and towboats, and $83,838,000 was primarily for upgrading of the existing marine transportation fleet. Capital expenditures for 2007 were $164,083,000 of which $67,898,000 was for construction of new tank barges and towboats, and $96,185,000 was primarily for upgrading of the existing marine transportation fleet. Financing of the construction of the new tank barges and towboats was through operating cash flows and available credit under the Company’s Revolving Credit Facility.
 
During 2009, the Company took delivery of 43 new barges and seven new chartered barges with a total capacity of 1,125,000 barrels, and four 1800 horsepower towboats. The Company projects that capital expenditures for 2010 will be in the $125,000,000 to $135,000,000 range, including approximately $60,000,000 for new tank barge and towboat construction. For 2010, new construction commitments from 2007 and 2008 orders include six barges with a total capacity of 116,000 barrels and three 1800 horsepower towboats. New construction for 2010 will also include 55 barges, with a total capacity of 665,000 barrels, ordered in late 2009 for delivery throughout 2010.
 
Funding for future capital expenditures and new tank barge and towboat construction is expected to be provided through operating cash flows and available credit under the Company’s Revolving Credit Facility.
 
Treasury Stock Purchases
 
During 2009, the Company purchased in the open market 20,000 shares of its common stock at a total purchase price of $657,000, for an average price of $32.83. During 2008, the Company purchased in the open market 837,400 shares of its common stock at a total purchase price of $33,377,000, for an average price of $39.86. The


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Company did not purchase any of its common stock during 2007. As of February 26, 2010, the Company had 1,400,000 shares available under its existing repurchase authorization. Historically, treasury stock purchases have been financed through operating cash flows and borrowings under the Company’s Revolving Credit Facility. The Company is authorized to purchase its common stock on the New York Stock Exchange and in privately negotiated transactions. When purchasing its common stock, the Company is subject to price, trading volume and other market considerations. Shares purchased may be used for reissuance upon the exercise of stock options or the granting of other forms of incentive compensation, in future acquisitions for stock or for other appropriate corporate purposes.
 
Liquidity
 
The Company generated net cash provided by operating activities of $319,885,000, $245,947,000 and $235,746,000 for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007, respectively. The increase for 2009 reflected a net increase in cash flows from changes in operating assets and liabilities versus a net decrease in 2008 primarily due to a decrease in receivables in 2009 as a result of decreased revenues. In 2008, the Company experienced an increase in receivables as revenues increased due to stronger business activity levels. Also impacting 2008 was a pension contribution of $32,000,000 versus none in 2009. This was partially offset by a decrease in accounts payable due to lower business activity levels and larger incentive compensation payments in 2009 versus 2008 and smaller incentive compensation accruals during 2009 versus 2008.
 
The increase in 2008 versus 2007 reflected higher 2008 net earnings attributable to Kirby, higher depreciation and amortization expense attributable to the new tank barge and towboat construction and acquisitions, and a higher deferred tax provision primarily due to bonus tax depreciation on qualifying expenditures under the Economic Stimulus Act of 2008. This was partially offset by net negative cash flows resulting from changes in operating assets and liabilities in 2008 compared to net positive cash flows in 2007. The 2008 year experienced a larger increase in accounts receivables, a decrease in accounts payable reflecting the declining business levels in late 2008 compared to an increase in accounts payable during 2007 as business levels were increasing, and a pension contribution of $32,000,000 in 2008 versus none in 2007. This was partially offset by decreases in inventory during 2008 due to inventory purchases in the 2007 fourth quarter being utilized in the 2008 first quarter service projects and lower activity levels in the 2008 fourth quarter versus an increase in 2007 to support the 2008 first quarter service projects, and prepaid fuel expenses decreasing during 2008 due to falling fuel prices versus prepaid fuel expenses increasing during 2007 due to rising fuel prices.
 
Funds generated are available for acquisitions, capital expenditure projects, common stock repurchases, repayments of borrowings and other operating requirements. In addition to net cash flow provided by operating activities, the Company also had available as of February 25, 2010, $248,358,000 under its Revolving Credit Facility, $4,425,000 available under its Credit Line and cash and cash equivalents of $113,762,000.
 
Neither the Company, nor any of its subsidiaries, is obligated on any debt instrument, swap agreement, or any other financial instrument or commercial contract which has a rating trigger, except for pricing grids on its Revolving Credit Facility.
 
The Company expects to continue to fund expenditures for acquisitions, capital construction projects, common stock repurchases, repayment of borrowings, and for other operating requirements from a combination of available cash and cash equivalents, funds generated from operating activities and available financing arrangements.
 
The credit markets have been undergoing significant volatility. Many financial institutions recently experienced liquidity concerns, prompting government intervention to mitigate pressure on the credit markets. The Company’s material exposure to the current credit market crisis includes its Revolving Credit Facility, Senior Notes and counterparty performance risks related to its interest rate swap agreements.
 
The Revolving Credit Facility’s commitment is in the amount of $250,000,000 and expires June 14, 2011. As of December 31, 2009, the Company had $248,358,000 available under the Revolving Credit Facility. Future extensions of the Revolving Credit Facility may contain terms that are less favorable than those of the current Revolving Credit Facility should current credit market volatility be prolonged for several years. The Revolving Credit Facility also allows for an increase in the commitments from the banks from the current $250,000,000 level up to a maximum of $325,000,000, subject to the consent of each bank that elects to participate in the increased


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commitment. Based on current economic conditions and credit market volatility, there is no guarantee that the participating banks would elect to increase the commitment, and if they did, the terms may be less favorable than the current Revolving Credit Facility. The Senior Notes of $200,000,000 do not mature until 2013 and require no prepayments. Bond and private placement markets have been negatively impacted by the worldwide credit crisis, which has resulted in more restrictive access by issuers and higher costs. While the Company currently has no plans to access the bond market, should the Company decide to do so in the near term, the terms, size and cost of a new debt issue could be less favorable.
 
Current market conditions also elevate the concern over counterparty risks related to the Company’s interest rate swap agreements used to hedge the Company’s exposure to fluctuating interest rates. The counterparties to these contracts are large multinational banks. The Company may not realize the benefit of some of its hedges should one of these financial counterparties not perform.
 
There are numerous factors that may negatively impact the Company’s cash flow in 2010. For a list of significant risks and uncertainties that could impact cash flows, see Note 12, Contingencies and Commitments in the financial statements. Amounts available under the Company’s existing financial arrangements are subject to the Company continuing to meet the covenants of the credit facilities as described in Note 5, Long-Term Debt in the financial statements.
 
On January 23, 2010, the Company was involved in an incident in the Port Arthur, Texas area which resulted in an oil spill that closed the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway. The incident involved a collision between a ship, the S/S Eagle Otome, and a Company owned towboat and two tank barges. The ship is not owned by the Company. The incident occurred as the S/S Eagle Otome struck a ship moored at the dock of the Port of Port Arthur prior to striking the Company’s towboat and two tank barges. One of the Company’s tank barges sustained damage as a result of the impact but no cargo spilled from any of the Company’s vessels and none of the Company’s employees were injured. The impact did cause a breach in the S/S Eagle Otome’s cargo tank which resulted in a spill of an estimated 11,000 barrels of crude oil. Various government agencies are investigating the cause of the ship’s deviation from its navigational course. There are also various pending legal proceedings for alleged personal injuries that have been filed against the ship and its owner. Based on the information developed to date, the Company believes that it was not at fault and has adequate insurance coverage in the event and to the extent it is found to be liable.
 
The Company has issued guaranties or obtained standby letters of credit and performance bonds supporting performance by the Company and its subsidiaries of contractual or contingent legal obligations of the Company and its subsidiaries incurred in the ordinary course of business. The aggregate notional value of these instruments is $28,175,000 at December 31, 2009, including $5,567,000 in letters of credit and debt guarantees, and $22,608,000 in performance bonds. All of these instruments have an expiration date within four years. The Company does not believe demand for payment under these instruments is likely and expects no material cash outlays to occur in connection with these instruments.
 
All marine transportation term contracts contain fuel escalation clauses. However, there is generally a 30 to 90 day delay before contracts are adjusted depending on the specific contract. In general, the fuel escalation clauses are effective over the long-term in allowing the Company to recover changes in fuel costs due to fuel price changes; however, the short-term effectiveness of the fuel escalation clauses can be affected by a number of factors including, but not limited to, specific terms of the fuel escalation formulas, fuel price volatility, navigating conditions, tow sizes, trip routing, and the location of loading and discharge ports that may result in the Company over or under recovering its fuel costs. Spot contract rates generally reflect current fuel prices at the time the contract is signed but do not have escalators for fuel.
 
During the last three years, inflation has had a relatively minor effect on the financial results of the Company. The marine transportation segment has long-term contracts which generally contain cost escalation clauses whereby certain costs, including fuel as noted above, can be passed through to its customers. Spot contract rates include the cost of fuel and are subject to market volatility. The repair portion of the diesel engine services segment is based on prevailing current market rates.


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Contractual Obligations
 
The contractual obligations of the Company and its subsidiaries at December 31, 2009 consisted of the following (in thousands):
 
                                         
    Payments Due By Period  
          Less Than
    1-3
    4-5
    After
 
    Total     1 Year     Years     Years     5 Years  
 
Long-term debt
  $ 200,239     $ 35     $ 204     $ 200,000     $  
Non-cancelable operating leases — tank barges
    34,810       7,593       13,314       10,019       3,884  
Non-cancelable operating leases — towboats
    105,878       55,321       43,439       7,118        
Non-cancelable operating leases — land, buildings and equipment
    26,297       4,291       6,892       6,093       9,021  
Tank barge and towboat construction contracts
    60,000       60,000                    
                                         
    $ 427,224     $ 127,240     $ 63,849     $ 223,230     $ 12,905  
                                         
 
The majority of the towboat charter agreements are for terms of one year or less. The Company’s towboat rental agreements provide the Company with the option to terminate most agreements with notice ranging from seven to 90 days. The Company estimates that 80% of the charter rental cost is related to towboat crew costs, maintenance and insurance.
 
Accounting Standards
 
In June 2009, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) issued FASB No. 168, “The FASB Accounting Standards Codification and the Hierarchy of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, a replacement of FASB Statement No. 162” (“SFAS No. 168”). SFAS No. 168 was effective for interim and annual periods ending after September 15, 2009. Under SFAS No. 168, the FASB Accounting Standards Codification (the “Codification” or “ASC”) became the source of authoritative U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) recognized by the FASB to be applied by nongovernmental entities. Rules and interpretive releases of the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) under authority of federal securities laws are also sources of authoritative GAAP for SEC registrants. The Codification superseded all existing non-SEC accounting and reporting standards at September 15, 2009. All other nongrandfathered non-SEC accounting literature not included in the Codification has become nonauthoritative. SFAS No. 168 has been incorporated in ASC 105, “Generally Accepted Accounting Principles”. The Company adopted SFAS No. 168 in the third quarter of 2009 with no effect on the Company’s consolidated financial statements except for the change in the referencing of financial accounting standards.
 
The Company adopted a new accounting standard included in ASC 805, “Business Combinations” (formerly SFAS No. 141(R), “Business Combinations”) for business combinations beginning in the Company’s fiscal year ending December 31, 2009. This standard provides guidance to improve the relevance, representational faithfulness, and comparability of the information that a reporting entity provides in its financial reports about a business combination and its effects. This standard also establishes principles and requirements for how the acquirer recognizes and measures in its financial statements the identifiable assets acquired, liabilities assumed, goodwill acquired and determines what information to disclose to enable users of the financial statements to evaluate the nature and financial effects of the business combination. As the Company completed no business acquisitions during 2009, the adoption as of January 1, 2009 had no effect on the Company’s consolidated financial statements.
 
The Company adopted ASC 810-10-65, “Noncontrolling Interests in Consolidated Financial Statements — an amendment of ARB No. 51” (formerly SFAS No. 160, “Noncontrolling Interests in Consolidated Financial Statements — an amendment of ARB No. 51”) effective January 1, 2009. This standard establishes accounting and reporting standards for the noncontrolling interest in a subsidiary and for the deconsolidation of a subsidiary to improve the relevance, comparability and transparency of the financial information that a reporting entity provides in its consolidated financial statements. Beginning January 1, 2009, the Company has applied the provisions of this


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standard to its accounting for noncontrolling interests and its financial statement disclosures. The presentation and disclosure provisions of this standard have been applied to all periods presented in the consolidated financial statements.
 
The Company adopted the provisions of ASC 820-10, “Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures” (formerly SFAS No. 157, “Fair Value Measurements”) with respect to nonfinancial assets and nonfinancial liabilities, except for items that are recognized or disclosed at fair value in the financial statements on a recurring basis (at least annually), effective January 1, 2009. The adoption of ASC 820-10 in the first quarter of 2009 did not have an impact on the Company’s consolidated financial statements except that the Company has applied these provisions to its financial statement disclosures.
 
The Company adopted a new accounting standard included in ASC 815, “Derivatives and Hedging” (formerly SFAS No. 161, “Disclosures about Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities — an amendment of FASB Statement No. 133”) effective January 1, 2009. This standard amends and expands derivatives and hedging disclosure requirements with the intent to provide users of financial statements with an enhanced understanding of: (a) how and why an entity uses derivative instruments; (b) how derivative instruments and related hedged items are accounted for under GAAP and its related interpretations; and (c) how derivative instruments and related hedged items affect an entity’s financial position, financial performance and cash flows. The Company applied the provisions of this standard to its financial statement disclosures beginning in the first quarter of 2009.
 
The Company adopted a new accounting standard included in ASC 855, “Subsequent Events” (formerly SFAS No. 165, “Subsequent Events”) which establishes general standards of accounting for and disclosure of events that occur after the balance sheet date but before financial statements are issued or are available to be issued. This standard also requires disclosure of the date through which an entity has evaluated subsequent events and the basis for that date. The Company adopted this standard in the second quarter of 2009 and has evaluated subsequent events through February 26, 2010, the time of filing of these financial statements with the SEC.
 
Item 7A.   Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk
 
The Company is exposed to risk from changes in interest rates on certain of its outstanding debt. The outstanding loan balances under the Company’s bank credit facilities bear interest at variable rates based on prevailing short-term interest rates in the United States and Europe. A 10% change in variable interest rates would have no impact on the 2010 interest expense based on balances outstanding at December 31, 2009 as the Company’s outstanding debt is approximately 100% hedged by interest rate swaps, and would change the fair value of the Company’s debt by less than 1%.
 
Interest Rate Risk Management
 
From time to time, the Company has utilized and expects to continue to utilize derivative financial instruments with respect to a portion of its interest rate risks to achieve a more predictable cash flow by reducing its exposure to interest rate fluctuations. These transactions generally are interest rate collar and swap agreements and are entered into with large multinational banks. Derivative financial instruments related to the Company’s interest rate risks are intended to reduce the Company’s exposure to increases in the benchmark interest rates underlying the Company’s floating rate senior notes and variable rate bank credit facility. The Company does not enter into derivative financial instrument transactions for speculative purposes.
 
From time to time, the Company hedges its exposure to fluctuations in short-term interest rates under its variable rate bank credit facility and floating rate senior notes by entering into interest rate collar and swap agreements. The interest rate collar and swap agreements are designated as cash flow hedges, therefore, the changes in fair value, to the extent the collar and swap agreements are effective, are recognized in OCI until the hedged interest expense is recognized in earnings. The swap agreements effectively convert the Company’s interest rate obligation on a portion of the Company’s variable rate senior notes from quarterly floating rate payments based on LIBOR to quarterly fixed rate payments. As of December 31, 2009, the Company had a total notional amount of


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$200,000,000 of interest rate swaps designated as cash flow hedges for its variable rate senior notes as follows (dollars in thousands):
 
                         
Notional
          Fixed
   
Amount
 
Effective date
  Termination date   pay rate   Receive rate
 
$ 100,000     March 2006   February 2013     5.45 %   Three-month LIBOR
$ 50,000     November 2008   February 2013     3.50 %   Three-month LIBOR
$ 50,000     May 2009   February 2013     3.795 %   Three-month LIBOR
 
Foreign Currency Risk Management
 
From time to time, the Company has utilized and expects to continue to utilize derivative financial instruments with respect to its forecasted foreign currency transactions to attempt to reduce the risk of its exposure to foreign currency rate fluctuations in its future diesel engine services inventory purchase commitments. These transactions, which relate to foreign currency obligations for the purchase of equipment from foreign suppliers, generally are purchased call options and are entered into with large multinational banks.
 
As of December 31, 2009, the Company has purchased Euro call options with a 1.28 strike price in the amount of 264,090 Euros maturing on March 1, 2010 and 528,180 Euros maturing on December 1, 2010. The purchased call options are designated as cash flow hedges, therefore, the changes in fair value, to the extent the purchased call options agreements are effective, are recognized in OCI until the purchased call option expires and is recognized in cost of sales and operating expenses.
 
Fair Value of Derivative Instruments
 
The following table sets forth the fair value of the Company’s derivative instruments recorded as assets located on the consolidated balance sheet at December 31, 2009 and 2008 (in thousands):
 
                     
Asset Derivatives   Balance Sheet Location   2009     2008  
 
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments under ASC 815:
                   
Foreign exchange contracts
  Prepaid expenses and other current assets   $ 138     $  
Foreign exchange contracts
  Other assets           188  
                     
Total derivatives designated as hedging
instruments under ASC 815
      $ 138     $ 188  
                     
Total asset derivatives
      $ 138     $ 188  
                     
 
The following table sets forth the fair value of the Company’s derivative instruments recorded as liabilities located on the consolidated balance sheet at December 31, 2009 and 2008 (in thousands):
 
                     
Liability Derivatives   Balance Sheet Location   2009     2008  
 
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments under ASC 815:
                   
Interest rate contracts
  Accrued liabilities   $       502  
Interest rate contracts
  Other long-term liabilities     15,301       20,500  
                     
Total derivatives designated as hedging
instruments under ASC 815
  $ 15,301     $ 21,002  
                 
Total liability derivatives
  $ 15,301     $ 21,002  
                 
 
Fair value amounts were derived as of December 31, 2009 and 2008 utilizing fair value models of the Company and its counterparties on the Company’s portfolio of derivative instruments. The fair value of the Company’s derivative instruments is described in the Company’s Financial statements in Note 3, Fair Value Measurements.


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Cash Flow Hedges
 
For derivative instruments that are designated and qualify as cash flow hedges, the effective portion of the gain or loss on the derivative is reported as a component of OCI and reclassified into earnings in the same period or periods during which the hedged transaction affects earnings. Gains and losses on the derivative representing either hedge ineffectiveness or hedge components excluded from the assessment of effectiveness are recognized in current earnings. Any ineffectiveness related to the Company’s hedges was not material for any of the periods presented.
 
The following table sets forth the location and amount of gains and losses on the Company’s derivative instruments in the consolidated statements of earnings for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 (in thousands):
 
                             
    Location of Gain (Loss)
  Amount of Gain (Loss)
 
    Reclassified from
  Recognized in OCI on
 
    Accumulated OCI
  Derivatives (Effective
 
Derivatives in ASC 815 Cash
  into Income
  Portion)  
Flow Hedging Relationships:
  (Effective Portion)   2009     2008     2007  
 
Interest rate contracts
  Interest expense   $ 5,701     $ (14,514 )   $ (5,382 )
Foreign exchange contracts
  Cost of sales and operating expenses     (51 )     73        
                             
Total
  $ 5,650     $ (14,441 )   $ (5,382 )
                         
 
                             
        Amount of Gain (Loss)
 
        Reclassified from
 
        Accumulated OCI
 
    Location of Gain (Loss)
  into Income
 
    Reclassified from Accumulated
  (Effective
 
Derivatives in ASC 815 Cash
  OCI into Income
  Portion)  
Flow Hedging Relationships:
  (Effective Portion)   2009     2008     2007  
 
Interest rate contracts
  Interest expense   $ (7,356 )   $ (3,404 )   $ 633  
Foreign exchange contracts
  Cost of sales and operating expenses                  
                             
Total
  $ (7,356 )   $ (3,404 )   $ 633  
                         
 
The Company anticipates $5,297,000 of net losses on interest rate swap agreements included in accumulated OCI will be transferred into earnings over the next year based on current interest rates. Gains or losses on interest rate swap agreements offset increases or decreases in rates of the underlying debt, which results in a fixed rate for the underlying debt. The Company also expects $138,000 of net gains on foreign currency contracts included in accumulated OCI will be transferred into earnings over the next year based on the maturity dates being less than twelve months on the purchased call options.
 
Item 8.   Financial Statements and Supplementary Data
 
The response to this item is submitted as a separate section of this report (see Item 15, page 85).
 
Item 9.   Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure
 
Not applicable.
 
Item 9A.   Controls and Procedures
 
Disclosure Controls and Procedures.  The Company’s management, with the participation of the Chief Executive Officer and the Chief Financial Officer, has evaluated the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 13a-15(e) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”) as of December 31, 2009. Based on that evaluation, the Chief Executive Officer and the Chief Financial Officer concluded that, as of December 31, 2009, the disclosure controls and procedures were effective to ensure that information required to be disclosed by the Company in the reports that it files or submits under the Exchange Act is recorded, processed,


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summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the Securities and Exchange Commission’s rules and forms.
 
Management’s Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting.  Management of the Company is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 13a-15(f) under the Exchange Act). The Company’s management, with the participation of the Chief Executive Officer and the Chief Financial Officer, evaluated the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2009 using the framework in Internal Control — Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission. Based on that evaluation, management concluded that the Company’s internal control over financial reporting was effective as of December 31, 2009. KPMG LLP, the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm, has audited the Company’s internal control over financial reporting, as stated in their report which is included herein.
 
There were no changes in the Company’s internal control over financial reporting during the quarter ended December 31, 2009 that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.
 
PART III
 
Items 10 Through 14.
 
The information for these items is incorporated by reference to the definitive proxy statement filed by the Company with the Commission pursuant to Regulation 14A within 120 days of the close of the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009, except for the information regarding executive officers which is provided under Item 1.


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Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
 
The Board of Directors and Stockholders of Kirby Corporation:
 
We have audited Kirby Corporation and consolidated subsidiaries internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2009, based on criteria established in Internal Control — Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO). Kirby Corporation’s management is responsible for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting and for its assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting, included in the accompanying Management’s Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Company’s internal control over financial reporting based on our audit.
 
We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether effective internal control over financial reporting was maintained in all material respects. Our audit included obtaining an understanding of internal control over financial reporting, assessing the risk that a material weakness exists, and testing and evaluating the design and operating effectiveness of internal control based on the assessed risk. Our audit also included performing such other procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
A company’s internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. A company’s internal control over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (1) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (2) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of the company; and (3) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the company’s assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements.
 
Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.
 
In our opinion, Kirby Corporation maintained, in all material respects, effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2009, based on criteria established in Internal Control — Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission.
 
We also have audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States), the consolidated balance sheets of Kirby Corporation and consolidated subsidiaries as of December 31, 2009 and 2008, and the related consolidated statements of earnings, stockholders’ equity and comprehensive income, and cash flows for each of the years in the three-year period ended December 31, 2009, and our report dated February 26, 2010 expressed an unqualified opinion on those consolidated financial statements.
 
 
KPMG LLP
 
Houston, Texas
February 26, 2010


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Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
 
The Board of Directors and Stockholders of Kirby Corporation:
 
We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of Kirby Corporation and consolidated subsidiaries as of December 31, 2009 and 2008, and the related consolidated statements of earnings, stockholders’ equity and comprehensive income, and cash flows for each of the years in the three-year period ended December 31, 2009. These consolidated financial statements are the responsibility of the Company’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these consolidated financial statements based on our audits.
 
We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Kirby Corporation and consolidated subsidiaries as of December 31, 2009 and 2008, and the results of their operations and their cash flows for each of the years in the three-year period ended December 31, 2009, in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.
 
We also have audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States), Kirby Corporation’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2009, based on criteria established in Internal Control — Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO), and our report dated February 26, 2010 expressed an unqualified opinion on the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.
 
 
KPMG LLP
 
Houston, Texas
February 26, 2010


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
December 31, 2009 and 2008
 
                 
    2009     2008  
    ($ in thousands)  
 
ASSETS
Current assets:
               
Cash and cash equivalents
  $ 97,836     $ 8,647  
Accounts receivable:
               
Trade — less allowance for doubtful accounts of $4,532 ($8,878 in 2008)
    132,660       187,210  
Other
    7,379       12,976  
Inventory — finished goods, at lower of average cost or market
    39,793       48,518  
Prepaid expenses and other current assets
    14,963       12,163  
Deferred income taxes
    7,466       9,997  
                 
Total current assets
    300,097       279,511  
                 
Property and equipment:
               
Marine transportation equipment
    1,654,799       1,550,547  
Land, buildings and equipment
    117,560       105,028  
                 
      1,772,359       1,655,575  
Accumulated depreciation
    687,302       664,643  
                 
Property and equipment — net
    1,085,057       990,932  
                 
Investment in affiliates
    3,052       2,056  
Goodwill — net
    228,873       230,774  
Other assets
    18,884       22,825  
                 
Total assets
  $ 1,635,963     $ 1,526,098  
                 
 
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY
Current liabilities:
               
Current portion of long-term debt
  $ 35     $ 1,243  
Income taxes payable
    5,210       4,755  
Accounts payable
    52,091       78,020  
Accrued liabilities:
               
Interest
    934       1,008  
Insurance premiums and claims
    23,744       25,796  
Employee compensation
    24,860       36,957  
Taxes — other than on income
    5,293       7,300  
Other
    12,640       10,981  
Deferred revenues
    12,297       7,006  
                 
Total current liabilities
    137,104       173,066  
                 
Long-term debt — less current portion
    200,204       246,064  
Deferred income taxes
    200,397       145,568  
Other long-term liabilities
    42,163       67,845  
                 
Total long-term liabilities
    442,764       459,477  
                 
Contingencies and commitments
           
Equity:
               
Kirby stockholders’ equity:
               
Preferred stock, $1.00 par value per share. Authorized 20,000,000 shares
           
Common stock, $.10 par value per share. Authorized 120,000,000 shares, issued 57,337,000 shares
    5,734       5,734  
Additional paid-in capital
    229,724       225,718  
Accumulated other comprehensive income — net
    (30,468 )     (55,047 )
Retained earnings
    930,366       804,425  
Treasury stock — at cost, 3,500,000 shares in 2009 and 3,848,000 in 2008
    (82,893 )     (90,777 )
                 
Total Kirby stockholders’ equity
    1,052,463       890,053  
Noncontrolling interests
    3,632       3,502  
                 
Total equity
    1,056,095       893,555  
                 
Total liabilities and equity
  $ 1,635,963     $ 1,526,098  
                 
 
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF EARNINGS
For the Years Ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007
 
                         
    2009     2008     2007  
    ($ in thousands,
 
    except per share amounts)  
 
Revenues:
                       
Marine transportation
  $ 881,298     $ 1,095,475     $ 928,834  
Diesel engine services
    200,860       264,679       243,791  
                         
Total revenues
    1,082,158       1,360,154       1,172,625  
                         
Costs and expenses:
                       
Costs of sales and operating expenses
    637,833       843,310       735,427  
Selling, general and administrative
    121,401       142,171       121,952  
Taxes, other than on income
    12,104       13,120       13,159  
Depreciation and amortization
    93,968       91,199       80,916  
Impairment of goodwill
    1,901              
Loss (gain) on disposition of assets
    (1,079 )     (142 )     383  
                         
Total costs and expenses
    866,128       1,089,658       951,837  
                         
Operating income
    216,030       270,496       220,788  
Equity in earnings of affiliates
    874       134       266  
Other expense
    (266 )     (649 )     (221 )
Interest expense
    (11,080 )     (14,064 )     (20,284 )
                         
Earnings before taxes on income
    205,558       255,917       200,549  
Provision for taxes on income
    (78,020 )     (97,444 )     (76,491 )
                         
Net earnings
    127,538       158,473     $ 124,058  
Less: Net earnings attributable to noncontrolling interests
    (1,597 )     (1,305 )     (717 )
                         
Net earnings attributable to Kirby
  $ 125,941     $ 157,168     $ 123,341  
                         
Net earnings per share attributable to Kirby common stockholders:
                       
Basic
  $ 2.34     $ 2.92     $ 2.31  
Diluted
  $ 2.34     $ 2.91     $ 2.29  
 
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY AND
COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
For the Years Ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007
 
                         
    2009     2008     2007  
    ($ in thousands)  
 
Common stock:
                       
Balance at beginning and end of year
  $ 5,734     $ 5,734     $ 5,734  
                         
Additional paid-in capital:
                       
Balance at beginning of year
  $ 225,718     $ 211,983     $ 208,032  
Excess (deficit) of proceeds received upon exercise of stock options and issuance of restricted stock over cost of treasury stock issued
    (349 )     3,879       746  
Tax benefit realized from equity compensation plans
    1,013       8,930       2,995  
Issuance of restricted stock, net of forfeitures
    (6,513 )     (8,332 )     (6,133 )
Amortization of unearned compensation
    9,855       9,258       6,343  
                         
Balance at end of year
  $ 229,724     $ 225,718     $ 211,983  
                         
Accumulated other comprehensive income:
                       
Balance at beginning of year
  $ (55,047 )   $ (22,522 )   $ (23,087 )
Change in defined benefit plans’ minimum liabilities, net of taxes ($(12,962) in 2009, $14,344 in 2008 and $(2,600) in 2007)
    20,903       (23,134 )     4,063  
Change in fair value of derivative financial instruments, net of taxes ($(1,974) in 2009, $5,049 in 2008 and $1,884 in 2007)
    3,676       (9,391 )     (3,498 )
                         
Balance at end of year
  $ (30,468 )   $ (55,047 )   $ (22,522 )
                         
Retained earnings:
                       
Balance at beginning of year
  $ 804,425     $ 647,692     $ 524,351  
Net earnings attributable to Kirby for the year
    125,941       157,168       123,341  
Adjustment to initially apply ASC 715-10, net of taxes of $270
          (435 )      
                         
Balance at end of year
  $ 930,366     $ 804,425     $ 647,692  
                         
Treasury stock:
                       
Balance at beginning of year
  $ (90,777 )   $ (73,057 )   $ (83,035 )
Purchase of treasury stock (20,000 in 2009 and 837,000 shares in 2008)
    (657 )     (33,377 )      
Cost of treasury stock issued upon exercise of stock options and issuance of restricted stock (368,000 in 2009, 795,000 in 2008 and 548,000 in 2007)
    8,541       15,657       9,978  
                         
Balance at end of year
  $ (82,893 )   $ (90,777 )   $ (73,057 )
                         
Noncontrolling interests:
                       
Balance at beginning of year
  $ 3,502     $ 2,978     $ 3,019  
Net earnings attributable to noncontrolling interests
    1,597       1,305       717  
Return of investment to noncontrolling interests
    (1,782 )     (894 )     (1,333 )
Proceeds from noncontrolling interest investments
    315       113       575  
                         
Balance at the end of year
  $ 3,632     $ 3,502     $ 2,978  
                         
Comprehensive income:
                       
Net earnings attributable to Kirby for the year
  $ 125,941     $ 157,168     $ 123,341  
Other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes ($(14,936) in 2009, $19,393 in 2008 and $(716) in 2007)
    24,579       (32,525 )     565  
                         
Total comprehensive income
  $ 150,520     $ 124,643     $ 123,906  
                         
 
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
For the Years Ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007
 
                         
    2009     2008     2007  
    ($ in thousands)  
 
Cash flows from operating activities:
                       
Net earnings
  $ 127,538     $ 158,473     $ 124,058  
Adjustments to reconcile net earnings to net cash provided by operations:
                       
Depreciation and amortization
    93,968       91,199       80,916  
Provision (credit) for doubtful accounts
    (1,104 )     7,799       85  
Provision for deferred income taxes
    42,424       34,280       1,653  
Loss (gain) on disposition of assets
    (1,079 )     (142 )     383  
Equity in earnings of affiliates, net of distributions
    (874 )     (134 )     395  
Amortization of unearned compensation
    9,855       9,258       6,343  
Impairment of goodwill
    1,901              
Other
    (104 )     65       108  
Increase (decrease) in cash flows resulting from changes in:
                       
Accounts receivable
    59,083       (21,277 )     1,868  
Inventory
    8,724       6,208       (9,335 )
Other assets
    (1,585 )     7,053       (1,198 )
Income taxes payable
    3,557       (7,530 )     8,614  
Accounts payable
    (25,929 )     (22,888 )     11,742  
Accrued and other liabilities
    3,510       (16,417 )     10,114  
                         
Net cash provided by operating activities
    319,885       245,947       235,746  
                         
Cash flows from investing activities:
                       
Capital expenditures
    (192,660 )     (173,019 )     (164,083 )
Acquisitions of businesses and marine equipment, net of cash acquired
          (5,480 )     (67,185 )
Proceeds from disposition of assets
    7,388       1,978       3,417  
Other
                (52 )
                         
Net cash used in investing activities
    (185,272 )     (176,521 )     (227,903 )
                         
Cash flows from financing activities:
                       
Payments on bank credit facilities, net
    (46,000 )     (49,050 )     (12,350 )
Payments on long-term debt, net
    (1,087 )     (1,091 )     (984 )
Return of investment to noncontrolling interests
    (1,782 )     (894 )     (1,333 )
Proceeds from noncontrolling interest investments
    315       113       575  
Proceeds from exercise of stock options
    2,774       12,888       5,718  
Purchase of treasury stock
    (657 )     (33,377 )      
Excess tax benefit from equity compensation plans
    1,013       5,515       2,995  
                         
Net cash used in financing activities
    (45,424 )     (65,896 )     (5,379 )
                         
Increase in cash and cash equivalents
    89,189       3,530       2,464  
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of year
    8,647       5,117       2,653  
                         
Cash and cash equivalents, end of year
  $ 97,836     $ 8,647     $ 5,117  
                         
Supplemental disclosures of cash flow information:
                       
Cash paid during the year:
                       
Interest
  $ 10,899     $ 14,002     $ 20,171  
Income taxes
  $ 31,005     $ 65,180     $ 63,341  
Noncash investing activity:
                       
Disposition of assets for receivables
  $ 934     $     $  
Cash acquired in acquisition
  $     $     $ 10  
Debt assumed in acquisition
  $     $     $ 245  
 
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(1)   Summary of Significant Accounting Policies
 
Principles of Consolidation.  The consolidated financial statements include the accounts of Kirby Corporation and all majority-owned subsidiaries (“the Company”). One affiliated limited partnership in which the Company owns a 50% interest, is the general partner and has effective control, and whose activities are an integral part of the operations of the Company, is consolidated. All other investments in which the Company owns 20% to 50% and exercises significant influence over operating and financial policies are accounted for using the equity method. All material intercompany accounts and transactions have been eliminated in consolidation. Certain reclassifications have been made to reflect the current presentation of financial information.
 
Accounting Policies
 
Cash Equivalents.  Cash equivalents consist of all short-term, highly liquid investments with maturities of three months or less at date of purchase.
 
Accounts Receivable.  In the normal course of business, the Company extends credit to its customers. The Company regularly reviews the accounts and makes adequate provisions for probable uncollectible balances. It is the Company’s opinion that the accounts have no impairment, other than that for which provisions have been made. Included in accounts receivable as of December 31, 2009 and 2008 were $23,789,000 and $31,578,000, respectively, of accruals for revenues earned which have not been invoiced as of the end of each year.
 
The Company’s marine transportation and diesel engine services operations are subject to hazards associated with such businesses. The Company maintains insurance coverage against these hazards with insurance companies. Included in accounts receivable as of December 31, 2009 and 2008 were $608,000 and $2,500,000, respectively, of receivables from insurance companies to cover claims in excess of the Company’s deductible.
 
Concentrations of Credit Risk.  Financial instruments which potentially subject the Company to concentrations of credit risk are primarily trade accounts receivables. The Company’s marine transportation customers include the major oil refining and petrochemical companies. The diesel engine services customers are offshore oil and gas service companies, inland and offshore marine transportation companies, commercial fishing companies, power generation companies, shortline, industrial, Class II and certain transit railroads, and the United States government. The Company regularly reviews its accounts and estimates the amount of uncollectible receivables each period and establishes an allowance for uncollectible amounts. The amount of the allowance is based on the age of unpaid amounts, information about the current financial strength of customers, and other relevant information. Estimates of uncollectible amounts are revised each period, and changes are recorded in the period they become known.
 
Fair Value of Financial Instruments.  Cash, accounts receivable, accounts payable and accrued liabilities have carrying values that approximate fair value due to the short-term maturity of these financial instruments. The fair value of the Company’s debt instruments is more fully described in Note 5, Long-Term Debt.
 
Property, Maintenance and Repairs.  Property is recorded at cost. Improvements and betterments are capitalized as incurred. Depreciation is recorded on the straight-line method over the estimated useful lives of the individual assets as follows: marine transportation equipment, 6-40 years; buildings, 10-40 years; other equipment, 2-10 years; and leasehold improvements, term of lease. When property items are retired, sold or otherwise disposed of, the related cost and accumulated depreciation are removed from the accounts with any gain or loss on the disposition included in the statement of earnings. Maintenance and repairs are charged to operating expense as incurred.
 
Environmental Liabilities.  The Company expenses costs related to environmental events as they are incurred or when a loss is considered probable and estimable.
 
Goodwill.  The excess of the purchase price over the fair value of identifiable net assets acquired in transactions accounted for as a purchase is included in goodwill. Goodwill, including goodwill associated with


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(1)   Summary of Significant Accounting Policies — (Continued)
 
equity method investments, is not amortized. The Company conducted its annual goodwill impairment test at November 30, 2009, incurring an impairment of goodwill charge of $1,901,000. The Company will continue to conduct goodwill impairment tests as of November 30 of subsequent years, or whenever events or circumstances indicate that interim impairment testing is necessary. The gross carrying value of goodwill at December 31, 2009 and 2008 was $246,340,000 and accumulated amortization at December 31, 2009 and 2008 was $15,566,000. Accumulated impairment losses were $1,901,000 at December 31, 2009.
 
During the 2009 fourth quarter, the Company took a $1,901,000 charge for the partial impairment of the goodwill recorded for Osprey Line, L.L.C., a subsidiary that transports project cargoes and cargo containers by barge on the United States inland waterway system. The partial impairment reflected the reduced profitability outlook of the container-on-barge operations due to the current economic environment. The fair value was determined using a combination of a discounted cash flow methodology and a market based approach utilizing a net earnings before interest expense, taxes on income, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) multiplier.
 
Net goodwill for the marine transportation segment was $153,870,000 and $155,771,000 at December 31, 2009 and 2008, respectively. Net goodwill for the diesel engine services segment was $75,003,000 at December 31, 2009 and 2008.
 
Revenue Recognition.  The majority of marine transportation revenue is derived from term contracts, ranging from one to five years, with renewal options, and the remainder is from spot market movements. The majority of the term contracts are for terms of one year. The Company is a provider of marine transportation services for its customers and, in almost all cases, does not assume ownership of the products it transports. A term contract is an agreement with a specific customer to transport cargo from a designated origin to a designated destination at a set rate or at a daily rate. The rate may or may not escalate during the term of the contract, however, the base rate generally remains constant and contracts often include escalation provisions to recover changes in specific costs such as fuel. A spot contract is an agreement with a customer to move cargo from a specific origin to a designated destination for a rate negotiated at the time the cargo movement takes place. Spot contract rates are at the current “market” rate, including fuel, and are subject to market volatility. The Company uses a voyage accounting method of revenue recognition for its marine transportation revenues which allocates voyage revenue based on the percent of the voyage completed during the period. There is no difference in the recognition of revenue between a term contract and a spot contract.
 
Diesel engine service products and services are generally sold based upon purchase orders or preferential service agreements with the customer that include fixed or determinable prices and that do not include right of return or significant post delivery performance obligations. Diesel engine parts sales are recognized when title passes upon shipment to customers. Diesel overhauls and repairs revenue are reported on the percentage of completion method of accounting using measurements of progress towards completion appropriate for the work performed.
 
Stock-Based Compensation.  The Company has share-based compensation plans covering selected officers and other key employees as well as the Company’s Board of Directors. Stock-based grants made under the Company’s stock plans are recorded at fair value on the date of the grant and the cost is recognized ratably over the vesting period of the stock option or restricted stock. Stock option grants are valued at the date of grant as calculated under the Black-Scholes option pricing model. The Company’s stock-based compensation plans are more fully described in Note 8, Stock Award Plans.
 
Taxes on Income.  The Company follows the asset and liability method of accounting for income taxes. Under the asset and liability method, deferred tax assets and liabilities are recognized for the future tax consequences attributable to differences between the financial statement carrying amounts of existing assets and liabilities and their respective tax basis and operating loss and tax credit carryforwards. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are measured using enacted tax rates expected to apply to taxable income in the years in which those temporary differences are expected to be recovered or settled. The effect on deferred tax assets and liabilities of a change in tax rates is recognized in income in the period that includes the enactment date.


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(1)   Summary of Significant Accounting Policies — (Continued)
 
Accrued Insurance.  Accrued insurance liabilities include estimates based on individual incurred claims outstanding and an estimated amount for losses incurred but not reported (IBNR) or fully developed based on past experience. Insurance premiums, IBNR losses and incurred claims losses, up to the Company’s deductible, for 2009, 2008 and 2007 were $12,786,000, $19,130,000 and $14,317,000, respectively.
 
Noncontrolling Interests.  The Company has a majority interest in and is the general partner in several affiliated entities. In situations where losses applicable to the minority interest in the affiliated entities exceed the limited partners’ equity capital, such excess and any further loss attributable to the minority interest is charged against the Company’s interest in the affiliated entities. If future earnings materialize in the respective affiliated entities, the Company’s interest would be credited to the extent of any losses previously absorbed.
 
The Company adopted ASC 810-10-65, “Noncontrolling Interests in Consolidated Financial Statements — an amendment of ARB No. 51” (formerly SFAS No. 160, “Noncontrolling Interests in Consolidated Financial Statements — an amendment of ARB No. 51”) effective January 1, 2009. This standard establishes accounting and reporting standards for the noncontrolling interest in a subsidiary and for the deconsolidation of a subsidiary to improve the relevance, comparability and transparency of the financial information that a reporting entity provides in its consolidated financial statements. Beginning January 1, 2009, the Company has applied the provisions of this standard to its accounting for noncontrolling interests and its financial statement disclosures. The presentation and disclosure provisions of this standard have been applied to all periods presented in the consolidated financial statements.
 
Treasury Stock.  The Company follows the average cost method of accounting for treasury stock transactions.
 
Impairment of Long-Lived Assets and for Long-Lived Assets to Be Disposed Of.  The Company reviews long-lived assets and certain identifiable intangibles for impairment by vessel class whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of the assets may not be recoverable.
 
Recoverability on marine transportation assets is assessed based on vessel classes, not on individual assets, because identifiable cash flows for individual marine transportation assets are not available. Projecting customer contract volumes allows estimation of future cash flows by projecting pricing and utilization by vessel class but it is not practical to project which individual marine transportation asset will be utilized for any given contract. Because customers do not specify which particular vessel is used, prices are quoted based on vessel classes not individual assets. Nominations of vessels for specific jobs are determined on a day by day basis and are a function of the equipment class required and the geographic position of vessels within that class at that particular time as vessels within a class are interchangeable and provide the same service. Barge vessel classes are based on similar capacities, hull type, and type of product and towboats are based on horsepower. Recoverability of the vessel classes is measured by a comparison of the carrying amount of the assets to future net cash flows expected to be generated by the assets. If such assets are considered to be impaired, the impairment to be recognized is measured by the amount by which the carrying amount of the assets exceeds the fair value of the assets. Assets to be disposed of are reported at the lower of the carrying amount or fair value less costs to sell.
 
Accounting Standards
 
In June 2009, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) issued FASB No. 168, “The FASB Accounting Standards Codification and the Hierarchy of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, a replacement of FASB Statement No. 162” (“SFAS No. 168”). SFAS No. 168 was effective for interim and annual periods ending after September 15, 2009. Under SFAS No. 168, the FASB Accounting Standards Codification (the “Codification” or “ASC”) became the source of authoritative U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) recognized by the FASB to be applied by nongovernmental entities. Rules and interpretive releases of the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) under authority of federal securities laws are also sources of authoritative GAAP for SEC registrants. The Codification superseded all existing non-SEC accounting and reporting standards at September 15, 2009. All other nongrandfathered non-SEC accounting literature not included in the Codification has


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(1)   Summary of Significant Accounting Policies — (Continued)
 
become nonauthoritative. SFAS No. 168 has been incorporated in ASC 105, “Generally Accepted Accounting Principles”. The Company adopted SFAS No. 168 in the third quarter of 2009 with no effect on the Company’s consolidated financial statements except for the change in the referencing of financial accounting standards.
 
The Company adopted a new accounting standard included in ASC 805, “Business Combinations” (formerly SFAS No. 141(R), “Business Combinations”) for business combinations beginning in the Company’s fiscal year ending December 31, 2009. This standard provides guidance to improve the relevance, representational faithfulness, and comparability of the information that a reporting entity provides in its financial reports about a business combination and its effects. This standard also establishes principles and requirements for how the acquirer recognizes and measures in its financial statements the identifiable assets acquired, liabilities assumed, goodwill acquired and determines what information to disclose to enable users of the financial statements to evaluate the nature and financial effects of the business combination. As the Company completed no business acquisitions during 2009, the adoption as of January 1, 2009 had no effect on the Company’s consolidated financial statements.
 
The Company adopted a new accounting standard included in ASC 815, “Derivatives and Hedging” (formerly SFAS No. 161, “Disclosures about Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities — an amendment of FASB Statement No. 133”) effective January 1, 2009. This standard amends and expands derivatives and hedging disclosure requirements with the intent to provide users of financial statements with an enhanced understanding of: (a) how and why an entity uses derivative instruments; (b) how derivative instruments and related hedged items are accounted for under GAAP and its related interpretations; and (c) how derivative instruments and related hedged items affect an entity’s financial position, financial performance and cash flows. The Company applied the provisions of this standard to its financial statement disclosures beginning in the first quarter of 2009.
 
The Company adopted a new accounting standard included in ASC 855, “Subsequent Events” (formerly SFAS No. 165, “Subsequent Events”) which establishes general standards of accounting for and disclosure of events that occur after the balance sheet date but before financial statements are issued or are available to be issued. This standard also requires disclosure of the date through which an entity has evaluated subsequent events and the basis for that date. The Company adopted this standard in the second quarter of 2009 and has evaluated subsequent events through February 26, 2010, the time of filing of these financial statements with the SEC.
 
(2)   Acquisitions
 
On June 30, 2008, the Company purchased substantially all of the assets of Lake Charles Diesel, Inc. (“Lake Charles Diesel”) for $3,680,000 in cash. Lake Charles Diesel was a Gulf Coast high-speed diesel engine services provider operating factory-authorized full service marine dealerships for Cummins, Detroit Diesel and Volvo engines, as well as an authorized marine dealer for Caterpillar engines in Louisiana.
 
On March 18, 2008, the Company purchased six inland tank barges from OFS Marine One, Inc. (“ORIX”) for $1,800,000 in cash. The Company had been leasing the barges from ORIX prior to their purchase.
 
On October 1, 2007, the Company purchased nine inland tank barges from Siemens Financial, Inc. for $4,500,000 in cash. The Company had been leasing the barges since 1994 when the leases were assigned to the Company as part of the Company’s purchase of the tank barge fleet of The Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”).
 
On July 20, 2007, the Company purchased substantially all of the assets of Saunders Engine and Equipment Company, Inc. (“Saunders”) for $13,288,000 in cash and the assumption of $245,000 of debt. Saunders was a Gulf Coast high-speed diesel engine services provider operating factory-authorized full service marine dealerships for Cummins, Detroit Diesel and John Deere engines, as well as an authorized marine dealer for Caterpillar engines in Alabama.
 
On February 23, 2007, the Company purchased the assets of P&S Diesel Service, Inc. (“P&S”) for $1,622,000 in cash. P&S was a Gulf Coast high-speed diesel engine services provider operating as a factory-authorized marine dealer for Caterpillar in Louisiana.


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(2)   Acquisitions — (Continued)
 
On February 13, 2007, the Company purchased from NAK Engineering, Inc. for a net $3,540,000 in cash, the assets and technology to support the Nordberg medium-speed diesel engines used in nuclear applications. As part of the transaction, Progress Energy Carolinas, Inc. (“Progress Energy”) and Duke Energy Carolinas, LLC (“Duke Energy”) made payments to the Company for non-exclusive rights to the technology and entered into ten-year exclusive parts and service agreements with the Company. Nordberg engines are used to power emergency diesel generators used in nuclear power plants owned by Progress Energy and Duke Energy.
 
On January 3, 2007, the Company purchased the stock of Coastal Towing, Inc. (“Coastal”), the owner of 37 inland tank barges, for $19,474,000 in cash. The Company had been operating the Coastal tank barges since October 2002 under a barge management agreement.
 
On January 2, 2007, the Company purchased 21 inland tank barges from Cypress Barge Leasing, LLC for $14,965,000 in cash. The Company had been leasing the barges since 1994 when the leases were assigned to the Company as part of the Company’s purchase of the tank barge fleet of Dow.
 
Pro forma results of the acquisitions made in 2007 and 2008 have not been presented as the pro forma revenues, earnings before taxes on income, net earnings attributable to Kirby and net earnings per share attributable to Kirby common stockholders would not be materially different from the Company’s actual results.
 
(3)   Fair Value Measurements
 
The Company adopted the provisions of ASC 820-10, “Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures” (formerly SFAS No. 157, “Fair Value Measurements”) with respect to nonfinancial assets and nonfinancial liabilities, except for items that are recognized or disclosed at fair value in the financial statements on a recurring basis (at least annually), effective January 1, 2009. The adoption of ASC 820-10 in the first quarter of 2009 did not have an impact on the Company’s consolidated financial statements except that the Company has applied these provisions to its financial statement disclosures.
 
ASC 820-10 provides guidance for using fair value to measure assets and liabilities by defining fair value, establishing a framework for measuring fair value and expanding disclosures about fair value measurements. ASC 820-10 establishes a three tier value hierarchy, which prioritizes the inputs to valuation techniques used in measuring fair value. These tiers include: Level 1, defined as observable inputs such as quoted in active markets for identical assets or liabilities; Level 2, defined as inputs other than quoted prices in active markets that are either directly or indirectly observable; and Level 3, defined as unobservable inputs in which little, if any, market data exists, therefore requiring an entity to develop its own assumptions about the assumptions that market participants would use in pricing the asset or liability.
 
The following table summarizes the assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis at December 31, 2009 and 2008 (in thousands):
 
                                 
    Quoted Prices in
                   
    Active Markets for
    Significant
    Significant
    Total
 
    Identical Assets
    Other Observable
    Unobservable
    Fair Value
 
    (Level 1)     Inputs (Level 2)     Inputs (Level 3)     Measurements  
 
December 31, 2009:
                               
Assets:
                               
Derivatives
  $     $ 138     $     $ 138  
                                 
Liabilities:
                               
Derivatives
  $     $ 15,301     $     $ 15,301  
                                 
 


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(3)   Fair Value Measurements — (Continued)
 
                                 
    Quoted Prices in
                   
    Active Markets for
    Significant
    Significant
    Total
 
    Identical Assets
    Other Observable
    Unobservable
    Fair Value
 
    (Level 1)     Inputs (Level 2)     Inputs (Level 3)     Measurements  
 
December 31, 2008:
                               
Assets:
                               
Derivatives
  $     $ 188     $     $ 188  
                                 
Liabilities:
                               
Derivatives
  $     $ 21,002     $     $ 21,002  
                                 
 
The fair value of the Company’s derivative instruments is more fully described in Note 4, Derivative Instruments.
 
Cash, accounts receivable, accounts payable and accrued liabilities have carrying values that approximate fair value due to the short-term maturity of these financial instruments. The Company is of the opinion that amounts included in the consolidated financial statements for outstanding debt materially represent the fair value of such debt due to their variable interest rates.
 
Certain assets are measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis and therefore are not included in the table above. These assets are adjusted to fair value when there is evidence of impairment. During 2009, the Company recorded a $1,901,000 impairment charge on goodwill, which was based on fair value measurements classified as Level 3 of the valuation hierarchy. As of December 31, 2009, the implied fair value of this impaired goodwill was $2,703,000.
 
Fair value is determined using a combination of a discounted cash flow methodology and a market based approach utilizing a net earnings before interest expense, taxes on income, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) multiplier. The key inputs used in the determination of fair value include projections of the amounts and timing of future cash flows, an expected growth rate, an estimated discount rate and a terminal value. The key inputs are based on information such as historical performance and anticipated market conditions.
 
(4)   Derivative Instruments
 
ASC 815 (formerly SFAS No. 133, “Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities”) established accounting and reporting standards requiring that derivative instruments (including certain derivative instruments embedded in other contracts) be recorded at fair value and included in the balance sheet as assets or liabilities. The accounting for changes in the fair value of a derivative instrument depends on the intended use of the derivative and the resulting designation, which is established at the inception date of a derivative. Special accounting for derivatives qualifying as fair value hedges allows a derivative’s gains and losses to offset related results on the hedged item in the statement of earnings. For derivative instruments designated as cash flow hedges, changes in fair value, to the extent the hedge is effective, are recognized in other comprehensive income (“OCI”) until the hedged item is recognized in earnings. Hedge effectiveness is measured at least quarterly based on the cumulative difference between the fair value of the derivative contract and the hedged item over time. Any change in fair value resulting from ineffectiveness, as defined by ASC 815, is recognized immediately in earnings.
 
Interest Rate Risk Management
 
From time to time, the Company has utilized and expects to continue to utilize derivative financial instruments with respect to a portion of its interest rate risks to achieve a more predictable cash flow by reducing its exposure to interest rate fluctuations. These transactions generally are interest rate collar and swap agreements and are entered into with large multinational banks. Derivative financial instruments related to the Company’s interest rate risks are

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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(4)   Derivative Instruments — (Continued)
 
intended to reduce the Company’s exposure to increases in the benchmark interest rates underlying the Company’s floating rate senior notes and variable rate bank credit facility.
 
From time to time, the Company hedges its exposure to fluctuations in short-term interest rates under its variable rate bank credit facility and floating rate senior notes by entering into interest rate collar and swap agreements. The interest rate collar and swap agreements are designated as cash flow hedges, therefore, the changes in fair value, to the extent the collar and swap agreements are effective, are recognized in OCI until the hedged interest expense is recognized in earnings. The swap agreements effectively convert the Company’s interest rate obligation on a portion of the Company’s variable rate senior notes from quarterly floating rate payments based on the London Interbank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”) to quarterly fixed rate payments. As of December 31, 2009, the Company had a total notional amount of $200,000,000 of interest rate swaps designated as cash flow hedges for its variable rate senior notes as follows (dollars in thousands):
 
                                 
Notional
              Fixed
       
Amount
   
Effective date
  Termination date     pay rate     Receive rate  
 
$ 100,000     March 2006     February 2013       5.45 %     Three-month LIBOR  
$ 50,000     November 2008     February 2013       3.50 %     Three-month LIBOR  
$ 50,000     May 2009     February 2013       3.795 %     Three-month LIBOR  
 
Foreign Currency Risk Management
 
From time to time, the Company has utilized and expects to continue to utilize derivative financial instruments with respect to its forecasted foreign currency transactions to attempt to reduce the risk of its exposure to foreign currency rate fluctuations in its future diesel engine services inventory purchase commitments. These transactions, which relate to foreign currency obligations for the purchase of equipment from foreign suppliers, generally are purchased call options and are entered into with large multinational banks.
 
As of December 31, 2009, the Company has purchased Euro call options with a 1.28 strike price in the amount of 264,090 Euros maturing on March 1, 2010 and 528,180 Euros maturing on December 1, 2010. The purchased call options are designated as cash flow hedges, therefore, the changes in fair value, to the extent the purchased call options agreements are effective, are recognized in OCI until the purchased call option expires and is recognized in cost of sales and operating expenses.
 
Fair Value of Derivative Instruments
 
The following table sets forth the fair value of the Company’s derivative instruments recorded as assets located on the consolidated balance sheet at December 31, 2009 and 2008 (in thousands):
 
                     
Asset Derivatives   Balance Sheet Location   2009     2008  
 
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments under ASC 815:
                   
Foreign exchange contracts
  Prepaid expenses and other current assets   $ 138     $  
Foreign exchange contracts
  Other assets           188  
                     
Total derivatives designated as hedging instruments under ASC 815
      $ 138     $ 188  
                     
Total asset derivatives
      $ 138     $ 188  
                     


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(4)   Derivative Instruments — (Continued)
 
The following table sets forth the fair value of the Company’s derivative instruments recorded as liabilities located on the consolidated balance sheet at December 31, 2009 and 2008 (in thousands):
 
                     
Liability Derivatives   Balance Sheet Location   2009     2008  
 
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments under ASC 815:
                   
Interest rate contracts
  Accrued liabilities   $     $ 502  
Interest rate contracts
  Other long-term liabilities     15,301       20,500  
                     
Total derivatives designated as hedging
instruments under ASC 815
  $ 15,301     $ 21,002  
                 
Total liability derivatives
      $ 15,301     $ 21,002  
                     
 
Fair value amounts were derived as of December 31, 2009 and 2008 utilizing fair value models of the Company and its counterparties on the Company’s portfolio of derivative instruments. The fair value of the Company’s derivative instruments is described above in Note 3, Fair Value Measurements.
 
Cash Flow Hedges
 
For derivative instruments that are designated and qualify as cash flow hedges, the effective portion of the gain or loss on the derivative is reported as a component of OCI and reclassified into earnings in the same period or periods during which the hedged transaction affects earnings. Gains and losses on the derivative representing either hedge ineffectiveness or hedge components excluded from the assessment of effectiveness are recognized in current earnings. Any ineffectiveness related to the Company’s hedges was not material for any of the periods presented.
 
The following table sets forth the location and amount of gains and losses on the Company’s derivative instruments in the consolidated statements of earnings for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 (in thousands):
 
                             
    Location of Gain (Loss)
  Amount of Gain (Loss)
 
    Reclassified from
  Recognized in OCI on
 
    Accumulated OCI
  Derivatives
 
    into Income
  (Effective Portion)  
Derivatives in ASC 815 Cash Flow Hedging Relationships:   (Effective Portion)   2009     2008     2007  
 
Interest rate contracts
  Interest expense   $ 5,701     $ (14,514 )   $ (5,382 )
Foreign exchange contracts
  Cost of sales and
operating expenses
    (51 )     73        
                             
Total
      $ 5,650     $ (14,441 )   $ (5,382 )
                             
 
                             
        Amount of Gain (Loss)
 
    Location of Gain (Loss)
  Reclassified from
 
    Reclassified from
  Accumulated OCI
 
    Accumulated OCI
  into Income
 
    into Income
  (Effective Portion)  
Derivatives in ASC 815 Cash Flow Hedging Relationships:   (Effective Portion)   2009     2008     2007  
 
Interest rate contracts
  Interest expense   $ (7,356 )   $ (3,404 )   $ 633  
Foreign exchange contracts
  Cost of sales and
operating expenses
                 
                             
Total
      $ (7,356 )   $ (3,404 )   $ 633  
                             


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(4)   Derivative Instruments — (Continued)
 
The Company anticipates $5,297,000 of net losses on interest rate swap agreements included in accumulated OCI will be transferred into earnings over the next year based on current interest rates. Gains or losses on interest rate swap agreements offset increases or decreases in rates of the underlying debt, which results in a fixed rate for the underlying debt. The Company also expects $138,000 of net gains on foreign currency contracts included in accumulated OCI will be transferred into earnings over the next year based on the maturity dates being less than twelve months on the purchased call options.
 
(5)   Long-Term Debt
 
Long-term debt at December 31, 2009 and 2008 consisted of the following (in thousands):
 
                 
    2009     2008  
 
Long-term debt, including current portion:
               
$250,000,000 revolving credit facility due June 14, 2011
  $     $ 46,000  
Senior notes due February 28, 2013
    200,000       200,000  
Other long-term debt
    239       1,307  
                 
    $ 200,239     $ 247,307  
                 
 
The aggregate payments due on the long-term debt in each of the next five years were as follows (in thousands):
 
         
2010
  $ 35  
2011
    198  
2012
    6  
2013
    200,000  
2014
     
Thereafter
     
         
    $ 200,239  
         
 
The Company has an unsecured revolving credit facility (“Revolving Credit Facility”) with a syndicate of banks, with JPMorgan Chase Bank as the agent bank, with a maturity date of June 14, 2011. The Revolving Credit Facility allows for an increase in the commitments of the banks from $250,000,000 up to a maximum of $325,000,000, subject to the consent of each bank that elects to participate in the increased commitment. The unsecured Revolving Credit Facility has a variable interest rate based on LIBOR and varies with the Company’s senior debt rating and the level of debt outstanding. The variable interest rate spread for 2009 was 40 basis points over LIBOR and the commitment fee and utilization fee were each .10%. The Revolving Credit Facility contains certain restrictive financial covenants including an interest coverage ratio and a debt-to-capitalization ratio. In addition to financial covenants, the Revolving Credit Facility contains covenants that, subject to exceptions, restrict debt incurrence, mergers and acquisitions, sales of assets, dividends and investments, liquidations and dissolutions, capital leases, transactions with affiliates and changes in lines of business. Borrowings under the Revolving Credit Facility may be used for general corporate purposes, the purchase of existing or new equipment, the purchase of the Company’s common stock, or for business acquisitions. As of December 31, 2009, the Company was in compliance with all Revolving Credit Facility covenants and had no borrowings outstanding under the Revolving Credit Facility. The average borrowing under the Revolving Credit Facility during 2009 was $14,788,000, computed by averaging the daily balance, and the weighted average interest rate was 0.9%, computed by dividing the interest expense under the Revolving Credit Facility by the average Revolving Credit Facility borrowing. The Revolving


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(5)   Long-Term Debt — (Continued)
 
Credit Facility includes a $25,000,000 commitment which may be used for standby letters of credit. Outstanding letters of credit under the Revolving Credit Facility were $1,642,000 as of December 31, 2009.
 
The Company has $200,000,000 of unsecured floating rate senior notes (“Senior Notes”) due February 28, 2013. The Senior Notes pay interest quarterly at a rate equal to LIBOR plus a margin of 0.5%. The Senior Notes are callable, at the Company’s option, at par. No principal payments are required until maturity in February 2013. As of December 31, 2009, $200,000,000 was outstanding under the Senior Notes and the 2009 average interest rate was 1.5%, computed by dividing the interest expense under the Senior Notes by the average Senior Notes borrowings of $200,000,000. The Company was in compliance with all Senior Notes covenants at December 31, 2009.
 
The Company has a $5,000,000 line of credit (“Credit Line”) with Bank of America, N.A. (“Bank of America”) for short-term liquidity needs and letters of credit with a maturity date of June 30, 2010. The Credit Line allows the Company to borrow at an interest rate agreed to by Bank of America and the Company at the time each borrowing is made or continued. The Company did not have any borrowings outstanding under the Credit Line as of December 31, 2009. Outstanding letters of credit under the Credit Line were $597,000 as of December 31, 2009.
 
The Company is of the opinion that the amounts included in the consolidated financial statements for outstanding debt materially represent the fair value of such debt at December 31, 2009 and 2008 due to their variable interest rates.
 
(6)   Taxes on Income
 
Earnings before taxes on income and details of the provision for taxes on income for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 were as follows (in thousands):
 
                         
    2009     2008     2007  
 
Earnings before taxes on income — United States
  $ 205,558     $ 255,917     $ 200,549  
                         
Provision for taxes on income:
                       
Federal:
                       
Current
  $ 30,443     $ 55,077     $ 67,766  
Deferred
    38,404       31,928       532  
State and local
    9,173       10,439       8,193  
                         
    $ 78,020     $ 97,444     $ 76,491  
                         
 
During the three years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007, tax benefits related to the exercise of stock options and the issuance of restricted stock that were allocated directly to additional paid-in capital were $1,013,000, $8,930,000 and $2,995,000, respectively.
 
The Company’s provision for taxes on income varied from the statutory federal income tax rate for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 due to the following:
 
                         
    2009     2008     2007  
 
United States income tax statutory rate
    35.0 %     35.0 %     35.0 %
State and local taxes, net of federal benefit
    2.9       2.7       2.6  
Non-deductible items
    .1       .4       .5  
                         
      38.0 %     38.1 %     38.1 %
                         


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(6)   Taxes on Income — (Continued)
 
The tax effects of temporary differences that give rise to significant portions of the current deferred tax assets and non-current deferred tax assets and liabilities at December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 were as follows (in thousands):
 
                         
    2009     2008     2007  
 
Current deferred tax assets:
                       
Compensated absences
  $ 572     $ 546     $ 510  
Allowance for doubtful accounts
    1,580       3,101       700  
Insurance accruals
    3,042       3,695       2,959  
Other
    2,272       2,655       2,360  
                         
    $ 7,466     $ 9,997     $ 6,529  
                         
Non-current deferred tax assets and liabilities:
                       
Deferred tax assets:
                       
Postretirement health care benefits
  $ 3,603     $ 3,654     $ 3,391  
Insurance accruals
    959       1,010       1,022  
Deferred compensation
    7,568       6,000       4,949  
Unrealized loss on derivative financial instruments
    5,347       7,325       2,271  
Unrealized loss on defined benefit plans
    11,643       23,496       10,378  
Operating loss carryforwards
    1,486       2,570       3,249  
Other
    8,037       6,676       5,742  
Valuation allowance
          (487 )     (496 )
                         
      38,643       50,244       30,506  
                         
Deferred tax liabilities:
                       
Property
    (205,696 )     (162,496 )     (137,433 )
Deferred state taxes
    (18,972 )     (13,846 )     (12,739 )
Pension benefits
    (8,082 )     (12,721 )     (4,415 )
Goodwill and other intangibles
    (5,465 )     (5,593 )     (5,811 )
Other
    (825 )     (1,156 )     (1,007 )
                         
      (239,040 )     (195,812 )     (161,405 )
                         
    $ (200,397 )   $ (145,568 )   $ (130,899 )
                         
 
The Company has determined that is more likely than not that all deferred tax assets at December 31, 2009 will be realized, including its operating loss carryforward of $1,486,000 that expires in 2026.
 
The Company or one of its subsidiaries files income tax returns in the United States federal jurisdiction and various state jurisdictions. The Company is currently open to audit under the statute of limitations by the Internal Revenue Service for the 2006 through 2008 tax years. With few exceptions, the Company and its subsidiaries’ state income tax returns are open to audit under the statute of limitations for the 2003 through 2008 tax years.
 
As of December 31, 2009, the Company has provided a liability of $3,254,000 for unrecognized tax benefits related to various income tax issues which includes interest and penalties. The amount that would impact the Company’s effective tax rate, if recognized, is $2,189,000, with the difference between the total amount of unrecognized tax benefits and the amount that would impact the effective tax rate being primarily related to the federal tax benefit of state income tax items. It is not reasonably possible to determine if the liability for unrecognized tax benefits will significantly change prior to December 31, 2010 due to the uncertainty of possible examination results.


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(6)   Taxes on Income — (Continued)
 
A reconciliation of the beginning and ending amount of the liability for unrecognized tax benefits for the years ended December 31, 2009 and 2008, is as follows (in thousands):
 
                 
    2009     2008  
 
Balance at beginning of year
  $ 2,451     $ 2,639  
Additions based on tax positions related to the current year
    417       569  
Additions for tax positions of prior years
    87       301  
Reductions for tax positions of prior years
    (665 )     (601 )
Settlements
          (457 )
                 
Balance at end of year
  $ 2,290     $ 2,451  
                 
 
The Company accounts for interest and penalties related to uncertain tax positions as part of its provision for federal and state income taxes. The Company recognized net expense (income) of $(221,000), $(336,000) and $338,000 in interest and penalties for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007, respectively. The Company had $964,000, $1,247,000 and $1,591,000 of accrued liabilities for the payment of interest and penalties at December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007, respectively.
 
(7)   Leases
 
The Company and its subsidiaries currently lease various facilities and equipment under a number of cancelable and noncancelable operating leases. Lease agreements for tank barges have terms from three to seven years expiring at various dates through 2016. Lease agreements for towboats chartered by the Company have terms from 30 days to five years expiring at various dates through 2013; however, the majority of the towboat charter agreements are for terms of one year or less. Total rental expense for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 was as follows (in thousands):
 
                         
    2009     2008     2007  
 
Rental expense:
                       
Marine equipment — tank barges
  $ 9,489     $ 6,684     $ 7,324  
Marine equipment — towboats
    81,453       116,933       100,058  
Other buildings and equipment
    5,240       5,134       4,941  
                         
Rental expense
  $ 96,182     $ 128,751     $ 112,323  
                         
 
Future minimum lease payments under operating leases that have initial or remaining noncancelable lease terms in excess of one year at December 31, 2009 were as follows (in thousands):
 
                                 
    Land, Buildings
    Marine Equipment        
    and Equipment     Tank Barges     Towboats     Total  
 
2010
  $ 4,291     $ 7,593     $ 55,321     $ 67,205  
2011
    3,604       6,946       26,163       36,713  
2012
    3,288       6,368       17,276       26,932  
2013
    3,156       5,615       7,118       15,889  
2014
    2,937       4,404             7,341  
Thereafter
    9,021       3,884             12,905  
                                 
    $ 26,297     $ 34,810     $ 105,878     $ 166,985  
                                 


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
 
(8)   Stock Award Plans
 
The Company has share-based compensation plans which are described below. The compensation cost that has been charged against earnings for the Company’s stock award plans and the income tax benefit recognized in the statement of earnings for stock awards for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 were as follows (in thousands):
 
                         
    2009     2008     2007  
 
Compensation cost
  $ 9,855     $ 9,258     $ 6,343  
Income tax benefit
  $ 3,775     $ 3,546     $ 2,429  
 
The Company has four employee stock award plans for selected officers and other key employees which provide for the issuance of stock options and restricted stock. For all of the plans, the exercise price for each option equals the fair market value per share of the Company’s common stock on the date of grant. The terms of the options are five years and vest ratably over three years. At December 31, 2009, 1,671,510 shares were available for future grants under the employee plans and no outstanding stock options under the employee plans were issued with stock appreciation rights.
 
The following is a summary of the stock option activity under the employee plans described above for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007:
 
                 
    Outstanding
    Weighted
 
    Non-Qualified or
    Average
 
    Nonincentive
    Exercise
 
    Stock Awards     Price  
 
Outstanding at December 31, 2006
    1,072,317     $ 18.80  
Granted
    177,766     $ 35.69  
Exercised
    (318,965 )   $ 14.58  
Canceled or expired
    (668 )   $ 16.96  
                 
Outstanding at December 31, 2007
    930,450     $ 23.48  
Granted
    178,495     $ 46.64  
Exercised
    (594,764 )   $ 20.22  
Canceled or expired
        $  
                 
Outstanding at December 31, 2008
    514,181     $ 35.28  
Granted
    228,246     $ 23.98  
Exercised
    (101,944 )   $ 21.86  
Canceled or expired
        $  
                 
Outstanding at December 31, 2009
    640,483     $ 33.39  
                 
 
Under the employee plans, stock options exercisable were 262,488, 148,698 and 536,600 at December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007, respectively.


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(8)   Stock Award Plans — (Continued)
 
The following table summarizes information about the Company’s outstanding and exercisable stock options under the employee plans at December 31, 2009:
 
                                                         
    Options Outstanding     Options Exercisable  
          Weighted
                               
          Average
                               
          Remaining
    Weighted
                Weighted
       
          Contractual
    Average
    Aggregated
          Average
    Aggregated
 
    Number
    Life in
    Exercise
    Intrinsic
    Number
    Exercise
    Intrinsic
 
Range of Exercise Prices
  Outstanding     Years     Price     Value     Exercisable     Price     Value  
 
$20.89 — $22.05
    11,200       .10     $ 21.32               11,200     $ 21.32          
$23.98 — $27.60
    296,650       3.39     $ 24.68               82,792     $ 26.50          
$34.40 — $36.94
    174,138       2.28     $ 35.54               107,946     $ 35.61          
$48.00 — $48.65
    158,495       3.11     $ 48.18               60,550     $ 48.16          
                                                         
$20.89 — $48.65
    640,483       2.95     $ 33.39     $ 921,000       262,488     $ 35.02     $ (50,000 )
                                                         
 
The following is a summary of the restricted stock award activity under the employee plans described above for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007:
 
                 
          Weighted
 
          Average
 
    Unvested
    Grant Date
 
    Restricted Stock
    Fair Value
 
    Award Shares     Per Share  
 
Nonvested balance at December 31, 2006
    442,544     $ 22.35  
Granted
    173,214     $ 36.16  
Vested
    (118,100 )   $ 20.86  
Forfeited
    (4,240 )   $ 31.18  
                 
Nonvested balance at December 31, 2007
    493,418     $ 27.48  
Granted
    172,432     $ 43.57  
Vested
    (156,580 )   $ 28.35  
Forfeited
    (6,452 )   $ 33.46  
                 
Nonvested balance at December 31, 2008
    502,818     $ 33.64  
Granted
    263,579     $ 24.70  
Vested
    (207,106 )   $ 36.60  
Forfeited
    (16,612 )   $ 32.70  
                 
Nonvested balance at December 31, 2009
    542,679     $ 30.70  
                 
 
The Company has two director stock award plans for nonemployee directors of the Company which provide for the issuance of stock options and restricted stock. No additional options can be granted under one of the plans. The 2000 Director Plan provides for the automatic grants of stock options and restricted stock to nonemployee directors on the date of first election as a director and after each annual meeting of stockholders. In addition, the 2000 Director Plan allows for the issuance of stock options or restricted stock in lieu of cash for all or part of the annual director fee at the option of the director. The exercise prices for all options granted under the plans are equal to the fair market value per share of the Company’s common stock on the date of grant. The terms of the options are ten years. The options granted when first elected a director vest immediately. The options granted and restricted stock issued after each annual meeting of stockholders vest six months after the date of grant. Options granted and restricted stock issued in lieu of cash director fees vest in equal quarterly increments during the year to which they


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(8)   Stock Award Plans — (Continued)
 
relate. At December 31, 2009, 393,355 shares were available for future grants under the 2000 Director Plan. The director stock award plans are intended as an incentive to attract and retain qualified and competent independent directors.
 
The following is a summary of the stock option activity under the director plans described above for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007:
 
                 
    Outstanding
    Weighted
 
    Non-Qualified or
    Average
 
    Nonincentive
    Exercise
 
    Stock Awards     Price  
 
Outstanding at December 31, 2006
    343,316     $ 17.81  
Granted
    42,000     $ 36.82  
Exercised
    (80,974 )   $ 13.17  
                 
Outstanding at December 31, 2007
    304,342     $ 21.66  
Granted
    69,298     $ 55.49  
Exercised
    (64,068 )   $ 13.43  
                 
Outstanding at December 31, 2008
    309,572     $ 30.94  
Granted
    50,433     $ 29.60  
Exercised
    (46,068 )   $ 11.85  
Forfeited
    (12,000 )   $ 35.99  
                 
Outstanding at December 31, 2009
    301,937     $ 33.43  
                 
 
Under the director plans, options exercisable were 301,328, 309,247 and 304,342 at December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007, respectively.
 
The following table summarizes information about the Company’s outstanding and exercisable stock options under the director plans at December 31, 2009:
 
                                                         
    Options Outstanding     Options Exercisable  
          Weighted
                               
          Average
                               
          Remaining
    Weighted
                Weighted
       
          Contractual
    Average
    Aggregate
          Average
    Aggregate
 
    Number
    Life in
    Exercise
    Intrinsic
    Number
    Exercise
    Intrinsic
 
Range of Exercise Prices
  Outstanding     Years     Price     Value     Exercisable     Price     Value  
 
$10.06 — $12.69
    34,356       1.91     $ 11.06               34,356     $ 11.06          
$15.74 — $29.60
    102,247       6.65     $ 23.75               101,638     $ 23.72          
$35.17 — $55.49
    165,334       7.37     $ 44.06               165,334     $ 44.06          
                                                         
$10.06 — $55.49
    301,937       6.51     $ 33.43     $ 424,000       301,328     $ 33.43     $ 421,000  
                                                         


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(8)   Stock Award Plans — (Continued)
 
The following is a summary of the restricted stock award activity under the director plan described above for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007:
 
                 
          Weighted
 
          Average
 
    Unvested
    Grant Date
 
    Restricted Stock
    Fair Value
 
    Award Shares     Per Share  
 
Nonvested balance at December 31, 2006
    618     $ 35.17  
Granted
    10,128     $ 36.86  
Vested
    (9,962 )   $ 36.75  
                 
Nonvested balance at December 31, 2007
    784     $ 36.86  
Granted
    9,557     $ 56.00  
Vested
    (9,951 )   $ 54.49  
                 
Nonvested balance at December 31, 2008
    390     $ 56.00  
Granted
    10,919     $ 29.77  
Vested
    (10,577 )   $ 30.74  
                 
Nonvested balance at December 31, 2009
    732     $ 29.77  
                 
 
The total intrinsic value of all options exercised under all of the Company’s plans was $1,859,000, $17,827,000 and $10,175,000 for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007, respectively. The actual tax benefit realized for tax deductions from stock option exercises was $712,000, $6,828,000 and $3,897,000 for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007, respectively.
 
The total intrinsic value of all the restricted stock vestings under all of the Company’s plans was $5,931,000, $7,187,000 and $4,726,000 for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007, respectively. The actual tax benefit realized for tax deductions from restricted stock vestings was $2,271,000, $2,753,000 and $1,810,000 for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007, respectively.
 
As of December 31, 2009, there was $1,867,000 of unrecognized compensation cost related to nonvested stock options and $12,095,000 related to restricted stock. The stock options are expected to be recognized over a weighted average period of approximately 1.9 years and restricted stock over approximately 2.9 years. The total fair value of options vested was $2,763,000, $3,346,000 and $2,779,000 during the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007, respectively. The fair value of the restricted stock vested was $5,931,000, $7,187,000 and $4,726,000 for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007, respectively.
 
The weighted average per share fair value of options granted during the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 was $8.15, $14.95 and $11.85, respectively. The fair value of the options granted during the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 was $2,271,000, $3,705,000 and $2,604,000, respectively. The Company currently uses treasury stock shares for restricted stock grants and stock option exercises. The fair value of each option was determined using the Black-Scholes option pricing model. The key input variables used in valuing the options during the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 were as follows:
 
             
    2009   2008   2007
 
Dividend yield
  None   None   None
Average risk-free interest rate
  1.9%   3.0%   4.7%
Stock price volatility
  33%   26%   25%
Estimated option term
  Four years or
eight years
  Four years or
nine years
  Four years or
nine years


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
 
(9)   Retirement Plans
 
The Company sponsors a defined benefit plan for vessel personnel and shore based tankermen. The plan benefits are based on an employee’s years of service and compensation. The plan assets consist primarily of equity and fixed income securities.
 
The fair value of plan assets was $126,490,000 and $99,722,000 at December 31, 2009 and 2008, respectively. As of December 31, 2009 and 2008, these assets were allocated among asset categories as follows:
 
                     
                Current Minimum, Target and
Asset Category
  2009     2008     Maximum Allocation Policy
 
Equity securities
    73 %     46 %   30% — 70% — 95%
Debt securities
    23 %     18 %   15% — 25% — 50%
Fund of hedge funds
    %     1 %   0% — 0% — 0%
Cash and cash equivalents
    4 %     35 %   0% — 5% — 10%
                     
      100 %     100 %    
                     
 
The cash and cash equivalents asset category exceeded the maximum percentage allocation in 2008 due to the 2008 pension contribution of $32,000,000 being funding on the last day of 2008 which resulted in insufficient time to properly allocate the contribution among the proper asset categories. The Company allocated the contribution among the appropriate asset categories over the first four months of 2009.
 
The plan assets are invested entirely in common collective trusts. These instruments are public investment vehicles valued using the net asset value provided by the administrator of the fund. The net asset value is classified within Level 2 of the valuation hierarchy as set forth in the accounting guidance for fair value measurements because the net asset value price is quoted on an inactive private market although the underlying investments are traded on an active market.
 
The Company’s investment strategy focuses on total return on invested assets (capital appreciation plus dividend and interest income). The primary objective in the investment management of assets is to achieve long-term growth of principal while avoiding excessive risk. Risk is managed through diversification of investments within and among asset classes, as well as by choosing securities that have an established trading and underlying operating history.
 
The Company makes various assumptions when determining defined benefit plan costs including, but not limited to, the current discount rate and the expected long-term return on plan assets. Discount rates are determined annually and are based on a yield curve that consists of a hypothetical portfolio of high quality corporate bonds with maturities matching the projected benefit cash flows. The Company assumed that plan assets would generate a long-term rate of return of 7.5% in 2009 and 8.0% in 2008. The Company developed its expected long-term rate of return assumption by evaluating input from investment consultants comparing historical returns for various asset classes with its actual and targeted plan investments. The Company believes that its long-term asset allocation, on average, will approximate the targeted allocation.
 
The Company’s pension plan funding strategy has historically been to contribute an amount equal to the greater of the minimum required contribution under ERISA or the amount necessary to fully fund the plan on an accumulated benefit obligation basis (“ABO”) at the end of the fiscal year. No pension contribution was made in 2009 for the 2009 year as funding of the pension plan’s ABO was 107% at December 31, 2009. The Company elected to fund its 2008 pension contribution in accordance with the Pension Protection Act of 2006 (“PPA”) to be approximately fully funded on a PPA basis instead of the higher amount as determined by the ABO due to uncertainty in the economic and credit market environment in December 2008. The Company’s contribution of $32,000,000 in December 2008 resulted in funding 91% of the pension plan’s ABO at December 31, 2008.


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(9)   Retirement Plans — (Continued)
 
The Company sponsors an unfunded defined benefit health care plan that provides limited postretirement medical benefits to employees who meet minimum age and service requirements, and to eligible dependents. The plan limits cost increases in the Company’s contribution to 4% per year. The plan is contributory, with retiree contributions adjusted annually. The Company also has an unfunded defined benefit supplemental executive retirement plan (“SERP”) that was assumed in an acquisition in 1999. That plan ceased to accrue additional benefits effective January 1, 2000.
 
The following table presents the change in benefit obligation and plan assets for the Company’s defined benefit plans and postretirement benefit plan (in thousands):
 
                                                 
                            Other Postretirement
 
                Benefits  
    Pension Benefits     Postretirement
 
    Pension Plan     SERP     Welfare Plan  
    2009     2008     2009     2008     2009     2008  
 
Change in benefit obligation
                                               
Benefit obligation at beginning of year
  $ 135,337     $ 122,684     $ 1,431     $ 1,215     $ 5,448     $ 7,558  
Effect of eliminating early measurement date
          908             2             (10 )
Service cost
    6,523       6,361                   246       506  
Interest cost
    8,486       7,734       84       88       322       496  
Actuarial loss (gain)
    (5,761 )     684       14       189       (141 )     (2,835 )
Gross benefits paid
    (3,247 )     (3,034 )     (100 )     (63 )     (434 )     (286 )
Less: federal subsidy on benefits paid
                            18       19  
                                                 
Benefit obligation at end of year
  $ 141,338     $ 135,337     $ 1,429     $ 1,431     $ 5,459     $ 5,448  
                                                 
Accumulated benefit obligation at end of year
  $ 118,041     $ 109,359     $ 1,429     $ 1,431     $     $  
                                                 
Weighted-average assumption used to determine benefit obligation at end of year
                                               
Discount rate
    6.1 %     6.1 %     6.1 %     6.1 %     6.1 %     6.1 %
Rate of compensation increase
    4.0 %     4.0 %                        
Health care cost trend rate
                                               
Initial rate
                            7.5 %     8.0 %
Ultimate rate
                            5.0 %     5.0 %
Years to ultimate
                            2015       2015  
Effect of one-percentage-point change in assumed health care cost trend rate on postretirement obligation
                                               
Increase
  $     $     $     $     $ 218     $ 251  
Decrease
                            (195 )     (224 )
Change in plan assets
                                               
Fair value of plan assets at beginning of year
  $ 99,722     $ 103,405     $     $     $     $  
Effect of eliminating early measurement date
          434                              
Actual return on plan assets
    30,015       (33,083 )                        
Employer contribution
          32,000       100       63       434       286  
Gross benefits paid
    (3,247 )     (3,034 )     (100 )     (63 )     (434 )     (286 )
                                                 
Fair value of plan assets at end of year
  $ 126,490     $ 99,722     $     $     $     $  
                                                 


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(9)   Retirement Plans — (Continued)
 
The following table presents the funded status and amounts recognized in the Company’s consolidated balance sheet for the Company’s defined benefit plans and postretirement benefit plan at December 31, 2009 and 2008 (in thousands):
 
                                                 
                            Other Postretirement
 
                Benefits  
    Pension Benefits     Postretirement
 
    Pension Plan     SERP     Welfare Plan  
    2009     2008     2009     2008     2009     2008  
 
Funded status at end of year
                                               
Fair value of plan assets
  $ 126,490     $ 99,722     $     $     $     $  
Benefit obligations
    141,338       135,337       1,429       1,431       5,459       5,448  
                                                 
Funded status and amount recognized at end of year
  $ (14,848 )   $ (35,615 )   $ (1,429 )   $ (1,431 )   $ (5,459 )   $ (5,448 )
                                                 
Amounts recognized in the consolidated balance sheets
                                               
Current liability
  $     $     $ (102 )   $ (102 )   $ (323 )   $ (372 )
Long-term liability
    (14,848 )     (35,615 )     (1,327 )     (1,329 )     (5,136 )     (5,076 )
Amounts recognized in accumulated other comprehensive income
                                               
Net actuarial loss (gain)
  $ 38,065     $ 72,174     $ 193     $ 181     $ (5,064 )   $ (5,248 )
Prior service cost (credit)
    (127 )     (215 )                 198       238  
                                                 
Accumulated other compensation income
  $ 37,938     $ 71,959     $ 193     $ 181     $ (4,866 )   $ (5,010 )
                                                 
 
The projected benefit obligation and fair value of plan assets for pension plans with a projected benefit obligation in excess of plan assets at December 31, 2009 and 2008 were as follows (in thousands):
 
                                 
    Pension Benefits
    Pension Plan   SERP
    2009   2008   2009   2008
 
Projected benefit obligation in excess of plan assets
                               
Projected benefit obligation at end of year
  $ 141,338     $ 135,337     $ 1,429     $ 1,431  
Fair value of plan assets at end of year
    126,490       99,722              
 
The projected benefit obligation, accumulated benefit obligation and fair value of plan assets for pension plans with an accumulated benefit obligation in excess of plan assets at December 31, 2009 and 2008 were as follows (in thousands):
 
                                 
    Pension Benefits
    Pension Plan   SERP
    2009   2008   2009   2008
 
Accumulated benefit obligation in excess of plan assets
                               
Projected benefit obligation at end of year
  $      —     $ 135,337     $ 1,429     $ 1,431  
Accumulated benefit obligation at end of year
          109,359       1,429       1,431  
Fair value of plan assets at end of year
          99,722              


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(9)   Retirement Plans — (Continued)
 
The following tables presents the expected cash flows for the Company’s defined benefit plans and postretirement benefit plan at December 31, 2009 and 2008 (in thousands):
 
                                                 
                    Other Postretirement
            Benefits
    Pension Benefits   Postretirement
    Pension Plan   SERP   Welfare Plan
    2009   2008   2009   2008   2009   2008
 
Expected employer contributions
                                               
First year
  $      —     $ 10,919     $ 102     $ 102     $ 323     $ 372  
 
                                                 
                    Other
                    Postretirement
            Benefits
    Pension Benefits   Postretirement
    Pension Plan   SERP   Welfare Plan
    2009   2008   2009   2008   2009   2008
 
Expected benefit payments (gross)
                                               
2010
  $ 4,240     $ 3,950     $ 102     $ 102     $ 341     $ 391  
2011
    4,551       4,263       101       101       378       409  
2012
    4,816       4,605       99       100       355       390  
2013
    5,105       4,936       98       99       361       374  
2014
    5,487       5,327       96       96       371       382  
Next five years
    35,121       36,839       489       479       2,186       2,282  
 
                                                 
        Other
        Postretirement
            Benefits
    Pension Benefits   Postretirement
    Pension Plan   SERP   Welfare Plan
    2009   2008   2009   2008   2009   2008
 
Expected federal subsidy
                                               
2010
  $     $     $     $     $ (18 )   $ (19 )
2011
                            (18 )     (19 )
2012
                            (19 )     (20 )
2013
                            (19 )     (21 )
2014
                            (19 )     (21 )
Next five years
                            (85 )     (95 )


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(9)   Retirement Plans — (Continued)
 
The components of net periodic benefit cost and other changes in plan assets and benefit obligations recognized in other comprehensive income for the Company’s defined benefit plans for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 were as follows (in thousands):
 
                                                 
    Pension Benefits  
    Pension Plan     SERP  
    2009     2008     2007     2009     2008     2007  
 
Components of net periodic benefit cost
                                               
Service cost
  $ 6,523     $ 6,361     $ 5,993     $     $     $  
Interest cost
    8,486       7,734       6,805       84       88       95  
Expected return on plan assets
    (7,333 )     (8,165 )     (7,693 )                  
Amortization:
                                               
Actuarial loss
    5,666       1,809       2,584       2       5       13  
Prior service credit
    (88 )     (89 )     (89 )                  
                                                 
Net periodic benefit cost
    13,254       7,650       7,600       86       93       108  
                                                 
Other changes in plan assets and benefit obligations recognized in other comprehensive income
                                               
Current year actuarial loss (gain)
    (28,443 )     41,932       (3,239 )     14       189       (642 )
Recognition of actuarial loss
    (5,666 )     (1,809 )     (2,584 )     (2 )     (5 )     (13 )
Recognition of prior service credit
    88       89       89                    
                                                 
Total recognized in other comprehensive income
    (34,021 )     40,212       (5,734 )     12       184       (655 )
                                                 
Total recognized in net periodic benefit cost and other comprehensive income
  $ (20,767 )   $ 47,862     $ 1,866     $ 98     $ 277     $ (547 )
                                                 
Weighted average assumptions used to determine net periodic benefit cost
                                               
Discount rate
    6.1 %     6.1 %     5.7 %     6.1 %     6.1 %     5.7 %
Expected long-term rate of return on plan assets
    7.5 %     8.0 %     8.0 %                  
Rate of compensation increase
    4.0 %     4.1 %     4.0 %                  
 
The estimated amounts that will be amortized from accumulated other comprehensive income into net periodic benefit cost in 2010 are as follows (in thousands):
 
                 
    Pension Benefits  
    Pension Plan     SERP  
 
Actuarial loss
  $ 2,323     $ 2  
Prior service credit
    (88 )      
                 
    $ 2,235     $ 2  
                 


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(9)   Retirement Plans — (Continued)
 
The components of net periodic benefit cost and other changes in benefit obligations recognized in other comprehensive income for the Company’s postretirement benefit plan for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 were as follows (in thousands):
 
                         
    Other Postretirement Benefits  
    Postretirement Welfare Plan  
    2009     2008     2007  
 
Components of net periodic benefit cost
                       
Service cost
  $ 246     $ 506     $ 506  
Interest cost
    322       496       426  
Amortization:
                       
Actuarial gain
    (325 )     (98 )     (116 )
Prior service cost
    40       40       40  
                         
Net periodic benefit cost
    283       944       856  
                         
Other changes in benefit obligations recognized in other comprehensive income
                       
Current year actuarial gain
  $ (141 )   $ (2,835 )   $ (350 )
Recognition of actuarial gain
    325       98       116  
Recognition of prior service cost
    (40 )     (40 )     (40 )
                         
Total recognized in other comprehensive income
    144       (2,777 )     (274 )
                         
Total recognized in net periodic benefit cost and other comprehensive income
  $ 427     $ (1,833 )   $ 582  
                         
Weighted average assumptions used to determine net periodic benefit cost
                       
Discount rate
    6.1 %     6.1 %     5.7 %
Health care cost trend rate
                       
Initial rate
    8.0 %     8.5 %     9.0 %
Ultimate rate
    5.0 %     5.0 %     5.0 %
Years to ultimate
    2015       2015       2011  
Effect of one-percentage-point change in assumed health care cost trend rate on aggregate service and interest cost
                       
Increase
  $ 12     $ 14     $ 13  
Decrease
    (11 )     (13 )     (12 )
 
The estimated amounts that will be amortized from accumulated other comprehensive income into net periodic benefit cost in 2010 are as follows (in thousands):
 
         
    Other Postretirement Benefits  
    Postretirement Welfare Plan  
 
Actuarial gain
  $ (295 )
Prior service cost
    40  
         
    $ (255 )
         


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(9)   Retirement Plans — (Continued)
 
In addition to the defined benefit plan and postretirement medical benefit plan, the Company sponsors defined contribution plans for all shore-based employees and certain vessel personnel. Maximum contributions to these plans equal the lesser of 15% of the aggregate compensation paid to all participating employees or up to 20% of each subsidiary’s earnings before federal income tax after certain adjustments for each fiscal year. The aggregate contributions to the plans were $14,213,000, $15,483,000 and $13,795,000 in 2009, 2008 and 2007, respectively.
 
(10)   Earnings Per Share
 
The Company adopted a new accounting standard included in ASC 260, “Earnings Per Share” which requires unvested share-based payment awards with non-forfeitable rights to receive dividends or dividend equivalents (whether paid or unpaid) to be considered participating securities for the purposes of applying the two-class method of calculating earnings per share. Accordingly, restricted stock granted under the Company’s stock-based compensation plans are treated as participating securities under the two-class method of determining earnings per share and earnings per share for prior periods have been restated to conform to this standard. The adoption of this standard lowered basic earnings per share by $.02 for the years ended December 31, 2008 and 2007.
 
The following table presents the components of basic and diluted earnings per share for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 (in thousands, except per share amounts):
 
                         
    2009     2008     2007  
 
Net earnings attributable to Kirby
  $ 125,941     $ 157,168     $ 123,341  
Undistributed earnings allocated to restricted shares
    (1,403 )     (1,484 )     (1,160 )
                         
Income available to Kirby common stockholders — basic
    124,538       155,684       122,181  
Undistributed earnings allocated to restricted shares
    1,403       1,484       1,160  
Undistributed earnings reallocated to restricted shares
    (1,400 )     (1,476 )     (1,150 )
                         
Income available to Kirby common stockholders — diluted
  $ 124,541     $ 155,692     $ 122,191  
                         
Shares outstanding:
                       
Weighted average common stock issued and outstanding
    53,791       53,745       53,333  
Weighted average unvested restricted stock
    (599 )     (507 )     (502 )
                         
Weighted average common stock outstanding — basic
    53,192       53,238       52,831  
Dilutive effect of stock options
    121       275       432  
                         
Weighted average common stock outstanding — diluted
    53,313       53,513       53,263  
                         
Net earnings per share attributable to Kirby common stockholders:
                       
Basic
  $ 2.34     $ 2.92     $ 2.31  
                         
Diluted
  $ 2.34     $ 2.91     $ 2.29  
                         
 
Certain outstanding options to purchase approximately 248,000 and 402,000 shares of common stock were excluded in the computation of diluted earnings per share as of December 31, 2009 and 2008, respectively, as such stock options would have been antidilutive. No shares were excluded in the computation of diluted earnings per share as of December 31, 2007.


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
 
(11)   Quarterly Results (Unaudited)
 
The unaudited quarterly results for the year ended December 31, 2009 were as follows (in thousands, except per share amounts):
 
                                 
    Three Months Ended  
    March 31,
    June 30,
    September 30,
    December 31,
 
    2009     2009     2009     2009  
 
Revenues
  $ 277,661     $ 272,743     $ 272,166     $ 259,588  
Costs and expenses
    229,265       215,156       213,053       209,733  
Gain (loss) on disposition of assets
    244       120       753       (38 )
                                 
Operating income
    48,640       57,707       59,866       49,817  
Other income
    95       91       189       233  
Interest expense
    (2,813 )     (2,793 )     (2,781 )     (2,693 )
                                 
Earnings before taxes on income
    45,922       55,005       57,274       47,357  
Provision for taxes on income
    (17,458 )     (21,020 )     (21,826 )     (17,716 )
                                 
Net earnings
    28,464       33,985       35,448       29,641  
Less: Net earnings attributable to noncontrolling interests
    (458 )     (266 )     (434 )     (439 )
                                 
Net earnings attributable to Kirby
  $ 28,006     $ 33,719     $ 35,014     $ 29,202  
                                 
Net earnings per share attributable to Kirby common stockholders:
                               
Basic
  $ .53     $ .63     $ .65     $ .54  
                                 
Diluted
  $ .52     $ .63     $ .65     $ .54  
                                 


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(11)   Quarterly Results (Unaudited) — (Continued)
 
The unaudited quarterly results for the year ended December 31, 2008 were as follows (in thousands, except per share amounts):
 
                                 
    Three Months Ended  
    March 31,
    June 30,
    September 30,
    December 31,
 
    2008     2008     2008     2008  
 
Revenues
  $ 330,570     $ 348,260     $ 354,647     $ 326,677  
Costs and expenses
    267,078       279,550       282,881       260,291  
Gain (loss) on disposition of assets
    (58 )     500       (166 )     (134 )
                                 
Operating income
    63,434       69,210       71,600       66,252  
Other expense
    (96 )     (12 )     (164 )     (243 )
Interest expense
    (3,782 )     (3,508 )     (3,375 )     (3,399 )
                                 
Earnings before taxes on income
    59,556       65,690       68,061       62,610  
Provision for taxes on income
    (22,748 )     (25,039 )     (25,932 )     (23,725 )
                                 
Net earnings
    36,808       40,651       42,129       38,885  
Less: Net earnings attributable to noncontrolling interests
    (161 )     (317 )     (351 )     (476 )
                                 
Net earnings attributable to Kirby
  $ 36,647     $ 40,334     $ 41,778     $ 38,409  
                                 
Net earnings per share attributable to Kirby common stockholders:
                               
Basic
  $ .69     $ .75     $ .77     $ .72  
                                 
Diluted
  $ .68     $ .74     $ .77     $ .72  
                                 
 
Quarterly basic and diluted earnings per share may not total to the full year per share amounts, as the weighted average number of shares outstanding for each quarter fluctuates as a result of the assumed exercise of stock options.
 
(12)   Contingencies and Commitments
 
In 2000, the Company and a group of approximately 45 other companies were notified that they are Potentially Responsible Parties (“PRPs”) under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (“CERCLA”) with respect to a Superfund site, the Palmer Barge Line Site (“Palmer”), located in Port Arthur, Texas. In prior years, Palmer had provided tank barge cleaning services to various subsidiaries of the Company. The Company and three other PRPs entered into an agreement with the United States Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) to perform a remedial investigation and feasibility study and, subsequently, a limited remediation was performed and is now complete. During the 2007 third quarter, five new PRP’s entered into an agreement with the EPA in regard to the Palmer Site. In July 2008, the EPA sent a letter to approximately 30 PRPs for the Palmer site, including the Company, indicating that it intends to pursue recovery of $2,949,000 of costs it incurred in relation to the site. The Company and the other PRPs have participated in meetings with the EPA and the United States Department of Justice and suggested pro rata allocations to the PRPs of the EPA’s incurred costs. Based on these initial discussions, the Company is unable to estimate its potential liability, if any, for any portion of such costs.
 
On January 23, 2010, the Company was involved in an incident in the Port Arthur, Texas area which resulted in an oil spill that closed the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway. The incident involved a collision between a ship, the S/S Eagle Otome, and a Company owned towboat and two tank barges. The ship is not owned by the Company. The incident occurred as the S/S Eagle Otome struck a ship moored at the dock of the Port of Port Arthur prior to striking


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(12)   Contingencies and Commitments — (Continued)
 
the Company’s towboat and two tank barges. One of the Company’s tank barges sustained damage as a result of the impact but no cargo spilled from any of the Company’s vessels and none of the Company’s employees were injured. The impact did cause a breach in the S/S Eagle Otome’s cargo tank which resulted in a spill of an estimated 11,000 barrels of crude oil. Various government agencies are investigating the cause of the ship’s deviation from its navigational course. There are also various pending legal proceedings for alleged personal injuries that have been filed against the ship and its owner. Based on the information developed to date, the Company believes that it was not at fault and has adequate insurance coverage in the event and to the extent it is found to be liable.
 
In addition, the Company is involved in various legal and other proceedings which are incidental to the conduct of its business, none of which in the opinion of management will have a material effect on the Company’s financial condition, results of operations or cash flows. Management believes that it has recorded adequate reserves and believes that it has adequate insurance coverage or has meritorious defenses for these other claims and contingencies.
 
Certain Significant Risks and Uncertainties.  The preparation of financial statements in conformity with United States generally accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements, and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates. However, in the opinion of management, the amounts would be immaterial.
 
The customer base of the marine transportation segment includes the major industrial petrochemical and chemical manufacturers, agricultural chemical manufacturers and refining companies operating in the United States. Approximately 75% of marine transportation revenues are from movements of such products under term contracts, ranging from one year to five years, with renewal options. While the manufacturing and refining companies have generally been customers of the Company for numerous years (some as long as 40 years) and management anticipates a continuing relationship, there is no assurance that any individual contract will be renewed. SeaRiver Maritime, Inc., the United States transportation affiliate of Exxon Mobil Corporation, accounted for 10% of the Company’s revenue in 2009, 2008 and 2007. Dow accounted for 11% of the Company’s revenues in 2009, 9% in 2008 and 10% in 2007.
 
Major customers of the diesel engine services segment include the inland and offshore barge operators, oil service companies, offshore fishing companies, other marine transportation entities, the United States Coast Guard (“USCG”) and United States Navy, shortline railroads, industrial owners of locomotives, transit railroads and Class II railroads, and power generation, nuclear and industrial companies. The segment operates as an authorized distributor in 17 eastern states and the Caribbean, and as non-exclusive authorized service centers for Electro-Motive Diesel, Inc. (“EMD”) throughout the rest of the United States for marine and power generation applications. The railroad portion of the segment serves as the exclusive distributorship of EMD aftermarket parts sales and services to the shortline and industrial railroad market. The segment also serves as the exclusive distributor of EMD parts to the nuclear industry. The diesel engine services segment’s relationship with EMD has been maintained for 44 years. The segment also operates factory-authorized full service marine dealerships for Cummins, Detroit Diesel and John Deere high-speed diesel engines and Allison transmissions and gears in the Gulf Coast region, as well as an authorized marine dealer for Caterpillar in Alabama, Kentucky and Louisiana. The results of the diesel engine services segment are largely tied to the industries it serves and, therefore, can be influenced by the cycles of such industries. No single customer of the diesel engine services segment accounted for more than 10% of the Company’s revenues in 2009, 2008 and 2007.
 
Weather can be a major factor in the day-to-day operations of the marine transportation segment. Adverse weather conditions, such as high water, low water, tropical storms, hurricanes, fog and ice, can impair the operating efficiencies of the marine fleet. Shipments of products can be significantly delayed or postponed by weather


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(12)   Contingencies and Commitments — (Continued)
 
conditions, which are totally beyond the control of the Company. Adverse water conditions are also factors which impair the efficiency of the fleet and can result in delays, diversions and limitations on night passages, and dictate horsepower requirements and size of tows. Additionally, much of the inland waterway system is controlled by a series of locks and dams designed to provide flood control, maintain pool levels of water in certain areas of the country and facilitate navigation on the inland river system. Maintenance and operation of the navigable inland waterway infrastructure is a government function handled by the Army Corps of Engineers with costs shared by industry. Significant changes in governmental policies or appropriations with respect to maintenance and operation of the infrastructure could adversely affect the Company.
 
The Company’s marine transportation segment is subject to regulation by the USCG, federal laws, state laws and certain international conventions, as well as numerous environmental regulations. The Company believes that additional safety, environmental and occupational health regulations may be imposed on the marine industry. There can be no assurance that any such new regulations or requirements, or any discharge of pollutants by the Company, will not have an adverse effect on the Company.
 
The Company’s marine transportation segment competes principally in markets subject to the Jones Act, a federal cabotage law that restricts domestic marine transportation in the United States to vessels built and registered in the United States, and manned and owned by United States citizens. The Jones Act cabotage provisions occasionally come under attack by interests seeking to facilitate foreign flag competition in trades reserved for domestic companies and vessels under the Jones Act. The efforts have been consistently defeated by large margins in the United States Congress. The Company believes that continued efforts will be made to modify or eliminate the cabotage provisions of the Jones Act. If such efforts are successful, certain elements could have an adverse effect on the Company.
 
The Company has issued guaranties or obtained standby letters of credit and performance bonds supporting performance by the Company and its subsidiaries of contractual or contingent legal obligations of the Company and its subsidiaries incurred in the ordinary course of business. The aggregate notional value of these instruments is $28,175,000 at December 31, 2009, including $5,567,000 in letters of credit and debt guarantees, and $22,608,000 in performance bonds. All of these instruments have an expiration date within four years. The Company does not believe demand for payment under these instruments is likely and expects no material cash outlays to occur in connection with these instruments.
 
(13)   Segment Data
 
The Company’s operations are classified into two reportable business segments as follows:
 
Marine Transportation — Marine transportation by United States flag vessels on the United States inland waterway system and, to a lesser extent, offshore transportation of dry-bulk cargoes. The principal products transported on the United States inland waterway system include petrochemicals, black oil products, refined petroleum products and agricultural chemicals.
 
Diesel Engine Services — Overhaul and repair of medium-speed and high-speed diesel engines, reduction gear repair, and sale of related parts and accessories for customers in the marine, power generation and railroad industries.
 
The Company’s two reportable business segments are managed separately based on fundamental differences in their operations. The Company’s accounting policies for the business segments are the same as those described in Note 1, Summary of Significant Accounting Policies. The Company evaluates the performance of its segments based on the contributions to operating income of the respective segments, and before income taxes, interest, gains or losses on disposition of assets, other nonoperating income, noncontrolling interests, accounting changes, and nonrecurring items. Intersegment sales for 2009, 2008 and 2007 were not significant.


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(13)   Segment Data — (Continued)
 
The following table sets forth by reportable segment the revenues, profit or loss, total assets, depreciation and amortization, and capital expenditures attributable to the principal activities of the Company for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 (in thousands):
 
                         
    2009     2008     2007  
 
Revenues:
                       
Marine transportation
  $ 881,298     $ 1,095,475     $ 928,834  
Diesel engine services
    200,860       264,679       243,791  
                         
    $ 1,082,158     $ 1,360,154     $ 1,172,625  
                         
Segment profit (loss):
                       
Marine transportation
  $ 208,086     $ 244,866     $ 196,112  
Diesel engine services
    21,005       39,587       37,948  
Other
    (23,533 )     (28,536 )     (33,511 )
                         
    $ 205,558     $ 255,917     $ 200,549  
                         
Total assets:
                       
Marine transportation
  $ 1,336,358     $ 1,289,689     $ 1,199,869  
Diesel engine services
    185,573       208,993       213,062  
Other
    114,032       27,416       17,544  
                         
    $ 1,635,963     $ 1,526,098     $ 1,430,475  
                         
Depreciation and amortization:
                       
Marine transportation
  $ 87,589     $ 84,537     $ 75,311  
Diesel engine services
    4,247       4,830       4,133  
Other
    2,132       1,832       1,472  
                         
    $ 93,968     $ 91,199     $ 80,916  
                         
Capital expenditures:
                       
Marine transportation
  $ 188,479     $ 164,681     $ 159,301  
Diesel engine services
    1,768       3,051       3,112  
Other
    2,413       5,287       1,670  
                         
    $ 192,660     $ 173,019     $ 164,083  
                         
 
The following table presents the details of “Other” segment profit (loss) for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 (in thousands):
 
                         
    2009     2008     2007  
 
General corporate expenses
  $ (12,239 )   $ (14,099 )   $ (12,889 )
Impairment of goodwill
    (1,901 )            
Interest expense
    (11,080 )     (14,064 )     (20,284 )
Gain (loss) on disposition of assets
    1,079       142       (383 )
Other income (expense)
    608       (515 )     45  
                         
    $ (23,533 )   $ (28,536 )   $ (33,511 )
                         


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KIRBY CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
 
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS — (Continued)
 
(13)   Segment Data — (Continued)
 
The following table presents the details of “Other” total assets as of December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 (in thousands):
 
                         
    2009     2008     2007  
 
General corporate assets
  $ 110,980     $ 25,360     $ 15,623  
Investment in affiliates
    3,052       2,056       1,921  
                         
    $ 114,032     $ 27,416     $ 17,544  
                         
 
(14)   Related Party Transactions
 
During 2009, the Company and its subsidiaries paid L3 Partners, LLC (“L3P”), a company owned by C. Berdon Lawrence, the Chairman of the Board of the Company, $155,000 for air transportation services provided by L3P. Such services were in the ordinary course of business of the Company.
 
During 2009, the Company and its subsidiaries paid 55 Waugh, LP, a partnership 60% owned by Mr. Lawrence and his family, $1,394,000 for the rental of office space in a building owned by 55 Waugh, LP. The Company’s headquarters are located in the building under a lease that was signed in 2005, prior to the purchase of the building by 55 Waugh, LP, and expires at the end of 2015.
 
The Company is a 50% owner of The Hollywood Camp, L.L.C. (“The Hollywood Camp”), a company that owns and operates a hunting and fishing facility used by the Company and L3P, which is also a 50% owner. The Company uses The Hollywood Camp primarily for customer entertainment. L3P acts as manager of The Hollywood Camp. The Hollywood Camp allocates lease and lodging expenses to its members based on their usage of the facilities. During 2009, the Company paid $2,240,000 to The Hollywood Camp for its share of facility expenses.
 
The husband of Amy D. Husted, Vice President — Legal of the Company, is a partner in the law firm of Strasburger & Price, LLP. In 2009, the Company paid the law firm $333,000 for legal services in connection with matters in the ordinary course of business of the Company.


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PART IV
 
Item 15.   Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules
 
1. Financial Statements
 
Included in Part III of this report:
 
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm.
 
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm.
 
Consolidated Balance Sheets, December 31, 2009 and 2008.
 
Consolidated Statements of Earnings, for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007.
 
Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity and Comprehensive Income, for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007.
 
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows, for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007.
 
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007.
 
2. Financial Statement Schedules
 
All schedules are omitted as the required information is inapplicable or the information is presented in the consolidated financial statements or related notes.
 
3. Exhibits
 
             
Exhibit
       
Number
     
Description of Exhibit
 
  3 .1     Restated Articles of Incorporation filed June 18, 1976, with all amendments to date (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 of the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2006).
  3 .2     Bylaws of the Company, as amended (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 of the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated January 28, 2008).
  4 .1     Rights Agreement, dated as of July 18, 2000, between Kirby Corporation and Fleet National Bank, a national bank association, which includes the Form of Resolutions Establishing Designations, Preference and Rights of Series A Junior Participating Preferred Stock of Kirby Corporation, the form of Rights Certificate and the Summary of Rights (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 of the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated July 18, 2000).
  4 .2     Amendment to Rights Agreement dated as of April 30, 2002 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.3 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2006).
  4 .3     Amendment No. 2 to Rights Agreement dated as of January 24, 2006 between Kirby Corporation and Computershare Trust Company, N.A. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 of the Registration’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated January 24, 2006).
  4 .4     Master Note Purchase Agreement dated as of February 15, 2003 among the Company and the Purchasers named therein (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.3 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2002).
  4 .5     First Supplement to Note Purchase Agreement dated as of May 31, 2005 among Kirby Corporation and the Purchasers named therein (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 of the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated May 31, 2005).
  10 .1     Indemnification Agreement, dated April 29, 1986, between the Company and each of its Directors and certain key employees (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.11 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1986).
  10 .2†     Deferred Compensation Agreement dated August 12, 1985 between Dixie Carriers, Inc., and J. H. Pyne (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.19 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1992).


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Exhibit
       
Number
     
Description of Exhibit
 
  10 .3†     1994 Nonemployee Director Stock Option Plan for Kirby Corporation (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.22 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1993).
  10 .4†     Deferred Compensation Plan for Key Employees (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.7 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2005).
  10 .5†     2002 Stock and Incentive Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.13 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2006).
  10 .6†     Annual Incentive Plan Guidelines for 2009 (incorporated by reference to exhibit 10.7 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2008).
  10 .7†*     Annual Incentive Plan Guidelines for 2010.
  10 .8†     2000 Nonemployee Director Stock Option Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.15 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2006).
  10 .9     2005 Stock and Incentive Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.16 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2006).
  10 .10†     Form of Nonincentive Stock Option Agreement (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the Commission on April 29, 2005, File No. 001-07615).
  10 .11†     Form of Incentive Stock Option Agreement (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the Commission on April 29, 2005, File No. 001-07615).
  10 .12†     Form of Restricted Stock Agreement (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the Commission on April 29, 2005, File No. 001-07615).
  10 .13†     Nonemployee Director Compensation Program (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 of the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2006).
  10 .14†     Amended and Restated Credit Agreement, dated June 14, 2006 among Kirby Corporation, JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. as Fund Administrator, Issuer and Administration Agent, and the banks named therein (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 of Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated June 14, 2006).
  21 .1*     Principal Subsidiaries of the Registrant.
  23 .1*     Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm.
  31 .1*     Certification of Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a).
  31 .2*     Certification of Chief Financial Officer Pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a).
  32 *     Certification Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350 (As adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002).
 
 
* Filed herewith
 
Management contract, compensatory plan or arrangement.

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SIGNATURES
 
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
 
Kirby Corporation
(Registrant)
 
  By: 
/s/  Norman W. Nolen
Norman W. Nolen
Executive Vice President,
Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer
 
Dated: February 26, 2010
 
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.
 
             
Signature
 
Capacity
 
Date
 
         
/s/  C. Berdon Lawrence

C. Berdon Lawrence
  Chairman of the Board and Director   February 26, 2010
         
/s/  Joseph H. Pyne

Joseph H. Pyne
  President, Chief Executive Officer and Director
(Principal Executive Officer)
  February 26, 2010
         
/s/  Norman W. Nolen

Norman W. Nolen
  Executive Vice President, Chief Financial
Officer and Treasurer
(Principal Financial Officer)
  February 26, 2010
         
/s/  Ronald A. Dragg

Ronald A. Dragg
  Vice President and Controller
(Principal Accounting Officer)
  February 26, 2010
         
/s/  James R. Clark

James R. Clark
  Director   February 26, 2010
         
/s/  C. Sean Day

C. Sean Day
  Director   February 26, 2010
         
/s/  Bob G. Gower

Bob G. Gower
  Director   February 26, 2010
         
/s/  William M. Lamont, Jr.

William M. Lamont, Jr.
  Director   February 26, 2010
         
/s/  David L. Lemmon

David L. Lemmon
  Director   February 26, 2010
         
/s/  Monte J. Miller

Monte J. Miller
  Director   February 26, 2010


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Signature
 
Capacity
 
Date
 
         
/s/  George A. Peterkin, Jr.

George A. Peterkin, Jr.
  Director   February 26, 2010
         
/s/  Richard R. Stewart

Richard R. Stewart
  Director   February 26, 2010


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EXHIBIT INDEX
 
         
Exhibit
       
Number
     
Description of Exhibit
 
10.7†*
    Annual Incentive Plan Guidelines for 2010.
21.1*
    Principal Subsidiaries of the Registrant.
23.1*
    Independent Registered Public Accountants’ Consent.
31.1*
    Certification of Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a).
31.2*
    Certification of Chief Financial Officer Pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a).
32*
    Certification Pursuant to Rule 18 U.S.C. Section 1350
 
 
* Filed herewith


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