UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Washington, D.C. 20549 FORM 10-K/A
            [X] ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
                         SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
                   For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2001
                                       or
              [ ] TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d)
                     OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
                  For the transition period from ____ to ____.
                         Commission file number 1-12108.

                              GulfWest Energy Inc.
             (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

            Texas                                              87-0444770
(State or other jurisdiction of                            (IRS Employer
incorporation or organization)                              Identification No.)

480 N. Sam Houston Parkway East, Suite 300
         Houston, Texas                                          77060
(Address of principal executive offices)                      (Zip Code)

       Registrant's telephone number, including area code: (281) 820-1919.

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

                               Title of Each Class
                               -------------------

               Class A Common Stock, par value of $.001 per share

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

                               Title of Each Class
                               -------------------
               Class A Common Stock, par value of $.001 per share

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

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

     The  aggregate  market  value of  voting  stock of the  Registrant  held by
non-affiliates  (excluding  voting  shares held by officers and  directors)  was
$3,968,219 on April 4, 2002.

     Indicate  the  number of  shares  outstanding  of each of the  Registrant's
classes of common stock: Class A Common Stock $.001 par value: 18,492,451 shares
on April 4, 2002.

                      DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE:

The  registrant's  definitive  Proxy  Statement  pertaining  to the 2002  Annual
Meeting of  Shareholders  (the "Proxy  Statement")  and filed or to be filed not
later than 120 days after the end of the fiscal year pursuant to Regulation  14A
is incorporated herein by reference into Part III.




     This Amended  Annual Report on Form 10-K/A is intended to amend and restate
in its entirety the  Company's  Annual  Report on Form 10-K for the period ended
December  31, 2001 to ensure  that the  information  contained  in the report is
true,  accurate and complete as of the date of the filing of this Amended Annual
Report on Form 10-K/A, November 18, 2002.

     As a  result  of a  financing  agreement  with an  energy  lender,  we were
required to enter into an oil and gas hedging  agreement with the lender. It has
been  determined this agreement meets the definition of SFAS 133 "Accounting for
Derivative  Instruments  and  Hedging  Activities"  and  is  accounted  for as a
derivative instrument.

     This amendment  reflects the results of the change in accounting  principle
in the financial statements and notes thereto,  and Management's  Discussion and
Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.  The estimated change
in fair value of the  derivatives  is  reported  in Other  Income and Expense as
unrealized  (gain) loss on derivative  instruments.  The estimated fair value of
the derivatives is reported in Other Assets (or Other Liabilities) as derivative
instruments.

     All other  information in the report  remains as previously  filed with the
Commission  in the  Company's  Annual  Report on Form 10-K for the period  ended
December 31, 2001 and is incorporated by reference herein.





                                     PART I

ITEM 1. Business.

Our Business.

     We are primarily engaged in the acquisition,  development, exploitation and
production of crude oil and natural gas. Our focus is on  increasing  production
from our existing  properties  through  further  exploitation,  development  and
exploration,  and on acquiring additional interests in crude oil and natural gas
properties.

     Since  we  made  our  first  significant   acquisition  in  1993,  we  have
substantially  increased our ownership in producing  properties and the value of
our crude oil and natural gas reserves through a combination of acquisitions and
the further  exploitation  and  development of our  properties.  At December 31,
2001, our part of the estimated  proved  reserves these  properties  contain was
approximately  5.9 million  barrels  (MBbl) of oil and 39.3  billion  cubic feet
(Bcf) of  natural  gas with a Present  Value  discounted  10%  (PV-10)  of $56.5
million.  At  present,  all of our  properties  are  located  on land in  Texas,
Colorado,  Louisiana  and  Oklahoma,  except  for the  property  on Grand  Lake,
Louisiana.  In the future, we plan to expand by acquiring additional  properties
in those areas, and in similar  properties  located in other areas of the United
States.

     Our gross revenues are derived from the following sources:

     1.   Oil and gas  sales  that are  proceeds  from the sale of crude oil and
          natural gas production to midstream purchasers;

     2.   Operating  overhead  and other income that  consists of earnings  from
          operating  crude oil and  natural  gas  properties  for other  working
          interest owners, and marketing and transporting natural gas. This also
          includes earnings from other miscellaneous activities.

     3.   Well  servicing  revenues that are earnings from the operation of well
          servicing equipment under contract to other operators.

     Our  operations are  considered to fall within a single  industry  segment,
which is the acquisition, development, production and servicing of crude oil and
natural gas  properties.  See Item 7. " Management's  Discussion and Analysis of
Financial  Condition  and Results of  Operations."  Certain  industry  terms are
italicized and defined in the Glossary beginning on page 28.

     Our common stock is traded over-the-counter (OTC) under the symbol "GULF".

Our Company.

     We were formed as a corporation under the laws of the State of Utah in 1987
as  Gallup  Acquisitions,  Inc.,  and  subsequently  changed  our  name to First
Preference  Fund,  Inc.  and then to  GulfWest  Energy,  Inc.  We became a Texas
corporation by a merger effected in July 1992, in which our name became GulfWest
Oil Company. On May 21, 2001, we changed our name to GulfWest Energy Inc.

     Our  principal  office is located at 480 North Sam  Houston  Parkway  East,
Suite 300, Houston, Texas 77060 and our telephone number is (281) 820-1919.
                                       2


     GulfWest Energy Inc. has nine wholly owned subsidiaries:

     1.   GulfWest  Oil and Gas  Company,  a Texas  corporation,  was  organized
          February  18, 1999 and is the owner of record of  interests in certain
          crude oil and natural gas properties located in Colorado and Texas.

     2.   SETEX Oil and Gas Company, a Texas  corporation,  was organized August
          11, 1998 and is the  operator of crude oil and natural gas  properties
          in which we own the majority working interest.

     3.   LTW Pipeline Co., a Texas  corporation,  was organized April 19, 1999,
          is the owner and operator of certain natural gas gathering systems and
          pipelines  that we own, and markets the natural gas produced  from our
          properties.

     4.   RigWest  Well  Service,  Inc.,  a  Texas  corporation,  was  organized
          September 5, 1996 and operates  well  servicing  equipment  for us and
          under contract for other operators.

     5.   Southeast  Texas Oil and Gas Company,  L.L.C.,  a Texas  company,  was
          acquired  by us on  September  1,  1998 and is the  owner of record of
          interests in certain crude oil and natural gas  properties  located in
          three Texas counties.

     6.   DutchWest Oil Company,  a Texas  corporation,  was organized  July 28,
          1997 and is the owner of record of interests in certain  crude oil and
          natural gas properties located along the Gulf Coast of Texas.

     7.   GulfWest  Development  Company,  a Texas  corporation,  was  organized
          November  9, 2000 and is the owner of record of  interests  in certain
          crude oil and natural gas  properties  located in Texas,  Oklahoma and
          Mississippi.

     8.   GulfWest Texas Company, a Texas corporation,  was organized  September
          23,  1996 and was the  owner of  interests  in  certain  crude oil and
          natural gas properties  located in the Vaughn Field,  Crockett County,
          Texas.  Effective  April 1, 2000,  these  properties  were assigned to
          GulfWest Oil and Gas Company to facilitate financing.

     9.   GulfWest Oil and Gas Company (Louisiana) LLC, a Louisiana company, was
          formed  July 31,  2001 and is the  owner of  record  of  interests  in
          certain  crude  oil and  natural  gas  properties  in  Louisiana.  Our
          Business Strategy.

     We have pursued a business strategy of acquiring interests in crude oil and
natural gas producing  properties where production and reserves can be increased
through  engineering  and  development   activities.   Such  activities  include
workovers,  development  drilling,  recompletions,  replacement  or  addition of
equipment  and  waterflood  or  other  secondary  recovery  techniques.  We have
expanded our business  plan to include an increased but  controlled  emphasis on
development  drilling for  additional  crude oil and natural gas  reserves.  Key
elements of our business strategy include:

     Continued Acquisition Program. We acquired properties in four crude oil and
natural  gas  fields  in Texas  and  Louisiana  in the year  2001.  We intend to
continue  to  aggressively  pursue  interests  in  crude  oil  and  natural  gas
properties  (i)  held by  small,  under-capitalized  operators  and  (ii)  being
divested by larger independent and major oil and gas companies.
                                       3



     Development and Exploitation of Existing Properties.  We intend to increase
the  development  of  properties in which we currently own interest by expanding
our  engineering and geological  field studies.  Our intent is to increase crude
oil and natural gas  production  and  reserves of our  existing  assets  through
relatively low-risk development  activities,  such as workovers,  recompletions,
horizontal drilling from existing wellbores and infield drilling, as well as the
more  efficient  use of  production  facilities  and the  expansion  of existing
waterflood operations.

     Significant  Operating Control.  Currently,  we are the operator of all the
wells,  except one, in which we own working  interests.  This operating  control
enables us to better manage the nature,  timing and costs of development of such
wells, and the marketing of the resulting production.

     Ownership of Workover Rigs. We currently own four workover service rigs and
one  swabbing  unit that we operate for our own account and under  contract  for
other  parties.  By owning and operating this  equipment,  we are better able to
control costs, quality of operations and availability of equipment and services.
We intend to  purchase  additional  service  rigs as needed to  accommodate  our
acquisition and development programs.

     Greater  Natural Gas  Ownership.  At December 31, 2001,  our reserves  were
comprised of 47% crude oil and 53% natural  gas. We will  continue to expand our
role in the domestic natural gas industry by (i) acquiring  additional interests
in natural gas  properties,  (ii)  increasing the production and reserve base of
our  existing  natural gas  properties,  and (iii)  acquiring  ownership of more
natural gas  gathering  systems and  pipelines.  We are  presently  focusing our
workover and  development  efforts on both crude oil and natural gas reserves to
take advantage of the higher prices of both commodities.  We are also seeking to
expand our ownership of gas gathering  systems and pipelines located in our main
field  areas.   Our  goal  is  to  have  greater  control  of  our  natural  gas
transportation  and  marketing,  and an expanded role in the  transportation  of
natural gas produced by other parties in our area of operations.

     Expanded  Exploration  and  Exploitation  Role.  Historically,  we have not
drilled  exploratory  wells due to the cost and risk  associated  with  drilling
prospective  locations.  However,  since  the  end of  1998,  we  have  acquired
producing  properties that have included significant acreage for prospective oil
and gas  exploration.  These  include  producing  wells and acreage in Crockett,
Grimes, Hardin, Jim Wells, Kimble, Madison, Palo Pinto, Refugio, Sutton, Wharton
and Zavala, Counties, Texas; Adams, Arapaho, Elbert and Weld Counties, Colorado;
Creek County, Oklahoma; and, Cameron Parish, Louisiana.  These acquisitions have
added  existing  natural gas and crude oil  production to our asset base and, as
importantly,  have provided us with immediate  geological databases for drilling
opportunities.  We have  expanded  our  evaluation  efforts in these  fields and
intend to increase our  development of reserves,  not only through  workovers of
existing wells, but by drilling additional wells.


Our Employees.

     At April 4, 2002, we had 64 full time salaried and contract  employees,  of
whom 49 were field personnel.

Our Executive Officers.

     See Item 10 of this report,  which  information is  incorporated  herein by
reference.
                                       4

ITEM 2. Our Properties.

     At December 31, 2001, we owned an average 92% working interest in 290 gross
wells (268 net wells). Gross wells are the total wells in which we own a working
interest.  Net wells are the sum of the fractional  working  interests we own in
gross wells. Our part of the estimated proved reserves these properties  contain
was  approximately 5.9 million barrels (MBbl) of oil and 39.3 billion cubic feet
(Bcf) of natural gas.  Substantially all of our properties are located in Texas,
Colorado, Louisiana and Oklahoma.

Proved Reserves.

     The following  table reflects our estimated  proved reserves at December 31
for each of the preceding three years.



                                             2001           2000           1999
                                             ----           ----           ----

                  Crude Oil (MBbl)
                       Developed            3,940          2,884          1,570
                       Undeveloped          1,932          1,692          1,745
                                            -----          -----          -----

                             Total          5,872          4,576          3,315
                                            =====          =====          =====

                  Natural Gas (MMcf)
                       Developed           21,204         15,142          9,317
                       Undeveloped         18,054          9,670          9,870
                                           ------          -----          -----

                             Total         39,258         24,812         19,187
                                           ======         ======         ======

                      Total (MBOE)         12,415          8,711          6,513
                                           ======          =====          =====

          (a)  Approximately 60% of our total proved reserves were classified as
               proved developed at December 31, 2001.

          (b)  Barrel of Oil Equivalent (BOE) is based on a ratio of 6,000 cubic
               feet of natural gas for each barrel of oil.
5

Standardized Measure of Discounted Future Net Cash Flows.

     The following  table sets forth as of December 31 for each of the preceding
three years, the estimated future net cash flow from and standardized measure of
discounted future net cash flows of our proved reserves,  which were prepared in
accordance  with the  rules and  regulations  of the SEC.  Future  net cash flow
represents  future  gross  cash  flow  from the  production  and sale of  proved
reserves,  net  of  crude  oil  and  natural  gas  production  costs  (including
production   taxes,  ad  valorem  taxes  and  operating   expenses)  and  future
development  costs. The  calculations  used to produce the figures in this table
are based on current  cost and price  factors at December  31 for each year.  We
cannot  assure you that the proved  reserves  will all be  developed  within the
periods used in the calculations or that prices and costs will remain constant.

                                                            2001                  2000                 1999
                                                     --------------------  -------------------- --------------------

Future cash inflows                                  $     199,162,921     $    318,504,931     $   119,006,567

Future production and development costs-
  Production                                                77,526,278           97,465,972          42,544,454
  Development                                               23,610,596           13,400,359           9,903,729
                                                     --------------------  -------------------- --------------------

Future net cash flows before income taxes                   98,026,047          207,638,600          66,558,384
Future income taxes                                        (13,281,358)         (56,466,527)        (11,847,076)
                                                     --------------------  -------------------- --------------------

Future net cash flows after income taxes                    84,744,689          151,172,073          54,711,308
10% annual discount for estimated timing
  of cash flows                                            (35,895,306)         (60,790,946)        (23,755,909)
                                                     --------------------  ------------------   ------------------

Standardized measure of discounted
 Future net cash flows(1)                            $      48,849,383     $     90,381,127     $    30,955,399
                                                     ==================    =================    ================

(1) The average prices of our proved reserves were $17.67 per Bbl and $2.43 per
     Mcf, $23.81 per Bbl and $8.45 per Mcf, and $22.80 per Bbl and $2.19 per Mcf
     at December 31, 2001, 2000 and 1999, respectively.

Significant Properties.

     Summary  information  on our properties  with proved  reserves is set forth
below as of December 31, 2001.

                         Productive Wells                       Proved Reserves (1)                    Present
                  -------------------------------    -----------------------------------------------  --------
                     Gross             Net                                                             Value (1)
                                                                                                       ---------
                   Productive       Productive         Crude         Natural
                     Wells            Wells            Oil             Gas             Total           Amount
                     -----           ------            ---             ---             -----           ------
                                                      (MBbl)          (MMcf)          (MBOE)            ($M)

Texas                  207           199.26           3,468           19,183           6,665        $  29,132
Colorado                39            26.57             480            9,185           2,011            5,949
Oklahoma                27            27.00              68              251             110              487
Louisiana               16            15.08           1,839           10,639           3,612           20,819
Mississippi              1              .38              17                -              17              112
                 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------
           Total       290           268.29           5,872           39,258          12,415        $  56,499
                 ================================================================================== ================

(1) The average prices of our proved reserves were $17.67 per Bbl and $2.43 per Mcf at December 31, 2001.
                                       6

     All information set forth herein relating to our proved reserves, estimated
future  net cash flows and  present  values is taken from  reports  prepared  by
Pressler Petroleum Consultants,  independent petroleum engineers.  The estimates
of these  engineers  were based upon their review of  production  histories  and
other  geological,  economic,  ownership  and  engineering  data provided by and
relating  to us. No reports  on our  reserves  have been filed with any  federal
agency.  In  accordance  with the  SEC's  guidelines,  our  estimates  of proved
reserves and the future net revenues from which  present  values are derived are
made  using  year end  crude oil and  natural  gas sales  prices  held  constant
throughout  the  life  of the  properties  (except  to  the  extent  a  contract
specifically provides otherwise). Operating costs, development costs and certain
production-related  taxes were  deducted  in arriving  at  estimated  future net
revenues, but such costs do not include debt service, general and administrative
expenses and income taxes.

     There are  numerous  uncertainties  inherent  in  estimating  crude oil and
natural  gas  reserves  and their  values,  including  many  factors  beyond our
control.  The reserve  data set forth in this  report are based upon  estimates.
Reservoir  engineering is a subjective  process,  which involves  estimating the
sizes of underground  accumulations  of crude oil and natural gas that cannot be
measured in an exact manner.  The accuracy of any reserve estimate is a function
of the quality of available data,  engineering and geological  interpretation of
that  data,  and  judgment.  As a  result,  estimates  of  different  engineers,
including  those used by us, may vary.  In  addition,  estimates of reserves are
subject to revision based upon actual production, results of future development,
exploitation  and exploration  activities,  prevailing crude oil and natural gas
prices,  operating  costs and other  factors.  Such  revisions  may be material.
Accordingly,  reserve estimates are often different from the quantities of crude
oil and natural gas that are ultimately  recovered and are highly dependent upon
the accuracy of the assumptions  upon which they are based. We cannot assure you
that the  estimates  contained  in this report are accurate  predictions  of our
crude oil and natural gas reserves or their  values.  Estimates  with respect to
proved reserves that may be developed and produced in the future are often based
upon  volumetric  calculations  and upon  analogy to similar  types of  reserves
rather than upon actual production history. Estimates based on these methods are
generally  less  reliable  than  those  based  on  actual  production   history.
Subsequent  evaluation of the same reserves based upon  production  history will
result in potentially substantial variations in the estimated reserves.
                                       7

Production, Revenue and Price History.

     The  following  table sets forth  information  (associated  with our proved
reserves)  regarding  production  volumes of crude oil and natural gas, revenues
and expenses  attributable  to such  production  (all net to our  interests) and
certain price and cost  information  for the years ended  December 31, 2001 2000
and 1999.

                                              2001                2000                1999
                                         ----------------    ----------------    ----------------

Production
    Oil (Bbl)                                  294,276             165,031               79,661
    Natural gas (Mcf)                        1,594,899           1,111,639              467,350
        Total (BOE)                            560,092             350,304              157,553

Revenue
    Oil production                       $  6,690,338        $   4,320,943        $   1,565,200
    Natural gas production                  5,735,765            4,124,989              968,104
                                         ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
         Total                           $ 12,426,103        $   8,445,932        $   2,533,304

Operating Expenses                       $  5,155,500        $   3,377,583        $   1,399,710

Production Data
    Average sales price
        Per barrel of oil                $      22.73        $       26.18        $       19.65
        Per Mcf of natural gas                   3.60                 3.71                 2.07
        Per BOE                                 22.19                24.11                16.08

    Average expenses per BOE
        Lease operating                          9.20                 9.64                 8.88
        Depreciation, depletion and
        amortization                             4.45                 3.83                 4.47
        General and administrative       $       3.05        $        4.53        $       12.59

Productive Wells at December 31, 2001:

     The  following  table  shows  the  number  of  productive  wells  we own by
location:

                       Gross            Net            Gross             Net
                     Oil Wells       Oil Wells       Gas Wells        Gas Wells
                    ------------    ------------    -------------    ------------

Texas                   118            120.11            89             79.15
Colorado                 18             11.42            21             15.15
Oklahoma                 27             27.00             -               -
Louisiana                14             13.08             2              2.00
Mississippi               1               .38             -               -
                    ------------    ------------    -------------    ------------
     Total              178            171.99           112             96.30
                    ============    ============    =============    ============
                                       9



Developed Acreage at December 31, 2001.

     The following  table shows the developed  acreage that we own, by location,
which is acreage  spaced or assigned to  productive  wells.  Gross acres are the
total  acres in which we own a  working  interest.  Net acres are the sum of the
fractional working interests we own in gross acres.

                                          Gross Acres                 Net Acres
                                          -----------                ----------

         Texas                              19,440                     14,936
         Colorado                            5,000                      2,700
         Louisiana                           1,560                      1,560
         Oklahoma                            1,200                        912
                                            -------                    --------
                  Total                     27,200                     20,108
                                            ======                     =======
Undeveloped Acreage at December 31, 2001.

     The following table shows the undeveloped acreage that we own, by location.
Undeveloped acreage is acreage on which wells have not been drilled or completed
to a point that would permit the  production of  commercial  quantities of crude
oil and natural gas.

                                          Gross Acres                 Net Acres
                                          -----------                ----------

         Texas                              23,900                      18,479
         Louisiana                             630                         630
         Colorado                           20,000                      14,175
                                          -----------                -----------
                  Total                     44,530                      33,284
                                            ======                      ======

Drilling Results.

     We have not  drilled  any  exploratory  wells in the past three  years.  We
drilled three wells in 2001 and six in 2000, all of which were development wells
and are currently  productive.  These  development wells included six horizontal
wells drilled by sidetracking from existing wellbores in the Madisonville Field,
Texas,  two new wells  drilled on our  Colorado  acreage;  and one well that was
deepened in our Leona River Field, Texas. We did not drill any wells in 1999.
                                       10

Risk Factors.

     Our success  depends  heavily  upon our ability to market our crude oil and
natural gas production at favorable prices.

     In recent decades, there have been both periods of worldwide overproduction
and  underproduction  of crude oil and natural gas, and periods of increased and
relaxed energy  conservation  efforts.  Such  conditions have resulted in excess
supply  of, and  reduced  demand  for,  crude oil on a  worldwide  basis and for
natural gas on a domestic basis. At other times, there has been short supply of,
and increased demand for, crude oil and, to a lesser extent,  natural gas. These
changes have resulted in dramatic price fluctuations.

     The  degree  to  which  we are  leveraged  could  possibly  have  important
consequences to our shareholders, including the following:

     (i)  Our indebtedness,  acquisitions, working capital, capital expenditures
          or other purposes may be impaired;

     (ii) Funds available for our operations and general  corporate  purposes or
          for capital expenditures will be reduced as a result of the dedication
          of a substantial portion of our consolidated cash flow from operations
          to the payment of the principal and interest on our indebtedness;

     (iii)We may be more  highly  leveraged  than  certain  of our  competitors,
          which may place us at a competitive disadvantage;

     (iv) The agreements governing our long-term indebtedness and bank loans may
          contain restrictive financial and operating covenants;

     (v)  An  event of  default  (not  cured  or  waived)  under  financial  and
          operating  covenants contained in our debt instruments could occur and
          have a material adverse effect;

     (vi) Certain of the  borrowings  under our debt  agreements  have  floating
          rates of interest,  which causes us to be  vulnerable  to increases in
          interest rates; and,

     (vii)Our substantial  degree of leverage could make us more vulnerable to a
          downturn in general economic conditions.

     Our  ability  to make  principal  and  interest  payments  under  long-term
indebtedness and bank loans will be dependent upon our future performance, which
is subject to financial,  economic and other  factors,  some of which are beyond
our control.

     We cannot  assure you that our  current  level of  operating  results  will
continue or improve.  We believe that we will need to access capital  markets in
the  future in order to  provide  the  funds  necessary  to repay a  significant
portion of our indebtedness. We cannot assure you that any such refinancing will
be possible or that we can obtain any additional financing, particularly in view
of our  anticipated  high levels of debt. If no such  refinancing  or additional
financing were available, we could default on our debt obligations.
                                       11

     We were  profitable for the year 2001,  however we have incurred net losses
in the past and there can be no assurance that we will continue to be profitable
in the future.

     Our future operating results may fluctuate  significantly  depending upon a
number  of  factors,  including  industry  conditions,  prices  of crude oil and
natural gas, rates of production,  timing of capital  expenditures  and drilling
success.  These variables could have a material  adverse effect on our business,
financial  condition,  results of operations  and the market price of our common
stock.

     Estimates of crude oil and natural gas reserves depend on many  assumptions
that may turn our to be inaccurate.

     Estimates  of our proved  reserves  for crude oil and  natural  gas and the
estimated  future net revenues  from the  production  of such reserves rely upon
various  assumptions,  including  assumptions  as to crude oil and  natural  gas
prices,  drilling  and  operating  expenses,  capital  expenditures,  taxes  and
availability  of funds.  The  process of  estimating  crude oil and  natural gas
reserves is complex and imprecise.

     Actual  future  production,  crude oil and natural  gas  prices,  revenues,
taxes,   development   expenditures,   operating   expenses  and  quantities  of
recoverable crude oil and natural gas reserves may vary  substantially  from the
estimates we obtain from reserve  engineers.  Any significant  variance in these
assumptions could materially  affect the estimated  quantities and present value
of reserves we have set forth.  In addition,  our proved reserves may be subject
to downward or upward revision due to factors that are beyond our control,  such
as production history, results of future exploration and development, prevailing
crude oil and natural gas prices and other factors.

     Approximately  40% of our total  estimated  proved reserves at December 31,
2001 were proved undeveloped reserves, which are by their nature less certain.

     Recovery of such reserves  requires  significant  capital  expenditures and
successful  drilling  operations.  The  reserve  data set  forth in the  reserve
engineer reports assumes that substantial  capital  expenditures are required to
develop such reserves.  Although cost and reserve estimates  attributable to our
crude oil and  natural  gas  reserves  have been  prepared  in  accordance  with
industry  standards,  we cannot be sure that the  estimated  costs are accurate,
that development will occur as scheduled or that the results of such development
will be as estimated.

     You should not interpret  the present  value  referred to in this report or
documents  incorporated  herein by reference as the current  market value of our
estimated crude oil and natural gas reserves.

     In accordance with SEC  requirements,  the estimated  discounted future net
cash flows from proved  reserves are  generally  based on prices and costs as of
the date of the  estimate.  Actual  future  prices  and costs may be  materially
higher or lower.

     The estimates of our proved reserves and the future net revenues from which
the present  value of our  properties  is derived were  calculated  based on the
actual  prices of our  various  properties  on a  property-by-property  basis at
December 31, 2001. The average  prices of all properties  were $17.67 per barrel
of oil and $2.43 per thousand cubic feet (Mcf) of natural gas at that date.

     Actual  future  net cash  flows  will  also be  affected  by  increases  or
decreases in  consumption by crude oil and natural gas purchasers and changes in
governmental  regulations or taxation. The timing of both the production and the
incurring of expenses in connection with the development and production of crude
oil and natural gas properties affect the timing of actual future net cash flows
from proved reserves. In addition, the
                                       12

10%  discount  factor,  which is required  by the SEC to be used in  calculating
discounted future net cash flows for reporting purposes,  is not necessarily the
most appropriate  discount factor.  The effective interest rate at various times
and the  risks  associated  with our  business  or the oil and gas  industry  in
general will affect the accuracy of the 10% discount factor.

     Except to the extent that we acquire properties  containing proved reserves
or  conduct  successful  development  or  exploitation  activities,  our  proved
reserves will decline as they are produced.

     In  general,  the  volume of  production  from  crude oil and  natural  gas
properties  declines as reserves are depleted.  Our future crude oil and natural
gas  production  is highly  dependent  upon our success in finding or  acquiring
additional reserves.

     The  business of  acquiring,  enhancing  or  developing  reserves  requires
considerable capital.

     Our ability to make the necessary capital  investment to maintain or expand
our asset base of crude oil and  natural gas  reserves  could be impaired to the
extent that cash flow from operations is reduced and external sources of capital
become limited or  unavailable.  In addition,  we cannot be sure that our future
acquisition and development activities will result in additional proved reserves
or that we will be able to drill productive wells at acceptable costs.

     Crude oil and natural gas drilling and production activities are subject to
numerous risks, many of which are beyond our control.

     These risks include (i) the possibility that no commercially productive oil
or gas  reservoirs  will  be  encountered;  and,  (ii)  that  operations  may be
curtailed,  delayed  or  canceled  due to title  problems,  weather  conditions,
governmental requirements, mechanical difficulties, or delays in the delivery of
drilling rigs and other equipment that may limit our ability to develop, produce
and market our  reserves.  We cannot  assure you that new wells we drill will be
productive or that we will recover all or any portion of our  investment in such
new wells.

     Drilling for crude oil and natural gas may not be profitable.

     Any wells that we drill may be dry wells or wells that are not sufficiently
productive  to be  profitable  after  drilling.  Such wells will have a negative
impact on our profitability.  In addition,  our properties may be susceptible to
drainage from production by other operators on adjacent properties.

     Our industry  experiences  numerous  operating risks that could cause us to
suffer substantial losses.

     Such  risks  include   fire,   explosions,   blowouts,   pipe  failure  and
environmental  hazards,  such as oil  spills,  natural  gas leaks,  ruptures  or
discharges of toxic gases.  We could also suffer losses due to personnel  injury
or loss of life;  severe damage to or destruction of property;  or environmental
damage that could result in clean-up responsibilities, regulatory investigation,
penalties or suspension of our operations. In accordance with customary industry
practice, we maintain insurance policies against some, but not all, of the risks
described  above. Our insurance  policies may not adequately  protect us against
loss or liability. There is no guarantee that insurance policies that protect us
against the many risks we face will  continue  to be  available  at  justifiable
premium levels.
                                       13

     As owners and operators of crude oil and natural gas properties,  we may be
liable under federal,  state and local environmental  regulations for activities
involving water pollution, hazardous waste transport, storage, disposal or other
activities.

     Our past growth has been  attributable  to  acquisitions of producing crude
oil and natural gas properties  with proved  reserves.  There are risks involved
with such acquisitions.

     The  successful   acquisition  of  properties  requires  an  assessment  of
recoverable reserves,  future crude oil and natural gas prices, operating costs,
potential  environmental  and other  liabilities,  and other factors  beyond our
control.  Such assessments are necessarily inexact and their accuracy uncertain.
In  connection  with such an  assessment,  we  perform  a review of the  subject
properties that we believe to be generally  consistent with industry  practices.
Such a review,  however, will not reveal all existing or potential problems, nor
will it  permit  us, as the  buyer,  to become  sufficiently  familiar  with the
properties  to fully  assess  their  capabilities  or  deficiencies.  We may not
inspect every well and, even when an inspection is  undertaken,  structural  and
environmental problems may not necessarily be observable.

     When  we  acquire  properties,  in  most  cases,  we are  not  entitled  to
contractual indemnification for pre-closing liabilities, including environmental
liabilities.

     We  generally  acquire  interests  in  properties  on an "as is" basis with
limited  remedies  for  breaches of  representations  and  warranties.  In those
circumstances   in  which  we  have  contractual   indemnification   rights  for
pre-closing  liabilities,  we cannot  assure you that the seller will be able to
fulfill its  contractual  obligations.  In addition,  the competition to acquire
producing crude oil and natural gas properties is intense and many of our larger
competitors have financial and other resources  substantially greater than ours.
We cannot  assure  you that we will be able to acquire  producing  crude oil and
natural  gas  properties  that  have  economically   recoverable   reserves  for
acceptable prices.

     We  may  acquire  royalty,  overriding  royalty  or  working  interests  in
properties that are less than the controlling interest.

     In such  cases,  it is likely  that we will not  operate,  nor  control the
decisions affecting the operations,  of such properties. We intend to limit such
acquisitions  to  properties  operated by  competent  parties  with whom we have
discussed their plans for operation of the properties.

     We will need  additional  financing  in the future to  continue to fund our
developmental and exploitation activities.

     We have made and will continue to make substantial capital  expenditures in
our  exploitation and development  projects.  We intend to finance these capital
expenditures with cash flow from operations,  existing financing arrangements or
new  financing.  We cannot  assure you that such  additional  financing  will be
available.  If it is not available,  our development and exploitation activities
may have to be curtailed,  which could adversely affect our business,  financial
condition and results of operations.

     The  marketing of our natural gas  production  depends,  in part,  upon the
availability, proximity and capacity of natural gas gathering systems, pipelines
and processing facilities.

     We could be  adversely  affected by changes in existing  arrangements  with
transporters  of our  natural  gas  since  we do not own  most of the  gathering
systems and pipelines  through which our natural gas is delivered to purchasers.
Our  ability to  produce  and market  our  natural  gas could also be  adversely
affected  by   federal,   state  and  local   regulation   of   production   and
transportation.
                                       14


     The crude oil and natural gas industry is highly  competitive in all of its
phases.

     Competition  is  particularly  intense with respect to the  acquisition  of
desirable  producing  properties,  the  acquisition of crude oil and natural gas
prospects  suitable  for  enhanced  production   efforts,   and  the  hiring  of
experienced personnel. Our competitors in crude oil and natural gas acquisition,
development,  and  production  include the major oil  companies,  in addition to
numerous independent crude oil and natural gas companies, individual proprietors
and drilling  programs.  Many of these competitors  possess and employ financial
and personnel resources  substantially in excess of those which are available to
us and may, therefore,  be able to pay more for desirable  producing  properties
and prospects and to define, evaluate, bid for, and purchase a greater number of
producing  properties  and prospects  than our financial or personnel  resources
will permit. Our ability to generate reserves in the future will be dependent on
our ability to select and acquire  suitable  producing  properties and prospects
while competing with these companies.

     The domestic oil industry is extensively  regulated at both the federal and
state levels.  Although we believe we are presently in compliance with all laws,
rules and regulations,  we cannot assure you that changes in such laws, rules or
regulations,  or the  interpretation  thereof,  will not have a material adverse
effect on our financial condition or the results of our operations.

     Legislation affecting the oil and gas industry is under constant review for
amendment or  expansion,  frequently  increasing  the  regulatory  burden on the
industry.  There are numerous  federal and state  agencies  authorized  to issue
rules  and  regulations  affecting  the oil and gas  industry.  These  rules and
regulations are often difficult and costly to comply with and carry  substantial
penalties for noncompliance.

     State statutes and  regulations  require  permits for drilling  operations,
drilling  bonds,  and  reports  concerning  operations.  Most  states  also have
statutes  and  regulations  governing   conservation   matters,   including  the
unitization or pooling of properties,  and the establishment of maximum rates of
production from wells. Some states have also enacted statutes  prescribing price
ceilings for natural gas sold within their states.  Our industry is also subject
to numerous laws and  regulations  governing  plugging and abandonment of wells,
discharge  of  materials  into the  environment  and other  matters  relating to
environmental  protection.  The  heavy  regulatory  burden  on the  oil  and gas
industry  increases  the costs of our doing  business as an oil and gas company,
consequently affecting our profitability.

     Our board of directors is authorized,  without further  shareholder action,
to issue  preferred  stock in one or more series and to  designate  the dividend
rate, voting rights and other rights,  preferences and restrictions of each such
series.

     As of  April  4,  2002,  we had a total of  8,000  shares  of our  Series D
Preferred  Stock and 9,000  shares of our Series E  Preferred  Stock  issued and
outstanding,  both par value $.01 and  liquidation  value  $500 per  share.  The
Series  D and E  Preferred  Stock  are  senior  to our  common  stock  regarding
liquidation.  The holders of the  preferred  stock do not have voting  rights or
preemptive  rights nor are they  subject to the  benefits of any  retirement  or
sinking fund.

     The  Series D  Preferred  Stock is not  entitled  to  dividends,  nor is it
redeemable,  however it is  convertible  to common  stock at  anytime  following
December 31, 2002,  the third  anniversary  of the issue date.  Thereafter,  the
holder may convert  any or all of the shares of the Series D Preferred  Stock to
common stock.  The total number of shares of common stock to be issued upon such
conversion shall be 500,000.
                                       15

     The Series E Preferred  Stock is entitled to receive  dividends at the rate
of $12.50 per share per annum,  payable quarterly.  The Series E Preferred Stock
is redeemable in whole or in part at any time, at our option, at a price of $500
per share,  plus all accrued and  undeclared or unpaid  dividends;  except that,
after two years from the date of the original  issuance and prior to  redemption
of  remaining  shares by the  Company,  the  holders of record  shall be given a
60-day written notice of our intent to redeem and the opportunity to convert the
Series E Preferred Stock to common stock.  The conversion price for the Series E
Preferred Stock shall be $2.00 per share of common stock. At April 4, 2002, none
of the 9,000 outstanding shares of Series E Preferred Stock had been redeemed or
converted.  On a fully converted  basis,  the 9,000 shares of Series E Preferred
Stock would convert to 2,250,000 shares of common stock.

     We do not pay dividends on our common stock.

     Our board of directors  presently intends to retain all of our earnings for
the expansion of our business,  therefore we do not anticipate distributing cash
dividends on our common  stock in the  foreseeable  future.  Any decision of our
board of  directors  to pay  cash  dividends  will  depend  upon  our  earnings,
financial position, cash requirements and other factors.

     The  holders  of our common  stock do not have  cumulative  voting  rights,
preemptive rights or rights to convert their common stock to other securities.

     We are  authorized to issue  40,000,000  shares of common stock,  $.001 par
value per share.  As of April 4, 2002,  there were  18,492,451  shares of common
stock issued and outstanding.  Since the holders of our common stock do not have
cumulative  voting  rights,  the holder(s) of a majority of the shares of common
stock present,  in person or by proxy,  will be able to elect all of the members
of our board of directors. The holders of shares of our common stock do not have
preemptive rights or rights to convert their common stock into other securities.
At April 4, 2002,  we had  outstanding  warrants and options for the purchase of
2,338,754 shares of common stock at prices ranging from $.75 to $6.00 per share,
including  employee stock options to purchase 1,032,000 shares at prices ranging
from  $.75 to $1.81 per  share.  If we issue  additional  shares,  the  existing
shareholders' percentage ownership of the Company may be further diluted.

     Actual results may differ from forward-looking statements.

     We make  forward-looking  statements  throughout this report.  Whenever you
read a statement that is not simply a statement of historical fact, such as when
we describe what we "believe,"  "expect" or "anticipate"  will occur,  and other
similar statements,  you must remember that our expectations may not be correct,
even though we believe they are  reasonable.  These  forward-looking  statements
generally relate to our plans and objectives for future operations and are based
upon our management's  reasonable  estimates of future results and trends. We do
not  guarantee  that the  transactions  and  events  described  will  happen  as
described (or that they will happen at all). In connection with  forward-looking
statements,  you should  carefully  review the  factors set forth in this report
under "Risk Factors."

ITEM 3. Legal Proceedings.

     From time to time, we are involved in litigation relating to claims arising
out of our  operations  or from  disputes  with vendors in the normal  course of
business. As of April 4, 2001, we were not engaged in any legal proceedings that
are  expected,  individually  or in the  aggregate,  to have a material  adverse
effect on us.
                                       16

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

     We did not submit any matters to a vote of our security  holders during the
fourth quarter of the fiscal year ended December 31, 2001.

                                       17



                                     PART II

ITEM 5. Market for Our Common Stock and Related Stockholder Matters.

     Our common stock is traded  over-the-counter  under the symbol "GULF".  The
high and low trading prices for the common stock for each quarter in 2001,  2000
and 1999 are set forth  below.  The  trading  prices  represent  prices  between
dealers,  without  retail  mark-ups,  mark-downs,  or  commissions,  and may not
necessarily represent actual transactions.

                                                         High              Low
                                                         ----              ---
                  2001
                  ----
                  First Quarter                         $1.46             $.39
                  Second Quarter                         1.01              .53
                  Third Quarter                           .96              .48
                  Fourth Quarter                          .72              .58

                  2000
                  ----
                  First Quarter                          1.81              .75
                  Second Quarter                         2.00             1.25
                  Third Quarter                          1.63             1.13
                      Fourth Quarter                     1.69              .88

                  1999
                  ----
                  First Quarter                          2.63             1.88
                  Second Quarter                         1.00              .38
                  Third Quarter                           .75              .38
                  Fourth Quarter                          .94              .63

     We are authorized to issue  40,000,000  shares of Class A common stock, par
value  $.001 per share (the  "common  stock").  As of April 4, 2002,  there were
18,492,451   shares  of  common  stock  issued  and   outstanding  and  held  by
approximately 580 beneficial owners. Our common stock is traded over-the-counter
(OTC)  under the  symbol  "GULF".  Fidelity  Transfer  Company,  1800 South West
Temple,  Suite 301, Box 53, Salt Lake City,  Utah 84115,  (801)  484-7222 is the
transfer agent for the common stock.

     Holders of common stock are entitled,  among other things,  to one vote per
share on each matter  submitted to a vote of  shareholders  and, in the event of
liquidation,  to share ratably in the  distribution  of assets  remaining  after
payment of liabilities (including preferential  distribution and dividend rights
of holders of  preferred  stock).  Holders  of common  stock have no  cumulative
rights, and, accordingly, the holders of a majority of the outstanding shares of
the common stock have the ability to elect all of the directors.

     Holders of common stock have no preemptive or other rights to subscribe for
shares.  Holders  of  common  stock are  entitled  to such  dividends  as may be
declared by the Board out of funds legally  available  therefore.  We have never
paid cash  dividends on the common stock and do not  anticipate  paying any cash
dividends in the foreseeable future.

Preferred Stock.

     Our board of directors is authorized,  without further  shareholder action,
to issue  preferred  stock in one or more series and to  designate  the dividend
rate, voting rights and other rights,  preferences and restrictions of each such
series.  As of April 4, 2002, we had a total of 17,000 shares of preferred stock
                                       18

issued and outstanding,  including 8,000 of our Series D and 9,000 of our Series
E Preferred  Stock.  The Series D and E Preferred Stock are senior to our common
stock  regarding  liquidation.  The holders of the  preferred  stock do not have
voting rights or  preemptive  rights nor are they subject to the benefits of any
retirement or sinking fund.

     The  Series D  Preferred  Stock is not  entitled  to  dividends,  nor is it
redeemable,  however it is  convertible  to Common  Stock at  anytime  following
December 31, 2002, the third anniversary of the date of issue.  Thereafter,  the
holder may convert  any or all of the shares of the Series D Preferred  Stock to
Common Stock.  The total number of shares of Common Stock to be issued upon such
conversion shall be 500,000.

     The Series E Preferred  Stock is entitled to receive  dividends at the rate
of $12.50 per share per annum,  payable quarterly.  The Series E Preferred Stock
is redeemable in whole or in part at any time, at our option, at a price of $500
per share,  plus all accrued and  undeclared or unpaid  dividends;  except that,
after two years from the date of the original  issuance and prior to  redemption
of  remaining  shares by the  Company,  the  holders of record  shall be given a
60-day written notice of our intent to redeem and the opportunity to convert the
Series E Preferred Stock to common stock.  The conversion price for the Series E
Preferred Stock shall be $2.00 per share of common stock. At April 4, 2002, none
of the 9,000 outstanding shares of Series E Preferred Stock had been redeemed or
converted.  On a fully converted  basis,  the 9,000 shares of Series E Preferred
Stock would convert to 2,225,000 shares of common stock.

Outstanding Options and Warrants.

     At April 4, 2002, we had outstanding  warrants and options for the purchase
of  2,338,754  shares of common  stock at prices  ranging from $.75 to $6.00 per
share,  including  employee stock options to purchase 1,032,000 shares at prices
ranging from $.75 to $1.81 per share.

Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities.

     During 2001, we sold and issued the following shares of common or preferred
stock in private  offerings not registered  under the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended,  and exempt  under  Section 4(2) of the Act.  All the  purchasers  were
accredited  investors  not  affiliated  with  the  company  or  consultants.  No
underwriters were used and no underwriting discounts or commissions were paid in
any of the sales.

                                                       Number of
                                                       ---------
    Date          Security    Purchaser                  Shares      Consideration
    ----          --------    ---------                  ------      -------------

  04/30/01        Common      Property Seller             17,500     Exchange for oil and gas properties
  08/07/01        Preferred   Property Seller              9,000     Exchange for oil and gas properties
  08/16/01        Common      Consultants                 10,000     Consulting fees
  10/25/01        Common      Property Seller             20,000     Exchange for oil and gas properties
                                       19

     We also granted warrants or options  exercisable for shares of common stock
not registered  under the  Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and exempt under
Section 4(2) of the Act. All the grantees were current employees, consultants or
accredited investors not affiliated with the company. No underwriters were used,
and no  underwriting  discounts or commissions  were paid in connection with the
grants.

                                                   Exercisable       Exercise
                                                   -----------       --------
    Date          Derivative    Grantee(s)           Shares           Price     Consideration
    ----          ----------    ----------           ------           -----     -------------

  05/18/01        Option        Employees            184,000         $   .83     Compensation
  08/16/01        Warrant       Consultants          156,000         $   .75     Fees
                                       20

ITEM 6. Selected Financial Data.

     The following  table sets forth selected  historical  financial data of our
company as of December 31, 2001,  2000, 1999, 1998 and 1997, and for each of the
periods then ended. See "Item 1. Business" and "Item 7. Management's  Discussion
and  Analysis of  Financial  Condition  and Results of  Operations."  The income
statement  data for the years ended  December  31,  2001,  2000 and 1999 and the
balance  sheet data at December  31, 2001 and 2000 are derived  from our audited
financial  statements  contained elsewhere herein. The income statement data for
the  years  ended  December  31,  1998 and 1997 and the  balance  sheet  data at
December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997 are derived from our Annual Report on Form 10-K
for  those  periods.   You  should  read  this  data  in  conjunction  with  our
consolidated  financial  statements  and the notes  thereto  included  elsewhere
herein.

                                                                       Year Ended December 31,
                                    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                          2001               2000               1999               1998              1997
                                    -----------------  -----------------  -----------------  ----------------- -----------------

Income Statement Data
---------------------
Operating Revenues                  $  12,990,581      $    8,984,175     $     2,812,639    $    2,403,553    $    4,960,966

Net income (loss) from
operations                              3,451,875           2,464,017          (1,464,094)        (6,329,884)         (598,320)

Net income (loss)                       1,044,291             352,774          (2,269,506)        (8,387,060)       (1,676,681)

Dividends on preferred stock              (56,250)              -                (450,684)          (427,173)         (380,928)

Net income (loss) available to
Common Shareholders                       988,401             352,774          (2,720,190)        (8,814,233)       (2,057,609)

Net income (loss), per share
of common stock                     $         .05      $          .02     $          (.34)    $        (3.68)   $        (1.19)

Weighted average number of
shares of common stock
outstanding                            18,464,343          17,293,848            7,953,147         2,394,866         1,725,926

Balance Sheet Data
------------------
Current assets                      $   2,205,862      $    2,934,804     $      1,357,465    $      820,984    $    1,536,396

Total assets                           51,379,209          32,374,128           20,009,793          8,058,827       17,089,855

Current liabilities                    12,492,365           7,594,986            4,650,691          6,559,393        2,879,256

Long-term obligations                  26,541,957          18,077,371           11,304,318          3,401,371       12,185,055

Stockholders' Equity
(Deficit)                           $  12,344,887      $    6,701,771     $      4,054,784     $   (1,901,937)    $  2,025,544
                                       21

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

Overview.

    We are engaged  primarily in the  acquisition,  development,  exploitation,
exploration  and  production  of crude  oil and  natural  gas.  Our  focus is on
increasing  production  from our existing  crude oil and natural gas  properties
through  the  further   exploitation,   development  and  exploration  of  those
properties,  and on acquiring  additional interests in crude oil and natural gas
properties. Our gross revenues are derived from the following sources:

     1.   Oil and gas  sales  that are  proceeds  from the sale of crude oil and
          natural gas production to midstream purchasers;

     2.   Operating  overhead  and other income that  consists of earnings  from
          operating  crude oil and  natural  gas  properties  for other  working
          interest owners, and marketing and transporting natural gas. This also
          includes earnings from other miscellaneous activities.

     3.   Well  servicing  revenues that are earnings from the operation of well
          servicing equipment under contract to other operators.

     The  following is a discussion  of our  consolidated  financial  condition,
results of  operations,  liquidity and capital  resources.  You should read this
discussion in  conjunction  with the  Consolidated  Financial  Statements of the
Company  and the  Notes  thereto  contained  elsewhere  herein.  See  "Financial
Statements."

Results of Operations.

     The factors which most  significantly  affect our results of operations are
(1) the sales price of crude oil and natural  gas,  (2) the level of total sales
volumes of crude oil and natural  gas,  (3) the level of and  interest  rates on
borrowings and, (4) the level and success of new acquisitions and development of
existing properties.

Comparative results of operations for the periods indicated are discussed below.

Year Ended December 31, 2001 Compared to Year Ended December 31, 2000

Revenues

     Oil and Gas Sales.  Our  operating  revenues from the sale of crude oil and
natural gas increased by 47% from $8,446,000 in 2000 to $12,426,000 in 2001, due
to increased oil and gas production from  development  projects and acquisitions
of additional properties.

     Well  Servicing  Revenues.  Revenues  from  our well  servicing  operations
decreased by 10% from  $188,000 in 2000 to $169,000 in 2001.  This  decrease was
due to higher rig  utilization  on  operated  properties  where the  Company has
working interest partners and less work for third parties.

     Operating  Overhead  and  Other  Income.  Revenues  from  these  activities
increased 13% from $350,000 in 2000 to $395,000 in 2000. Major components of the
increase included operating overhead $81,800,  gathering and marketing $210,900,
sale of exploratory leases $96,300 and miscellaneous income $6,000.
                                       22

Costs and Expenses

     Lease  Operating  Expenses.  Lease  operating  expenses  increased 53% from
$3,378,000 in 2000 to $5,155,000  in 2001.  This increase in operating  expenses
was due to the  acquisitions  of  additional  properties,  expanded  oil and gas
production, and increased vendor prices.

     Cost of Well Servicing  Operations.  Well servicing  expenses decreased 14%
from $212,000 in 2000 to $182,000 in 2001.  This decrease in expenses was due to
less utilization of our equipment under contract to third parties.

     Depreciation, Depletion and Amortization (DD and A). DD and A increased 86%
from  $1,342,000  in 2000 to  $2,491,000 in 2001,  due to  significantly  higher
production   resulting  from  successful   field   development   activities  and
acquisitions.

     General and  Administrative (G and A) Expenses.  G and A expenses increased
8% from $1,588,000 in 2000 to $1,710,000 in 2001 due to the increased  number of
properties being managed.

     Interest  Expense  and  Dividends  on  Preferred  Stock.  Interest  expense
increased  29% from  $2,135,000  in 2000 to  $2,757,000 in 2001 due to increased
debt  associated  with the funding of our  additional  acquisitions  and capital
development program.

     Dividends on preferred  stock due was $56,250 and paid was $28,125 in 2001.
No dividends were due or paid in 2000.

Year Ended December 31, 2000 Compared to Year Ended December 31, 1999

Revenues

     Oil and Gas Sales.  Our  operating  revenues from the sale of crude oil and
natural gas increased by 233% from $2,533,000 in 1999 to $8,446,000 in 2000, due
to increased oil and gas production from  development  projects,  higher oil and
gas prices, and acquisitions of additional properties.

     Well  Servicing  Revenues.  Revenues  from  our well  servicing  operations
increased by 61% from  $117,000 in 1999 to $188,000 in 2000.  This  increase was
due to higher rig  utilization  on  operated  properties  where the  Company has
working interest partners and increased work for third parties.

     Operating  Overhead  and  Other  Income.  Revenues  from  these  activities
increased  115% from $163,000 in 1999 to $350,000 in 2000.  Major  components of
the change  included a decrease of $38,000 in revenues we received for operating
properties for other parties (due to our acquiring  additional working interests
in the operated  properties);  an increase of $117,000 in natural gas  marketing
and transportation; $52,000 received in damages from a drilling contractor; and,
$20,000  received for the  assignment of certain deep drilling  rights on one of
our leases.

Costs and Expenses

     Lease  Operating  Expenses.  Lease operating  expenses  increased 141% from
$1,400,000 in 1999 to $3,378,000  in 2000.  This increase in operating  expenses
was due to the  acquisitions  of  additional  properties,  expanded  oil and gas
production, and the costs related to such production.

     Cost of Well Servicing  Operations.  Well servicing  expenses increased 12%
from $190,000 in 1999 to $212,000 in 2000.  This increase in expenses was due to
less  work  under  contract  to  third  parties.
                                       23


     Depreciation, Depletion and Amortization (DD and A). DD and A increased 91%
from  $704,000  in 1999 to  $1,342,000  in  2000,  due to  significantly  higher
production   resulting  from  successful   field   development   activities  and
acquisitions.

     General and  Administrative (G and A) Expenses.  G and A expenses decreased
20%  from   $1,983,000   for  1999  to  $1,588,000  in  2000.  The  Company  had
non-recurring  expenses consisting of costs associated with the consolidation of
its offices to Houston and non-cash  charges of $232,000 related to the issuance
of stocks and warrants in 1999 compared to $2,000 in 2000.

     Interest  Expense  and  Dividends  on  Preferred  Stock.  Interest  expense
increased 140% from $890,000 in 1999 to $2,135,000 in 2000 due to increased debt
associated with additional acquisitions and our capital development program, and
higher borrowing rates.

     Preferred dividends decreased $451,000 from year-end 1999, since all of the
preferred  stock  entitled to receive  dividends  had been  converted  to common
stock.

Year Ended December 31, 1999 Compared to Year Ended December 31, 1998

Revenues

     Oil and Gas  Sales.  Operating  revenues  from the  sale of  crude  oil and
natural gas increased by 40% from $1,804,000 in 1998 to $2,533,000 in 1999. This
was due to increased crude oil and natural gas production,  and higher crude oil
and natural gas prices.

     Well Servicing Revenues.  Revenues from well servicing operations decreased
by 73% from $432,000 in 1998 to $117,000 in 1999. This decrease was due to fewer
rig utilization  contracts with third parties as a result of significantly lower
industry activity.

     Operating  Overhead  Revenues.  Revenues  from the  operating of properties
decreased 2% from $167,000 in 1998 to $163,000 in 1999. This decrease was due to
the fact that we operated fewer wells for other working interest owners.

Costs and Expenses

     Lease  Operating  Expenses.  Lease  operating  expenses  decreased 15% from
$1,647,000 in 1998 to $1,400,000  in 1999.  This decrease in operating  expenses
was due to the sale of GulfWest Permian assets,  effective  October 1, 1998, and
the overall reduction in operating expenses.

     Cost of Well Servicing  Operations.  Well servicing  expenses decreased 55%
from $421,000 in 1998 to $190,000 in 1999.  This decrease in expenses was due to
the reduced utilization of our equipment under contract to third parties.

     Impairment  of Assets.  Impairment  of assets  decreased to $0 in 1999 from
$2,279,000 in 1998. The decrease was due to our not being required to write down
the  carrying  values of crude oil and  natural  gas  properties  (whose  future
estimated  undiscounted  net cash inflows are less than such carrying  value) to
fair value.  An impairment of assets  write-down is a charge to earnings,  which
does not impact cash flow from operating  activities.  However, such write-downs
do impact  the  amount  of our  stockholders'  equity.  The risk that we will be
required  to write  down the  carrying  value of our crude oil and  natural  gas
reserves  increases  when crude oil and  natural  gas prices  are  depressed  or
volatile as they were at December  31, 1998.  No assurance  can be given that we
will not experience  additional  write-downs  in the future if commodity  prices
decline.  General  and  Administrative  (G and  A)  Expenses.  G and A  expenses
decreased 4% from  $2,064,000 for the year ended December 31, 1998 to $1,983,000
for the year ended December 31, 1999, as a result of a consolidation  of offices
to Houston,  Texas.  This reduction was achieved  despite the cost of relocating
the  office and our staff  from  Dallas,  Texas and Baton  Rouge,  Louisiana  to
Houston, Texas.
                                       24


     Depreciation, Depletion and Amortization (DD and A). DD and A decreased 70%
from  $2,322,000  in 1998 to  $704,000  in  1999.  The  decrease  was due to the
significant  write-down of the crude oil and natural gas property book values in
1998 and the increased reserves booked in 1999.

     Interest  Expense  and  Dividends  on  Preferred  Stock.  Interest  expense
decreased 32% from $1,303,000 in 1998 to $890,000 in 1999. This decrease was due
to the  sale of our  subsidiary,  GulfWest  Permian  Company,  in  1998  and the
resulting significant debt reduction.  Preferred dividends increased $19,000 due
to the increase in the amount of preferred  stock issued;  however,  by year-end
1999, the majority of the preferred stock had been converted to common stock.

Financial Condition and Capital Resources.

     At December 31, 2001, our current  liabilities  exceeded our current assets
by $10,286,503.  We had a profit of $988,041 compared to a profit of $352,774 at
December 31, 2000.

     On April 5, 2000, we entered into an agreement with Aquila Energy  Capital,
an energy lender,  to provide  $19,302,000 in financing,  of which  $13,302,000,
less closing  costs of $402,000,  was funded at closing and  $6,000,000  was for
future  development  capital.  We used the net  proceeds to (i) retire  existing
debt,  including  accrued  interest of  $10,234,977;  (ii) acquire crude oil and
natural gas properties in Zavala County, Texas for $2,300,000,  including $3,266
in cash and  200,000  shares of common  stock;  and,  (iii)  acquire  additional
interests in the Madisonville Field, Texas. The loan is secured by substantially
all of the  Company's  interests in oil and gas  properties,  bears  interest at
prime plus 3.5% and matures May 29, 2004.  Monthly  payments as to principal and
interest  are from an 85% net revenue  interest in the secured  properties.  The
lender retains a 7% overriding  royalty interest with payments  commencing after
the loan is paid in full.  On August 16,  2001,  the total  amount of  financing
increased by $16,800,000 to $36,102,000. The proceeds are to be used as follows:
$10,000,000 for the Goldking Acquisition (see below), $6,630,000 for development
of the properties  securing the loan and $170,000 for a structuring  fee paid to
the lender. As a result of the amendment,  the net revenue increased from 85% to
90%. In addition,  the amendment requires payments on principal of $1,000,000 in
February, 2002, August 2000 and February, 2003

     The development capital included in the Aquila financing was designated for
projects to increase production on our existing properties,  as identified by us
and approved by the lender. We used  approximately  $3,400,000 for such projects
in the  year  2000  and  $4,230,000  in the  year  2001.  We will  continue  our
development plans in 2002 with the remaining  $5,000,000.  We will also continue
to identify and  evaluate  opportunities  for growth  through  acquisitions.  We
believe our profits will increase in the future;  however adverse changes in the
prices of crude oil and natural gas would have a severe impact on our plans.

     On August 17,  2001,  we purchased  several oil and natural gas  properties
located in four fields in Texas and Louisiana (the "Goldking Acquisition").  The
effective date of the acquisition was July 1, 2001. The acquired  properties are
currently producing an aggregate 600 barrels of oil and 1,200 Mcf of natural gas
per day, with total proved reserves (net to the acquired interests) estimated at
1.2 million  barrels of oil and 9.5 billion cubic feet of natural gas. There are
additional  possible reserves estimated at 10 billion cubic feet of natural gas.
The purchase price of the  acquisition was $15 million in a combination of notes
payable,  preferred  stock,  cash,  warrants  and common  stock.  Financing  was
arranged  through  an  existing  credit  facility  and  included  expanding  the
company's credit line to continue the development of its properties  through the
year 2002.
                                       25

     Effective  December  1,  200l,  we  entered  into an Oil  and Gas  Property
Acquisition, Exploration and Development Agreement (the "Summit Agreement") with
Summit Investment Group-Texas, L.L.C., an unrelated party, ("Summit"). Under the
agreement,  Summit  will  provide  or  makes  available  to us  payments  in the
aggregate of $1,200,000 in advanced  funds (the Advanced  Funds") for our use in
the acquisition of oil and gas leases and other mineral and royalty interests in
order that we may  conduct  specified  oil and gas  exploration  and  production
activities.  We will pay Summit a  sourcing  fee of  $100,000  and  expenses  of
$100,000  from the Advanced  Funds.  We agree to drill four (4) wells located on
oil and gas  properties  acquired under the Summit  Agreement  (the  "Obligation
Wells") and to commence such drilling  prior to the  expiration of two (2) years
from the effective date of the Summit Agreement.  We will pay Summit $175,000 on
or before the date of  commencement  of  drilling  of each  Obligation  Well and
Summit  shall  assign  us its  interest  in the  applicable  oil and gas  leases
attributable  to the production  unit for such well. We further agree to conduct
well workover  operations on certain  existing  wells  acquired by us, which are
located on lands  described  in the  Summit  Agreement,  all such well  workover
operations to be completed within nine (9) months of the Effective Date.  Summit
will reserve a 2.5% overriding  royalty interest in the drilling prospect leases
and a 25% net profits interest in the workover leases.

     The Advanced Funds shall be recouped by Summit in the following manner:

     (a)  A total of $500,000.00  shall be repaid out of an undivided 40% of the
          "Summit Net Profits Interest", defined as twenty five percent (25%) of
          the monthly net sale proceeds of all oil and gas production  allocable
          to our interest in the pertinent oil and gas properties, as more fully
          defined in the Summit  Agreement.  Summit will retain an 8.5%  working
          interest in the workover leases after payment of the $500,000.

     (b)  We shall  pay  $175,000  in cash to  Summit  on the  date we  commence
          drilling each Obligation Well; or

     (c)  By virtue of a lump sum production payment by us.

     If, at the expiration of two (2) years from the Effective Date,  Summit has
not completely recouped the Advanced Funds from the payments referred to in (a),
(b) and (c) above, then Summit, at its sole election,  may require that we issue
to it a  quantity  of  our  Common  Stock  equivalent  to  the  quotient  of the
outstanding Advanced Funds (numerator) and $2.00 per share  (denominator).  Upon
issuance of such stock to Summit,  Summit shall assign to us all its interest in
the remaining  oil and gas  properties  within the subject  area,  reserving its
overriding royalty interest in the properties.

Inflation and Changes in Prices.

     While the general level of inflation  affects certain costs associated with
the petroleum  industry,  factors  unique to the industry  result in independent
price  fluctuations.  Such price  changes have had, and will  continue to have a
material   effect  on  our   operations;   however,   we  cannot  predict  these
fluctuations.
                                       26

     The following  table indicates the average crude oil and natural gas prices
received over the last three years by quarter.  Average prices per barrel of oil
equivalent,   computed  by  converting  natural  gas  production  to  crude  oil
equivalents  at the rate of 6 Mcf per barrel,  indicate the composite  impact of
changes in crude oil and natural gas prices.

                                                   Average Prices
                                 ----------------------------------------------
                                  Crude Oil                              Per
                                    and               Natural        Equivalent
                                  Liquids               Gas            Barrel
                                  ---------           -----------      --------
                                  (per Bbl)            (Per Mcf)

         1999
         ----
         First                       $  9.72              $ 1.63        $  9.84
         Second                        14.28                2.17          13.71
         Third                         19.77                2.77          18.52
         Fourth                        20.27                2.71          18.64

         2000
         ----
         First                       $ 26.06              $ 2.73        $ 21.23
         Second                        25.14                3.19          21.89
         Third                         25.79                3.90          24.42
         Fourth                        27.38                4.68          27.74

         2001
         ----
         First                       $ 24.15              $ 5.27        $ 27.87
         Second                        24.14                3.88          23.71
         Third                         23.25                3.08          21.08
         Fourth                        19.94                2.62          17.96

ITEM 7a. Qualitative and Quantitative Disclosures About Market Risk.

     Information with respect to qualitative  disclosures about material risk is
contained in Item 1 "Risk Factors".

     Information  with respect to quantitative  disclosures  about material risk
follow:

     All of the  Company's  financial  instruments  are for purposes  other than
trading. The Company only enters derivative financial instruments in conjunction
with its oil and gas hedging activities.

     Hypothetical  changes in interest rates and prices chosen for the following
stimulated   sensitivity  effects  are  considered  to  be  reasonably  possible
near-term changes generally based on consideration of past fluctuations for each
risk  category.  It is not  possible to  accurately  predict  future  changes in
interest rates and product prices.  Accordingly,  these hypothetical changes may
not be an indicator of probable future fluctuations.

Interest Rate Risk

     The Company is exposed to interest rate risk on debt with variable interest
rates.  At  December  31,  2001,  the  Company  carried  variable  rate  debt of
$34,637,475.  Assuming a one percentage point change at December 31, 2001 on the
Company's variable rate debt, the annual pretax income would change by $346,374.
                                       27

Commodity Price Risk

     The Company hedges a portion of its price risks associated with its oil and
natural gas sales which are classified as derivative instruments. As of December
31, 2001, these derivative  instruments' assets had a fair value of. $467,582. A
hypothetical  change in oil and gas  prices  could have an effect on oil and gas
futures  prices,  which are used to  estimate  the fair value of our  derivative
instrument.  However, it is not practicable to estimate the resultant change, in
any, in the fair value of our derivative instrument.

ITEM 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data.

     Information  with  respect  to this Item 8 is  contained  in our  financial
statements beginning on Page F-1 of this Annual Report.


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

     None
                                       28

                                    PART III


ITEM 10. Directors and Executive Officers of the Registrant.

     The following  table sets forth  information on our directors and executive
officers:

                                                                                   Year First Elected
Name                                 Age Position                                 Director or Officer
----                                 --- --------                                 -------------------

Marshall A. Smith III(3)             54  Chairman of the Board                            1989

Thomas R. Kaetzer(3)                 43  Chief Executive Officer                          1998
                                         President and Director

Jim C. Bigham                        66  Executive Vice President                         1991
                                         and Secretary

Richard L. Creel                     53  Vice President of Finance                        1998
                                         and Controller

William T. Winston                   35  Director                                         2000

John E. Loehr(1)(2)(3)               56  Director                                         1992


J. Virgil Waggoner(1)(2)(3)          74  Director                                         1997


Steven M. Morris(1)(2)               50  Director                                         2000


John P. Boylan(1)                    35  Director                                         2001

         (1)      Member of the Audit Committee.
         (2)      Member of the Compensation Committee.
         (3)      Member of the Executive Committee.

     Marshall  A. Smith III has served as an officer  and a director of GulfWest
since July 1989. From July 1989 to November 20, 1992, he served as president and
chairman of the Board.  On November  20,  1992,  he  resigned as  president  but
continued as chief executive  officer and chairman of the board. On September 1,
1993,  Mr. Smith  reassumed  the duties of president and resigned as chairman of
the board.  On December 21, 1998,  he resigned as president  but remained  chief
executive officer. On March 20, 2001, he resigned as chief executive officer and
was elected chairman of the board.

     Thomas R. Kaetzer was appointed  senior vice president and chief  operating
officer of  GulfWest  on  September  15,  1998 and on  December  21, 1998 became
president and a director.  On March 20, 2001, he was appointed  chief  executive
officer.  Mr.  Kaetzer  has 17  years  experience  in the oil and gas  industry,
including 14 years with Texaco Inc., which involved the evaluation, exploitation
and  management  of oil  and  gas  assets.  He has  both  onshore  and  offshore
experience  in  operations  and  production   management,   asset   acquisition,
development,  drilling and workovers in the  continental  U.S.,  Gulf of Mexico,
North Sea,  Colombia,  Saudi Arabia,  China and West Africa.  Mr.  Kaetzer has a
Masters Degree in Petroleum Engineering from Tulane University and a Bachelor of
Science Degree in Civil Engineering from the University of Illinois.
                                       29

     Jim C.  Bigham has served as  secretary  since 1991 and as  executive  vice
president of GulfWest since 1996. Prior to joining GulfWest,  he held management
and sales  positions in the real estate and printing  industries.  Mr. Bigham is
also a retired  United States Air Force Major.  During his military  career,  he
served  in  both  command  and  staff  officer  positions  in  the  operational,
intelligence and planning areas.

     Richard L. Creel has served as controller of GulfWest since May 1, 1997 and
was  elected  vice  president  of  finance  on May 28,  1998.  Prior to  joining
GulfWest, Mr. Creel served as Branch Manager of the Nashville,  Tennessee office
of Management Reports and Services, Inc. He has also served as controller of TLO
Energy  Corp.  He has  extensive  experience  in general  accounting,  petroleum
accounting, and financial consulting and income tax preparation.

     William  T.  Winston  joined  GulfWest  in April  1999 and  served  as vice
president  from May 2000 until  March 29,  2002.  He became a director in August
2001.  While  vice  president,  he was  responsible  for  business  development,
including identifying and evaluating pipeline and gathering system acquisitions,
and assisting in the  evaluation  for  production  acquisitions.  Before joining
GulfWest, Mr. Winston was in charge of field operations and project planning for
Eagle Natural Gas Co., a privately  held natural gas gathering  company based in
Houston.  He served six years in the United States Army and Texas National Guard
and holds a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Government  from the  University of Texas
at Austin.

     John E. Loehr has served as a director of GulfWest since 1992, was chairman
of the board  from  September  1,  1993 to July 8, 1998 and was chief  financial
officer from November 22, 1996 to May 28, 1998. He is also  currently  president
and sole  shareholder of ST Advisory  Corporation,  an investment  company,  and
vice-president of Star-Tex Trading Company,  also an investment  company. He was
formerly president of Star-Tex Asset Management,  a  commodity-trading  advisor,
and a position he held from 1988 until 1992 when he sold his ownership interest.
Mr.  Loehr is a CPA and a member of the American  Institute of Certified  Public
Accountants.

     J. Virgil  Waggoner has served as a director of GulfWest  since December 1,
1997.  Mr.  Waggoner's  career in the  petrochemical  industry began in 1950 and
included senior management  positions with Monsanto Company and El Paso Products
Company,  the petrochemical  and plastics unit of El Paso Company.  He served as
president  and chief  executive  officer of Sterling  Chemicals,  Inc.  from the
firm's  inception  in 1986  until  its sale and his  retirement  in 1996.  He is
currently chief executive officer of JVW Investments, Ltd., a private company.

     Steven M.  Morris was  appointed a director of GulfWest on January 6, 2000.
He was the president of Pozo Resources, Inc., an oil and gas production company,
until its asset were sold to GulfWest  on December  31,  1999.  Mr.  Morris is a
certified public accountant and president of Pentad Enterprises, Inc., a private
investment  firm in Houston,  Texas.  He is  currently a director of the Bank of
Tanglewood,  Houston, Texas, and Quicksilver Resources,  Inc., a publicly traded
oil and gas exploration and production company with offices in Ft. Worth, Texas.

     John P. Boylan was appointed a director of GulfWest on August 7, 2001.  Mr.
Boylan has served as Managing  Partner and Chief  Executive  Officer of Birdwell
Partners,   L.P.,  the  parent   company  and  General   Partner  of  Five  Star
Transportation,  Superior Trucking Company and American Pipe Inspection  Company
since 1999.  He began his career in the oil and gas  industry in 1993  providing
venture funding for lease  acquisition and drilling  projects,  and from 1996 to
present  has  been  actively  involved  in  the  management  of  an  independent
exploration  and  production   company.   His  experience  covers  most  of  the
management,  finance and non-technical aspects of the oilfield services, as well
as the upstream oil and gas  exploration  and  production  industry.  He has had
experience in all of the major  producing  trends  covering the Texas Gulf Coast
and South  Texas.  In 1995,  he  received  the  degree  of  Master  of  Business
Administration,  with majors in Finance,  Economics and  International  Business
from the Leonard N. Stern Graduate School of Business of New York University. He
received  the degree of  Bachelor of  Business  Administration,  with a major in
Accounting,  from  the  University  of  Texas in  1988.  Mr.  Boylan  has been a
Certified Public Accountant in the State of Texas since 1991.
                                       30

     Our  directors  are elected  annually and hold office until the next annual
meeting  of  shareholders  and  until  their  successors  are duly  elected  and
qualified. The board of directors met seven times during the calendar year ended
December 31, 2001.

Committees of the Board of Directors.

     Our board of directors has established an audit  committee,  a compensation
committee and an executive committee.  The functions of these committees,  their
current  members,  and the number of meetings  held  during  2001 are  described
below.

     The audit  committee  was  established  to review  and  appraise  the audit
efforts  of our  independent  auditors,  and  monitor  the  company's  accounts,
procedures  and  internal  controls.  The  committee is comprised of Mr. John E.
Loehr (Chairman),  Mr. J. Virgil Waggoner,  Mr. John P. Boylan and Mr. Steven M.
Morris. The committee met twice in 2001.

     The function of the  compensation  committee is to fix the annual  salaries
and other  compensation  for the officers and key employees of the Company.  The
committee is comprised of Mr. J. Virgil Waggoner  (Chairman),  Mr. John E. Loehr
and Mr. Steven M. Morris. The committee met twice in 2001.

     The executive  committee was  established  to make  recommendations  to the
board of directors in the areas of financial  planning,  strategies and business
alternatives.   The  committee  is  comprised  of  Mr.  Marshall  A.  Smith  III
(Chairman), Mr. J. Virgil Waggoner, Mr. John E. Loehr and Mr. Thomas R. Kaetzer.
The committee met twice in 2001.

Compensation of Directors.

     The  shareholders  approved an amended and restated  Employee  Stock Option
Plan on May 28, 1998,  which  included a provision for the payment of reasonable
fees in cash or stock to directors. No fees were paid to directors in 2001.

ITEM 11. Executive Compensation.

     Information  regarding  executive  compensation is  incorporated  herein by
reference to our Proxy Statement.

ITEM 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management.

     Information  regarding  security ownership of certain beneficial owners and
management is incorporated herein by reference to our Proxy Statement.

ITEM 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions.

     Information  regarding certain  relationships  and related  transactions is
incorporated herein by reference to our Proxy Statement.
                                       31

                  GLOSSARY OF INDUSTRY TERMS AND ABBREVIATIONS

The following are definitions of certain industry terms and  abbreviations  used
in this report:

Bbl. Barrel.

BOE. Barrel of oil  equivalent,  based on a ratio of 6,000 cubic feet of natural
gas for each barrel of oil.

Gross Acres or Gross  Wells.  The total  acres or wells,  as the case may be, in
which a working interests is owned.

Horizontal Drilling. High angle directional drilling with lateral penetration of
one or more productive reservoirs.

Mcf. One thousand cubic feet.

Net Acres or Net Wells.  The sum of the fractional  working  interests  owned in
gross acres or gross wells.

Overriding  Royalty  Interest.  The right to receive a share of the  proceeds of
production from a well, free of all costs and expenses, except transportation.

Present Value. The pre-tax present value,  discounted at 10%, of future net cash
flows  from  estimated  proved  reserves,  calculated  holding  prices and costs
constant at amounts in effect on the date of the report  (unless  such prices or
costs are subject to change pursuant to contractual provisions) and otherwise in
accordance  with the  Commission's  rules for  inclusion  of oil and gas reserve
information in financial statements filed with the Commission.

Proceeds of Production.  Money received  (usually  monthly) from the sale of oil
and gas produced from producing properties.

Producing Properties. Properties that contain one or more wells that produce oil
and/or gas in paying quantities (i.e., a well for which proceeds from production
exceed operating expenses).

Productive  Well.  A well that is  producing  oil or gas or that is  capable  of
production.

Prospect.  A lease or group of leases containing  possible reserves,  capable of
producing  crude  oil,  natural  gas,  or  natural  gas  liquids  in  commercial
quantities,  either at the time of acquisition,  or after vertical or horizontal
drilling, completion of workovers, recompletions, or operational modifications.

Proved Reserves. Estimated quantities of crude oil, natural gas, and natural gas
liquids  that  geological  and  engineering  data  demonstrate  with  reasonable
certainty to be recoverable in future years from known reservoirs under existing
economic conditions; i.e., prices and costs as of the date the estimate is made.
Reservoirs  are  considered  proved if either actual  production or a conclusive
formation test supports economic production.
                                       32

     The area of a reservoir considered proved includes:

     a.   That  portion  delineated  by  drilling  and  defining  by  gas-oil or
          oil-water contacts, if any; and

     b.   The  immediately  adjoining  portions not yet drilled but which can be
          reasonably judged as economically productive on the basis of available
          geological  and  engineering  data. In the absence of  information  on
          fluid contacts, the lowest known structural occurrence of hydrocarbons
          controls the lower proved limit of the reservoir.

     Reserves which can be produced economically through application of improved
recovery  techniques  (such as fluid  injection)  are  included in the  "proved"
classification  when successful testing by a pilot project,  or the operation of
an installed  program in the  reservoir,  provides  support for the  engineering
analysis on which the project or program was based.

     Proved Reserves do not include:

     a.   Oil that may become  available from known reservoirs but is classified
          separately as "indicated additional reserves";

     b.   Crude oil, natural gas, and natural gas liquids, the recovery of which
          is subject to reasonable  doubt because of  uncertainty as to geology,
          reservoir characteristics, or economic factors;

     c.   Crude oil,  natural  gas,  and natural  gas liquids  that may occur in
          undrilled prospects; and

     d.   Crude oil,  natural gas, and natural gas liquids that may be recovered
          from oil shales and other sources.

Proved Developed Reserves. Reserves that can be expected to be recovered through
existing wells with existing equipment and operating methods. Additional oil and
gas expected to be obtained  through the application of fluid injection or other
improved recovery techniques for supplementing the natural forces and mechanisms
of primary recovery should be included as proved developed only after testing by
a pilot project or after operation of an installed program has confirmed through
production response that increased recovery will be achieved.

Proved Undeveloped Reserves. Reserves that are expected to be recovered from new
wells on  undrilled  acreage or from  existing  wells where a  relatively  major
expenditure is required for recompletion. Reserves on undrilled acreage shall be
limited to those drilling units offsetting  productive units that are reasonably
certain of production  when drilled.  Proved  reserves for other units that have
not been drilled can be claimed only where it can be demonstrated with certainty
that there is continuity of production from the existing  productive  formation.
Under no  circumstances  should  estimates  for proved  undeveloped  reserves be
attributable to any acreage for which an application of fluid injection or other
improved  recovery  technique is contemplated,  unless such techniques have been
proven effective by actual tests in the area and in the same reservoir.

Recompletion.  The completion for production of an existing  wellbore in another
formation from that in which the well has previously been completed.

Reservoir.  A porous and permeable  underground  formation  containing a natural
accumulation  of producible oil or gas that is confined by  impermeable  rock or
water barriers and is individual and separate from other reservoirs.

Royalty.  The right to a share of production  from a well, free of all costs and
expenses, except transportation.

Royalty Interest.  An interest in an oil and gas property entitling the owner to
a share of oil and natural gas production free of costs of production.
                                       33


Standardized  Measure. The present value,  discounted at 10%, of future net cash
flows from estimated proved  reserves,  after income taxes,  calculated  holding
prices and costs constant at amounts in effect on the date of the report (unless
such prices or costs are subject to change  pursuant to contractual  provisions)
and otherwise in accordance with the Commission's rules for inclusion of oil and
gas reserve information in financial statements filed with the Commission.

Waterflood.  An engineered,  planned effort to inject water into an existing oil
reservoir  with the intent of  increasing  oil reserve  recovery and  production
rates.

Working Interest.  The operating  interest under a lease, the owner of which has
the right to explore for and produce oil and gas covered by such lease. The full
working  interest  bears 100 percent of the costs of  exploration,  development,
production,  and operation, and is entitled to the portion of gross revenue from
the proceeds of production which remains after proceeds allocable to royalty and
overriding royalty interests or other lease burdens have been deducted.

Workover.  Rig work  performed  to restore an  existing  well to  production  or
improve its production from the current existing reservoir.
                                       34

                                     PART IV

ITEM 1. Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules, and Reports on Form 8-K.

     (a)  The following documents are filed as part of this Report:

          (1)  Financial Statements: Consolidated Balance Sheets at December 31,
               2001 and 2000.  Consolidated  Statements  of  Operations  for the
               years  ended  December  31,  2001,  2000 and  1999.  Consolidated
               Statements of  Stockholders'  Equity for the years ended December
               31, 2001,  2000 and 1999.  Consolidated  Statements of Cash Flows
               for the years ended  December 31, 2001,  2000 and 1999.  Notes to
               Consolidated  Financial  Statements,  December 31, 2001, 2000 and
               1999.

          (2)  Financial  Statement  Schedule:   Schedule  II  -  Valuation  and
               Qualifying Accounts

          (3)  Exhibits:

          Number Description
          ------ -----------

          #2.8 Purchase  and Sale  Agreement  between Pozo  Resources,  Inc. and
               GulfWest Oil Company, effective December 31, 1999.

          *3.1 Articles  of  Incorporation  of  the  Registrant  and  Amendments
               thereto.

          *3.2 Bylaws of the Registrant.

          %10.1GulfWest  Oil Company 1994 Stock  Option and  Compensation  Plan,
               amended  and  restated  as of April 1, 2001 and  approved  by the
               shareholders on May 18, 2001.

22.1     Subsidiaries of the Registrant filed herewith.

          25   Power of  Attorney  (included  on  signature  page of this Annual
               Report).


          #    Previously  filed with the  Company's  Form 8-K,  Current  Report
               dated  December 31, 1999,  filed with the  Commission  on January
               10,2000.
          *    Previously  filed  with the  Company's  Registration
               Statement  (on Form  S-1,  Reg.  No.  33-53526),  filed  with the
               Commission  on October  21,  1992.
          %    Previously  filed with the
               Company's  Proxy  Statement  on Form  DEF  14A,  filed  with  the
               Commission on April 16, 2001.

     (b) Reports on Form 8-K.

          None.
                                       35

                               S I G N A T U R E S

          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.

                                             GULFWEST ENERGY INC.

Date: November 18, 2002                      By \s\ Thomas R. Kaetzer
                                             ----------------------------------
                                             Thomas R. Kaetzer, President

                               POWER OF ATTORNEY

     Know all men by these presents,  that each person whose  signature  appears
below  constitutes  and  appoints  Thomas  R.  Kaetzer  as his true  and  lawful
attorney-in-fact and agent, with full power of substitution,  for him and in his
name, place, and stead, in any and all capacities to sign any and all amendments
or  supplements  to this amended  Annual Report on Form 10-K/A,  and to file the
same, and with all exhibits thereto and other documents in connection therewith,
with the Securities and Exchange Commission, granting unto said attorney-in-fact
and agent  full power and  authority  to do and  perform  each and every act and
thing requisite and necessary to be done as fully to all intents and purposes as
he might or could do in person,  hereby  ratifying and  confirming all that said
attorney-in-fact and agent or his substitute or substitutes,  may lawfully do or
cause to be done by virtue hereof.

     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                                      Title                                 Date
-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------  -------------------------
\s\ Marshall A. Smith                        Chairman of the Board                         November 18, 2002
---------------------
Marshall A. Smith III

\s\ Thomas R. Kaetzer                        President, Chief Executive Officer            November 18, 2002
-------------------------
Thomas R. Kaetzer                            and Director

\s\ Jim C. Bigham                            Executive Vice President and Secretary        November 18, 2002
---------------------------
Jim C. Bigham

\s\ Richard L. Creel                         Vice President of Finance, Controller         November 18, 2002
----------------------------
Richard L. Creel

\s\ William T. Winston                       Director                                      November 18, 2002
----------------------
William T. Winston

\s\ J. Virgil Waggoner                       Director                                      November 18, 2002
-----------------------
J. Virgil Waggoner

\s\ John E. Loehr                            Director                                      November 18, 2002
-----------------
John E. Loehr

\s\ John P. Boylan                           Director                                      November 18, 2002
------------------
John P. Boylan

\s\ Steven M.Morris                          Director                                      November 18, 2002
------------------------------
Steven M. Morris
                                       36
















                              GULFWEST ENERGY INC.

                                FINANCIAL REPORT

                                DECEMBER 31, 2001













                                 C O N T E N T S



                                                                     Page



INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT
  ON THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS                                        F-1


FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

     Consolidated balance sheets                                     F-2

     Consolidated statements of operations                           F-4

     Consolidated statements of stockholders' equity                 F-5

     Consolidated statements of cash flows                           F-9

     Notes to consolidated financial statements                      F-10


INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT ON
  THE FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULE F-31


FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULE

     Schedule II - Valuation and Qualifying Accounts                 F-32

     All other Financial  Statement Schedules have been omitted because they are
     either  inapplicable  or  the  information  required  is  included  in  the
     financial statements or the notes thereto.








                          INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT



To the Stockholders and
  Board of Directors
GULFWEST ENERGY INC.



We have audited the accompanying  consolidated balance sheets of GulfWest Energy
Inc. (a Texas  Corporation)  and  Subsidiaries as of December 31, 2001 and 2000,
the related consolidated statements of operations, stockholders' equity and cash
flows for each of the three years in the period ended  December 31, 2001.  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 auditing standards generally accepted
in the  United  States of  America.  Those  standards  require  that we plan and
perform the audit to obtain reasonable  assurance about whether the consolidated
financial  statements  are free of  material  misstatement.  An  audit  includes
examining,  on a test basis,  evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in
the  consolidated  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  consolidated  financial  position  of
GulfWest Energy Inc. and  Subsidiaries as of December 31, 2001 and 2000, and the
consolidated  results of their  operations  and their cash flows for each of the
three years in the period ended December 31, 2001, in conformity with accounting
principles generally accepted in the United States of America.





\s\WEAVER AND TIDWELL, L.L.P
------------------------------
WEAVER AND TIDWELL, L.L.P.
Dallas, Texas
November 11, 2002

                                      F-1


                                          GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                                            CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
                                            DECEMBER 31, 2001 AND 2000

                                                      ASSETS

                                                                                 2001                       2000
                                                                           -------------------       --------------------
CURRENT ASSETS
    Cash and cash equivalents                                              $         689,030         $          663,032
    Accounts receivable - trade, net of allowance
       for doubtful accounts of $ -0-
       in 2001 and 2000                                                            1,392,751                  2,188,421

    Prepaid expenses                                                                 124,018                     83,351
                                                                           ----------------          ---------------------
          Total current assets                                                     2,205,862                  2,934,804
                                                                           ----------------          ---------------------
OIL AND GAS PROPERTIES,
  using the successful efforts
  method of accounting                                                            52,045,178                 30,895,049

OTHER PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT                                                       2,352,166                  1,961,203
    Less accumulated depreciation,
       depletion, and amortization                                                (6,235,251)                (4,049,510)
                                                                           ------------------        ---------------------

          Net oil and gas properties and
              other property and equipment                                        48,162,093                 28,806,742
                                                                           ------------------        ---------------------
OTHER ASSETS
    Deposits                                                                          37,442                     27,638
    Investments                                                                                                 122,785
    Debt issue cost, net                                                             506,230                    482,159
    Derivative instruments                                                           467,582
                                                                           ------------------        ---------------------
           Total other assets                                                      1,011,254                    632,582
                                                                           ------------------        ---------------------

TOTAL ASSETS                                                               $      51,379,209         $       32,374,128
                                                                           ==================        =====================







The Notes to  Consolidated  Financial  Statements  are an integral part of these
statements.
                                      F-2


                                        LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
                                                                                 2001                     2000
                                                                         ------------------       -------------------

 CURRENT LIABILITIES
    Notes payable                                                        $      2,821,020         $         935,300
    Notes payable - related parties                                                40,000                   700,000
    Current portion of long-term debt                                           6,065,588                 3,111,120
    Current portion of long-term debt - related parties                           222,687                   303,296
    Accounts payable - trade                                                    3,099,399                 2,189,656
    Accrued expenses                                                              243,671                   355,614

          Total current liabilities                                            12,492,365                 7,594,986
                                                                         ------------------       -------------------
 NONCURRENT LIABILITIES
    Long-term debt, net of current portion                                     26,330,589                17,960,455
     Long-term debt - related parties                                             211,368                   116,916
                                                                         ------------------       -------------------
           Total noncurrent liabilities                                        26,541,957                18,077,371

 COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES

 STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
    Preferred stock                                                                   170                        80
    Common stock                                                                   18,493                    18,445
    Additional paid-in capital                                                 28,164,712                23,537,900
    Retained deficit                                                          (15,838,488)              (16,854,654)
    Long-term accounts and notes receivable -
      related parties, net of allowance for doubtful
      accounts of $740,478 in 2001 and 2000                                        -                          -
                                                                         -------------------       -------------------
          Total stockholders' equity                                           12,344,887                 6,701,771
                                                                         -------------------       -------------------
 TOTAL LIABILITIES AND
    STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY                                                 $     51,379,209           $    32,374,128
                                                                         ===================       ===================






The Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of  these statements.

                                      F-3


                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2001, 2000 AND 1999

                                                             2001                    2000                       1999
                                                     ------------------      -------------------        --------------------

OPERATING REVENUES
  Oil and gas sales                                  $     12,426,103        $       8,445,932           $      2,533,304
  Well servicing revenues                                     169,167                  188,052                    116,791
  Operating overhead and  other  income                       395,311                  350,191                    162,544
                                                     -------------------     --------------------        --------------------
          Total Operating Revenues                         12,990,581                8,984,175                  2,812,639

OPERATING EXPENSES
  Lease operating expenses                                  5,155,500                3,377,583                  1,399,710
  Cost of well servicing operations                           182,180                  212,286                    190,399
  Depreciation, depletion, and amortization                 2,491,385                1,341,890                    703,533
  General and administrative                                1,709,641                1,588,399                  1,983,091
                                                     -------------------     --------------------        --------------------
          Total Operating Expenses                          9,538,706                6,520,158                  4,276,733
                                                     -------------------     --------------------        --------------------
INCOME (LOSS) FROM OPERATIONS                               3,451,875                2,464,017                 (1,464,094)
                                                     -------------------     --------------------        --------------------
OTHER INCOME AND EXPENSE
  Interest income                                                                       16,082                      5,162
  Interest expense                                         (2,756,912)              (2,134,718)                  (889,796)
  Gain (loss) on sale of assets                              (118,254)                   7,393                     79,222
  Unrealized gain (loss) on derivative instruments          4,215,017
                                                     -------------------     --------------------        --------------------
          Total Other Income (Expense)                      1,339,851               (2,111,243)                  (805,412)
                                                     -------------------     --------------------        --------------------
INCOME (LOSS) BEFORE INCOME TAXES AND
  CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF CHANGE IN ACCOUNTING
  PRINCIPLES                                                4,791,726                  352,774                 (2,269,506)
                                                     -------------------     --------------------        --------------------
INCOME TAXES
                                                     -------------------     --------------------        --------------------
INCOME (LOSS) BEFORE CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF
  CHANGE IN ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES                           4,791,726                  352,774                 (2,269,506)

CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF CHANGE IN ACCOUNTING
  PRINCIPLES, NET OF INCOME TAXES                          (3,747,435)
                                                     -------------------     --------------------        --------------------
NET INCOME (LOSS)                                    $      1,044,291        $         352,774           $     (2,269,506)
DIVIDENDS ON PREFERRED STOCK
  (PAID 2001 - $28,125; 2000 - $76,992;1999 -
    $344,288)                                                 (56,250)                                           (450,684)
                                                     --------------------    ---------------------       ---------------------
NET INCOME (LOSS) AVAILABLE TO
  COMMON SHAREHOLDERS                                $        988,041        $         352,774           $     (2,720,190)
                                                     ==================      =====================       =====================
NET INCOME PER SHARE, BASIC BEFORE CUMULATIVE
  EFFECT OF CHANGE IN ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLE           $            .25        $             .02           $           (.34)
                                                     ------------------      ---------------------       ---------------------
CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF CHANGE IN ACCOUNTING
  PRINCIPLES                                                     (.20)                                               (.34)
                                                     ------------------      ---------------------       ---------------------
NET INCOME (LOSS) PER SHARE, BASIC                   $            .05        $             .02           $           (.34)
                                                     ==================      =====================       =====================
NET INCOME PER SHARE, DILUTED BEFORE
  CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF CHANGE IN ACCOUNTING
  PRINCIPLE                                          $            .23        $             .02           $           (.34)

CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF CHANGE IN ACCOUNTING
  PRINCIPLE                                                      (.18)
                                                     --------------------    ---------------------       ---------------------
NET INCOME (LOSS) PER SHARE, DILUTED                 $            .05        $             .02           $           (.34)
                                                     ====================    =====================       =====================

                                      F-4





                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2001, 2000 AND 1999






                                                                              -------------------------------
                                                                                     Number of Shares
                                                                              --------------    -------------
                                                                                Preferred          Common
                                                                                  Stock            Stock
                                                                              --------------    -------------
     BALANCE, December 31, 1998                                                      13,020       3,113,517
       Conversion of 2,425 shares of Class AAA preferred stock and unpaid
         dividends to 1,661,604 shares of common stock                               (2,425)      1,661,604

       Conversion of  1,950 shares of Class AA preferred stock and unpaid
          dividends to 1,550,000 shares of common stock                              (1,950)      1,550,000

       Conversion of 5,100 shares of Series BB preferred stock to 4,250,000
          shares of common stock                                                     (5,100)      4,250,000

       Conversion of 4,000 shares of Series C preferred stock to 200,000
          shares of common stock                                                     (4,000)        200,000

       Issuance of 1,270 shares of Series BB preferred stock for the
          conversion of debt                                                          1,270
       Issuance of 8,000 shares of Series D preferred stock for the acquisition
          of assets                                                                   8,000
       Issuance of 4,921,761 shares of common stock, net of offering costs
          (4,000,000 through private placement, 104,139 through exercise
          of warrants, 300,000 for acquisition of assets, 273,000 for services,
          244,622 in exchange for debt)                                                           4,921,761
       Issuance of warrants and options for services and additional financing
       Net loss
       Dividends paid on preferred stock
                                                                              --------------    -------------

BALANCE, December 31, 1999                                                           8,815       15,696,882
       Conversion of 815 shares of AAA preferred stock and unpaid
          dividends to 538,222 shares of common stock                                 (815)         538,322
       Issuance of 2,209,837 shares of common stock, net of offering costs
          (1,143,837 through private placement, 200,000 for acquisition of
          assets, 866,000 in exchange for debt)                                                   2,209,837
       Issuance of warrants and options for services and additional financing
       Netting of related party receivables and payables
       Provision for bad debts - receivables from related parties
       Net income
                                                                              --------------    -------------

         BALANCE, December 31, 2000                                                  8,000       18,445,041
                                                                              ==============    =============








The Notes to Consolidated Financials are an integral part of these statements.
                                      F-5















       Common                    Preferred              Additional                Retained              Receivables from
        Stock                     Stock              Paid-In Capital              Deficit                Related Parties
----------------------    --------------------   ----------------------    ----------------------    ---------------------
$         3,113           $          130         $       12,763,936        $      (14,516,642)       $       (152,474)

          1,662                     (24)                   232,803

          1,550                     (19)                   108,257

          4,250                     (51)                    (4,199)

            200                     (40)                      (160)

                                     12                     634,987

                                     80                   3,999,920



          4,922                                           3,541,715
                                                             44,650
                                                                                   (2,269,506)
                                                                                     (344,288)
----------------------    --------------------   ----------------------    ----------------------    ---------------------

         15,697                      88                  21,321,909               (17,130,436)               (152,474)

            538                      (8)                     76,463                   (76,992)


          2,210                                           2,123,868
                                                             15,660
                                                                                                              112,226
                                                                                                               40,248
                                                                                      352,774
----------------------    --------------------   ----------------------    ----------------------    ---------------------

$        18,445           $          80          $         23,537,900      $          (16,854,654)   ^           -
======================    ====================   ======================    ======================    =====================









The Notes to Consolidated Financials are an integral part of these statements.
                                      F-6








                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2001, 2000 AND 1999



                                                                                      ---------------------------------
                                                                                               Number of Shares
                                                                                       -------------------------------
                                                                                         Preferred           Common
                                                                                           Stock             Stock
                                                                                       --------------    ---------------
                                                                                       --------------    ---------------

BALANCE, December 31, 2000                                                                     8,000        18,445,041
     Issuance of 9,000 shares of Series E preferred stock for the acquisition of assets        9,000
     Issuance of 47,500 shares of common stock for the acquisition of assets                                    47,500
     Issuance of warrants for the acquisition of assets
     Net income
     Dividends paid on preferred stock
                                                                                       --------------    ---------------

BALANCE, December 31, 2001                                                                    17,000         18,492,541
                                                                                       ==============    ===============
































The Notes to Consolidated Financials are an integral part of these statements.
                                      F-7















        Common                  Preferred               Additional               Retained              Receivables from
        Stock                     Stock              Paid-In Capital              Deficit              Related Parties
----------------------    --------------------    ---------------------    ----------------------    ---------------------

$     18,445              $          80           $      23,537,900        $      (16,854,654)       $         -
                                     90                   4,499,910
          48                                                 35,402
                                                             91,500
                                                                                    1,044,291
                                                                                      (28,125)
----------------------    --------------------    ---------------------    ----------------------    ---------------------

$     18,493              $         170           $      28,164,712        $      (15,838,488)       $         -
======================    ====================    =====================    ======================    =====================
































The Notes to Consolidated Financials are an integral part of these statements.
                                      F-8



                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2001, 2000 AND 1999

                                                                                 2001                2000                 1999
                                                                           ----------------    ---------------     ----------------
CASH FLOWS  FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
    Net income (loss)                                                      $    1,044,291      $      352,774      $ (2,269,506)
    Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss) to net cash
      provided  by (used in) operating activities:
                Depreciation, depletion, and amortization                       2,491,385           1,341,890           703,533
                Partnership loss                                                                                         68,693
                Common   stock  and   warrants   issued  and   charged  to
                operations                                                                             15,660           234,250
                (Gain) loss on sale of assets                                     118,254              (7,393)          (79,222)
                Unrealized (Gain) loss on derivative instruments               (4,215,017)
                Cumulative effect of accounting change                          3,747,435
                Other non-operating income                                                             (5,780)
                Provision for bad debts                                                                40,248
                (Increase) decrease in accounts receivable - trade, net           765,939          (1,344,767)         (447,855)
                (Increase) decrease in inventory                                                                         13,925
                (Increase) decrease in prepaid expenses                           (40,730)             (3,588)           (4,802)
                Increase   (decrease)  in  accounts  payable  and  accrued        797,800           1,710,769          (359,290)
                                                                           -----------------    ---------------    ----------------
                   Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities          4,709,357           2,099,813        (2,140,274)

CASH FLOWS  FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
    Deposits                                                                       (9,804)                              (10,338)
    Proceeds from sale of property and equipment                                  394,423              14,915           155,844
    Purchase of property and equipment                                         (6,962,650)         (6,126,817)       (1,482,548)
                                                                             -------------     -----------------    --------------
Net cash used in investing activities                                          (6,578,031)         (6,111,902)       (1,337,042)
                                                                            ----------------   -----------------    --------------
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
    Proceeds from sale of common stock, net                                                           795,378         3,000,000
    Payments on debt                                                           (6,577,928)         (1,733,513)       (1,300,891)
    Proceeds from debt issuance                                                 8,530,269           5,694,510         1,861,200
    Debt issue cost                                                               (29,544)           (368,554)
    Dividends paid                                                                (28,125)
                                                                            -----------------    ----------------    ---------------
                   Net cash provided by financing activities                    1,894,672           4,387,821         3,560,309

INCREASE IN CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS                                              25,998             375,732            82,993
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS,
    beginning of year                                                             663,032             287,300           204,307
                                                                             -------------     -----------------    --------------
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS,
     end of year                                                             $    689,030      $      663,032       $   287,300
                                                                             =============     =================    ==============
CASH PAID FOR INTEREST                                                       $  2,811,677      $    2,041,630       $   758,226
                                                                             =============     =================    ==============


The Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of these statements.
                                      F-9


                                                 GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


Note 1. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies

     The  following  is  a  summary  of  the  significant   accounting  policies
     consistently  applied by management in the preparation of the  accompanying
     consolidated financial statements.

     Organization/Concentration of Credit Risk

               GulfWest Energy Inc. and subsidiaries (the "Company")  intends to
          pursue the  acquisition of quality oil and gas  prospects,  which have
          proved  developed  and  undeveloped  reserves and the  development  of
          prospects with third party industry partners.

               The accompanying  consolidated  financial  statements include the
          Company and its wholly-owned subsidiaries:  RigWest Well Service, Inc.
          ("RigWest"),  GulfWest  Texas  Company  ("GWT"),  both formed in 1996;
          DutchWest  Oil  Company  formed  in 1997;  SETEX  Oil and Gas  Company
          ("SETEX") formed August 11, 1998; Southeast Texas Oil and Gas Company,
          L.L.C.  ("Setex LLC") acquired September 1, 1998; GulfWest Oil and Gas
          Company  formed  February 18, 1999;  LTW Pipeline Co. formed April 19,
          1999; GulfWest Development Company ("GWD") formed November 9, 2000 and
          GulfWest Oil and Gas Company  (Louisiana)  LLC,  formed July 31, 2001.
          All material  intercompany  transactions  and balances are  eliminated
          upon consolidation.

               The Company  grants credit to  independent  and major oil and gas
          companies for the sale of crude oil and natural gas. In addition,  the
          Company grants credit to joint owners of oil and gas properties, which
          the Company,  through SETEX, operates. Such amounts are secured by the
          underlying  ownership  interests in the  properties.  The Company also
          grants  credit to  various  third  parties  through  RigWest  for well
          servicing operations.

               The  Company   maintains   cash  on  deposit  in   interest   and
          non-interest  bearing  accounts  which,  at  times,  exceed  federally
          insured  limits.  The Company has not  experienced  any losses on such
          accounts and believes it is not exposed to any significant credit risk
          on cash and equivalents.

     Statement of Cash Flows

               The Company  considers all highly liquid  investment  instruments
          purchased with remaining maturities of three months or less to be cash
          equivalents for purposes of the consolidated statements of cash flows.

          Non-Cash Investing and Financing Activities:

               During the twelve  month  period  ended  December  31,  2001,  we
          acquired  $15,068,774 in property and equipment through $10,441,824 in
          notes  payable to  financial  institutions  and  related  parties,  by
          issuing  9,000 shares of  preferred  stock  valued at  $4,500,000,  by
          issuing 47,500 shares of common stock valued at $35,450 and by issuing
          150,000  warrants valued at $91,500.  Also, debt issue costs increased
          $170,000 in notes payable.

               During the twelve  month period  ended  December  31,  2000,  the
          Company  acquired  $5,434,161 in property and equipment  through notes
          payable to financial  institutions  and related parties of $4,958,163,
          in exchange of accounts  receivable of $169,798 and by issuing 200,000
          shares of common  stock  valued at  $306,200.  In  addition,  accounts
          payable  and accrued  expenses  decreased  $312,791,  debt issue costs
          increased  $206,875  through notes payable to financial  institutions.
          During the period,  815 shares of preferred  stock,  along with unpaid
          dividends  of  $76,992,  were  converted  to 538,322  shares of common
          stock,  notes payable of $975,000  (including  $750,000 to a director)
          were converted to 800,000 shares of common stock and accounts  payable
          of $49,352 were  converted  to 66,000  shares of common  stock.  Also,
          related  party  receivables  of $112,226  and accounts  receivable  of
          $26,950 were  exchanged for related party notes payable of $75,000 and
          for accounts payable of $64,176.

                                      F-10


                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


Note 1. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies - continued

     Statement of Cash Flows - Non-Cash  Investing  and  Financing  Activities -
     continued

               In 1999, the Company converted deferred  compensation of $47,883,
          debt of $700,000,  accounts payable of $10,000 and $108,465 of accrued
          interest  to common  stock.  In  addition,  the Company  issued  notes
          payable for  $6,679,700,  along with 300,000  shares of common  stock,
          valued at $150,000,  and 8,000 shares of  preferred  stock,  valued at
          $4,000,000,  for the  acquisition of properties and equipment.  Common
          stock was also  issued for the  exercise  of  warrants  by  converting
          $21,025 in deferred  compensation  and the conversion of 13,475 shares
          of preferred stock,  plus $344,288 in unpaid  dividends,  to 7,661,604
          shares of common stock.  Equipment was exchanged for the assumption of
          $7,975 of debt. As a result of the sale of assets, accounts receivable
          were reduced by $14,756 and notes payable were reduced by $39,009.

     Use of Estimates in the Preparation of Financial Statements

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

     Oil and Gas Properties

               The Company uses the successful  efforts method of accounting for
          oil and gas producing  activities.  Costs to acquire mineral interests
          in oil and gas properties,  to drill and equip  exploratory wells that
          find proved  reserves,  and to drill and equip  development  wells are
          capitalized.  Costs to drill exploratory wells that do not find proved
          reserves, and geological and geophysical costs are expensed.

               As the Company acquires  significant oil and gas properties,  any
          unproved  property  that is  considered  individually  significant  is
          periodically   assessed  for  impairment  of  value,  and  a  loss  is
          recognized  at the  time of  impairment  by  providing  an  impairment
          allowance.  Capitalized  costs of producing oil and gas properties and
          support  equipment,  after  considering  estimated  dismantlement  and
          abandonment  costs and estimated  salvage values,  are depreciated and
          depleted by the unit-of-production method.

               On the sale of an entire interest in an unproved  property,  gain
          or loss on the  sale is  recognized,  taking  into  consideration  the
          amount of any recorded  impairment  if the property has been  assessed
          individually.  If a partial interest in an unproved  property is sold,
          the  amount  received  is treated  as a  reduction  of the cost of the
          interest  retained.  On the sale of an entire or partial interest in a
          proved  property,  gain or loss is  recognized,  based  upon  the fair
          values of the interests sold and retained.

     Other Property and Equipment

               The following  tables set forth certain  information with respect
          to the Company's other property and equipment.

               The Company provides for depreciation and amortization  using the
          straight-line  method over the following estimated useful lives of the
          respective assets:

                    Automobiles                                    3 - 5  years
                    Office equipment                               7      years
                    Gathering system                              10      years
                    Well servicing equipment                      10      years
                                      F-11


                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


Note 1. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies - continued

     Other Property and Equipment - continued

          Capitalized costs relating to other properties and equipment:

                                            2001                 2000
                                      ------------------    ----------------
Automobiles                           $      446,055        $     448,598
Office equipment                             126,690              111,477
Gathering system                             529,486              481,311
Well servicing equipment                   1,249,935              919,817
                                      ------------------    ----------------
                                           2,352,166            1,961,203

Less accumulated depreciation               (937,488)            (684,327)
                                      ------------------    ----------------

Net capitalized cost                  $    1,414,678        $   1,276,876
                                      ==================    ================

     Revenue Recognition

               The Company  recognizes  oil and gas revenues on the sales method
          as oil and gas  production  is sold.  Differences  between  sales  and
          production volumes during the years ended December 31, 2001, 2000, and
          1999 were not significant.  Well servicing  revenues are recognized as
          the related  services  are  performed.  Operating  overhead  income is
          recognized based upon monthly contractual amounts for lease operations
          and other income is recognized as earned.

     Fair Value of Financial Instruments

               At  December  31,  2001  and  2000,   the   Company's   financial
          instruments  consist of notes receivable from related  parties,  notes
          payable and long-term debt.  Interest rates currently available to the
          Company for notes  receivable,  notes payable and long-term  debt with
          similar terms and remaining maturities are used to estimate fair value
          of such financial instruments. Accordingly, the carrying amounts are a
          reasonable estimate of fair value.

     Investments

               Investments  consist of an interest in a partnership  acquired in
          the Setex LLC  acquisition,  accounted  for under the equity method of
          accounting.  The partnership was dissolved  during 2001 and the assets
          were distributed.

     Debt Issue Costs

               Debt  issue  costs  incurred  are  capitalized  and  subsequently
          amortized over the term of the related debt on a straight-line basis.

     Earnings (Loss) Per Share

               Earnings   (loss)  per  share  are  calculated   based  upon  the
          weighted-average number of outstanding common shares. Diluted earnings
          (loss) per share are calculated based upon the weighted-average number
          of  outstanding  common  shares,  plus the  effect of  dilutive  stock
          options,   warrants,   convertible  preferred  stock  and  convertible
          debentures.

                                      F-12

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


Note 1. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies - continued

     Earnings (Loss) Per Share - continued

               The  Company  has  adopted  Statement  of  Financial   Accounting
          Standards  (SFAS) No. 128  "Earnings Per Share",  which  requires that
          both basic earnings  (loss) per share and diluted  earnings (loss) per
          share be presented on the face of the  statement  of  operations.  All
          per-share  amounts are  presented on a diluted  basis,  that is, based
          upon the weighted-average  number of outstanding common shares and the
          effect of all  potentially  diluted common shares.  Implementation  of
          SFAS No.  128 had no  effect  on  previously  reported  loss per share
          amounts.

     Impairments

               Impairments,  measured  using fair market value,  are  recognized
          whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying
          amount  of  long-lived   assets  (other  than  unproved  oil  and  gas
          properties  discussed  above)  may not be  recoverable  and the future
          undiscounted  cash flows  attributable  to the asset are less than its
          carrying value.

     Stock Based Compensation

               In October 1995, SFAS No. 123, "Stock Based  Compensation," (SFAS
          123) was issued. This statement requires the Company to choose between
          two different  methods of  accounting  for stock options and warrants.
          The statement  defines a  fair-value-based  method of  accounting  for
          stock options and warrants but allows an entity to continue to measure
          compensation  cost for stock options and warrants using the accounting
          prescribed  by APB  Opinion  No.  25 (APB 25),  "Accounting  for Stock
          Issued to Employees."  Use of the APB 25 accounting  method results in
          no  compensation  cost being  recognized  if options are granted at an
          exercise price at the current market value of the stock or higher. The
          Company will continue to use the  intrinsic  value method under APB 25
          but is  required  by SFAS 123 to make  pro  forma  disclosures  of net
          income  (loss)  and  earnings  (loss)  per share as if the fair  value
          method  had  been  applied  in  its  2001,  2000  and  1999  financial
          statements.  See Note 6 to the consolidated  financial  statements for
          further information.

     Implementation of New Financial Accounting Standards

               Effective  January  1, 2001,  the  Company  adopted  SFAS No. 133
          "Accounting for Derivative  Instruments and other Hedging Activities",
          as  amended by SFAS No. 137 and No.  138.  As a result of a  financing
          agreement with an energy lender, we were required to enter into an oil
          and gas hedging agreement with the lender. It has been determined this
          agreement  meets the definition of SFAS 133 "Accounting for Derivative
          Instruments  and  Hedging  Activities"  and  is  accounted  for  as  a
          derivative instrument.

               The estimated change in fair value of the derivatives is reported
          in Other Income and Expense as  unrealized  (gain) loss on  derivative
          instruments.  The estimated fair value of the  derivatives is reported
          in Other Assets (or Other Liabilities) as derivative instruments.

               The estimated fair value of the derivative instruments at January
          1, 2001, the date of initial application of SFAS 133, of $3,747,435 is
          reported in the Statement of Operations as the cumulative  effect of a
          change in accounting principle.

               In June, 2001, SFAS No. 141 "Business  Combinations" and SFAS No.
          142 "Goodwill  and Other  Intangible  Assets were issued.  The Company
          presently  has no  goodwill  or  intangible  assets  and is  thus  not
          affected by SFAS No. 142.

                                      F-13

Note 2. Operations and Management Plans

               At December 31, 2001, the Company's current liabilities  exceeded
          its  current  assets  by  $10,286,503.  The  Company  had a profit  of
          $988,041 compared to a profit of $352,774 at December 31, 2000.

               On April 5, 2000,  the Company  entered  into an  agreement  with
          Aquila Energy  Capital,  an energy lender,  to provide  $19,302,000 in
          financing,  of which $13,302,000,  less closing costs of $402,000, was
          funded at closing and $6,000,000 was future development  capital.  The
          proceeds  were used to (i) retire  existing  debt,  including  accrued
          interest  of  $10,234,977;  (ii)  acquire  crude oil and  natural  gas
          properties in Zavala County, Texas for $2,300,000, including $3,266 in
          cash and 200,000  shares of the  Company's  common stock;  and,  (iii)
          acquire  additional  interests in the Madisonville  Field,  Texas. The
          loan is secured by substantially all of the Company's interests in oil
          and gas properties,  bears interest at prime plus 3.5% and matures May
          29, 2004.  Monthly  payments as to principal  and interest are from an
          85% net revenue interest in the secured properties. The lender retains
          a 7% overriding  royalty  interest with payments  commencing after the
          loan is paid in  full.  On  August  16,  2001,  the  total  amount  of
          financing increased by $16,800,000 to $36,102,000. The proceeds are to
          be used as follows: $10,000,000 for the Goldking Acquisition (see Note
          3), $6,630,000 for development of the properties securing the loan and
          $170,000 for a structuring fee paid to the lender.  As a result of the
          amendment,  the net  revenue  interest  increased  from 85% to 90%. In
          addition,  the amendment  required payments on principal of $1,000,000
          in February 2002, August 2002 and February 2003.

               The  development  capital  included in the Aquila  financing  was
          designated  for  projects  to  increase  production  on the  Company's
          existing properties,  as identified by the Company and approved by the
          lender. The Company used approximately $4,230,000 for such projects in
          the year 2001 and will  continue  development  activities in 2002 with
          the remaining  $5,000,000.  The Company will also continue to identify
          and evaluate opportunities for growth through acquisitions. Management
          believes profits will increase in the future; however, adverse changes
          in the prices of crude oil and  natural gas or the  inability  to make
          the required  payments under the amended Aquila financing would have a
          severe impact on the Company's plans.

                                      F14

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


Note 3. Cost of Oil and Gas Properties

               The following  tables set forth certain  information with respect
          to the  Company's  oil and gas  producing  activities  for the periods
          presented:

         Capitalized Costs Relating to Oil and Gas Producing Activities:
                                                                            2001               2000
                                                                            ----               ----

            Unproved oil and gas properties                           $     440,033    $         384,240
            Proved oil and gas properties                                48,702,656           28,540,631
            Support equipment and facilities                              2,902,489            1,970,178
                                                                      --------------      ---------------
                                                                         52,045,178           30,895,049
            Less accumulated depreciation,
              depletion and amortization                                 (5,297,763)          (3,365,182)
                                                                      --------------      --------------
            Net capitalized costs                                     $  46,747,415       $   27,529,867
                                                                        ===========       ==============

          Results of Operations for Oil and Gas Producing Activities:

                                                              2001                2000                 1999
                                                              ----                ----                 ----
           Oil and gas sales                             $   12,426,103      $     8,445,932      $    2,533,304
           Production costs                                  (5,155,500)          (3,377,583)         (1,399,710)
           Depreciation, depletion and amortization          (2,018,890)          (1,030,635)           (524,295)
           Income tax expense                                    _                    _                    _
                                                         ----------------    ----------------     ----------------
           Results of operations for oil and gas
                 producing activities - income           $    5,251,713     $      4,037,714      $      609,299
                                                         ================    ================     ================

            Costs Incurred in Oil and Gas Producing Activities:
                                                              2001                2000                 1999
                                                              ----                ----                 ----
                Property Acquisitions
                  Proved                                 $   15,236,808      $   5,874,199       $   11,006,257

                  Unproved                                      154,076            122,837                1,568
                Development Costs                             6,317,527          4,814,317            1,041,858
                                                         ----------------    ----------------     ----------------
                                                         $   21,708,411      $  10,811,353       $  12,049,683
                                                         ================    ================     ================

                                      F-15

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Note 3. Cost of Oil and Gas Properties - continued

               On July 3, 1994,  the  Company  exercised  its  option  under the
          Investment   Letter  and  Subscription   Agreement  with  Madisonville
          Project,  Ltd. (the  "Partnership"),  an unrelated  party,  to convert
          $500,000  of  the  note  receivable  from  the  Partnership  into  100
          Partnership  units.  At December 31,  1994,  the  Company's  100 units
          represent an interest of 32.46% of the Partnership.  Per the agreement
          with  the  Partnership,  income  and  expenses  are to be  distributed
          between  partners  based  on  the  weighted  average  interest  in the
          partnership  during  the year.  As a result of the  investment  in the
          Partnership,  the balance sheet of the  Partnership as of December 31,
          2001 and 2000,  and its  results  of  operations  for the years  ended
          December   31,   2001,   2000  and  1999  have  been   proportionately
          consolidated  with the  accompanying  balance  sheets,  statements  of
          operations  and cash flows of the Company.  All material  intercompany
          transactions and balances have been eliminated in consolidation.

               Effective July 1, 1999, the Company acquired interests in oil and
          gas properties in Zavala County,  Texas from an unrelated  party.  The
          acquisition cost was $438,759,  consisting of $150,000 cash,  $138,757
          in debt and 300,000 shares of common stock.

               Effective  December 31, 1999, the Company  acquired  interests in
          oil and gas properties in Colorado and Texas from an unrelated  party,
          Pozo Resources, Inc. The acquisition cost was $10,500,000,  consisting
          of 8,000 shares of Series D preferred stock and $6,500,000 in debt. In
          addition, the Company paid a $65,000 commission to an unrelated party.
          On the same date, the Company  transferred  its ownership  interest in
          these properties to its wholly owned subsidiary,  GulfWest Oil and Gas
          Company.

               Supplemental  unaudited pro forma information (under the purchase
          method of  accounting)  presenting  the results of operations  for the
          years ended  December 31, 1999, as if the Pozo  Resources  transaction
          had  occurred  as of January 1, 1999:

                                                                   Year Ended
                                                                  December  31,
                                                                       1999
                                                                 --------------
          Operating Revenues                                     $   3,885,644
          Operating Expenses                                         5,169,105
                                                                 --------------
          Income (loss) from operations                             (1,283,461)
          Other income and expense                                  (2,091,662)
          Income taxes                                           --------------
          Net income (loss)                                      $  (3,375,123)
                                                                 =============
          Earnings (loss) per share - basic and diluted          $        (.48)
                                                                 ==============

                Effective  April 1, 2000, the Company  acquired  interests in oil
          and gas properties in Texas from an unrelated  party.  The acquisition
          cost was  $2,624,455,  consisting of $21,522 cash,  $2,296,734 in debt
          and  200,000  shares of common  stock.  On the same date,  the Company
          acquired  additional  interest  in its  Madisonville  Field from three
          working interest owners. The acquisition cost was $294,648, consisting
          of  $155,343  in debt,  $167,798  in  accounts  receivable  due to the
          Company and $30,493 in accounts payable due a working interest owner.

               Effective October 1, 2000, the Company acquired  interests in oil
          and gas properties located in Texas,  Oklahoma and Mississippi from an
          unrelated party.  The acquisition  cost was $2,955,096,  consisting of
          $855,096 cash and $2,100,000 in debt.

                                      F-16

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


Note 3. Cost of Oil and Gas Properties - continued

               Effective July 1, 2001, the Company acquired interests in oil and
          gas properties located in Texas and Louisiana from an unrelated party,
          Grand Goldking L.L.C. The acquisition cost was $15,077,358, consisting
          of 9,000 shares of Series E preferred  stock valued at $4,500,000  and
          $10,000,000  in debt.  In  addition,  the  Company  paid  $545,300  in
          commissions to unrelated parties. The commissions were paid by issuing
          10,000  shares of common  stock  valued at  $8,800,  150,000  warrants
          valued  at  $91,500  and  $445,000  in  cash.  The  Company   incurred
          additional  cash costs of $33,058 related to the  acquisition.  On the
          same date,  the Company  transferred  its ownership  interest in these
          properties  to its  wholly  owned  subsidiary,  GulfWest  Oil  and Gas
          Company.

               Supplemental  unaudited pro forma information (under the purchase
          method of  accounting)  presenting  the results of operations  for the
          years  ended  December  31,  2001 and 2000,  as if the Grand  Goldking
          acquisition had occurred as of January 1, 2001 and 2000:

                                                 Year Ended          Year Ended
                                                December 31,        December 31,
                                                    2001                2000
                                              -----------------    ----------------
Operating revenues                            $   15,649,329       $   16, 343,559
Operating expenses                                10,652,222             9,027,278
                                              -----------------    ----------------
Income from operations                             4,997,107             7,316,281
Other income and expense                          (3,325,166)           (3,011,243)
Income taxes                                         -                    -
                                              -----------------    ----------------
Net income                                         1,671,941             4,305,038
Preferred dividends                                 (112,500)             (112,500)
                                              -----------------    ----------------
Net income to common shareholders             $    1,559,441       $     4,192,538
                                              =================    ================
Earnings per share
     Basic                                    $         0.08       $         0.24
                                              =================    ================
     Diluted                                  $         0.07       $         0.21
                                              =================    ================

Note 4. Accrued Expenses

           Accrued expenses consisted of the following:

                                                 December 31,     December 31,
                                                     2001             2000
                                                 ------------     -------------
                   Payroll and payroll taxes     $   3,910        $    15,569
                   Interest                        194,761            296,989
                   Professional fees                45,000             42,000
                   Sales taxes                        -                 1,056
                                                 ------------     -------------

                                                 $ 243,671        $   355,614
                                                 ============     ============

                                      F-17

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


Note 5. Notes Payable and Long-Term Debt

     Notes payable is as follows:                                                               2001            2000
                                                                                          --------------- ----------------

          $175,000 notes payable due May, 1998.  Interest at
             prime rate, plus 2% (prime rate at 9.5% at December 31,
             2000); 18% past due rate, payable monthly.  Secured by
             oil and gas properties; past due; retired February, 2001.                                            45,000

          Promissory note payable to a director of the Company at 10%; payable on
             demand; unsecured; retired May, 2001.                                                               500,000

          Promissory note payable to a director of the Company at 8.5%;
             due April, 2001; unsecured; retired May, 2001.                                                      200,000

          Promissory note payable to an unrelated party at 10%; payable on demand;
             unsecured; retired May, 2001.                                                                       100,000

          Promissory note payable to an unrelated party at 10%; due January, 2001;
             unsecured; retired May, 2001.                                                                       250,000

          Non-interest bearing note payable to an unrelated party; payable out of 50%
             of the net transportation revenues from a certain natural gas pipeline; no
             due date.                                                                       40,300               40,300

          Note payable to a bank at 11%; due March, 2001; secured by the
             guaranty of three directors of the Company; retired March, 2001.                                    500,000

          Note payable to a bank with monthly principal payments of $13,889; interest
             at prime plus 1%; due March, 2002; secured by the guaranty of three
             directors of the Company.                                                      374,999

          Promissory note payable to a director of the Company at 8%; due May, 2001;
             unsecured.                                                                      40,000

          Promissory note payable to an unrelated party at 10%; payable on demand;
             unsecured.                                                                     115,000

          Line of credit (up to $2,500,000) to a bank; due October, 2002; secured by
             guaranty of a director; interest at prime rate, less .25% (prime rate
             4.75% at December 31, 2001).                                                 2,251,192

          Promissory note to an unrelated party at 10%; due and retired in January, 2002.    39,529
                                                                                         ------------          ---------

                                                                                         $2,861,020          $ 1,635,300
                                                                                         ============        =============

The weighted average interest rate for notes payable at December 31, 2001 and 2000 was 5.0% and 10.1%, respectively.

                                      F-18

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Note 5. Notes Payable and Long-Term Debt

          Long-term debt is as follows:
                                                                                            2001                2000
                                                                                       ---------------     ----------------
          Line of credit (up to $3,000,000) to bank; due July, 2003;
             secured by guaranty of a director.  Interest at prime rate
             (prime rate 4.75% at December 31, 2001).                                    $2,939,515           $2,989,515

          Subordinated promissory notes to various individuals at 9.5% interest
             per annum; amounts include $100,000 ($120,000 - 2000) due to related
             parties; past due.                                                             200,000              245,000

          Notes payable to finance vehicles, payable in aggregate
             monthly installments of approximately $6,000, including
             interest of 8.5% to 13% per annum; secured by the related
             equipment, due various dates through 2005.                                      96,024              141,990

          Note payable to related party to finance equipment with monthly
              installments of $5,200, including interest at 13.76% per annum;
             final payment due October, 2003; secured by related equipment.                 100,591              145,716

          Promissory note to a director of the Company; interest at 8.5%;
              due December 31, 2003.                                                         88,814              100,980

          Non-interest bearing note payable to unrelated party (interest imputed
              at 10%); payable out of 25% net profits from certain oil and gas
              properties; due January, 2001; secured by related oil and gas
              properties; retired May, 2001.                                                                     132,278

          Note payable to a related party to finance equipment with monthly
             installments of $2,300, including interest at 11% per annum; final
             payment due March, 2002; secured by related equipment.                           6,871               32,553

          Note payable to a related party to finance equipment with monthly
             installments of $1,100, including interest at 11% per annum; final
             payment due September, 2002; secured by related equipment.                       9,453               20,963

          Note payable to a bank with monthly principal payments of $2,300;
             interest at 9.5%; due May, 2003; secured by related equipment.                  39,543               67,456

          Note payable to an energy lender; interest at prime plus 3.5% (prime
             rate 4.75% at December 31, 2001) payable monthly   out of 85%
             (90% beginning July, 2001) net profits from certain oil and gas properties;
             final payment due May, 2004; secured by related oil and gas properties.     26,679,770           15,530,336

                                      F-19

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Note 5. Notes Payable and Long-Term Debt

          Long-term debt is as follows - continued:
                                                                                               2001                 2000
                                                                                          ---------------      ---------
          Note payable to a bank with monthly principal payments of $15,000;
             interest at prime plus 1% (prime rate 4.75% at December 31, 2001);
             in October, 2001 monthly principal payments became $36,000 and
             interest prime plus 1% with a minimum prime rate of 5.50%; final
             payment due November, 2003; secured by related oil and gas
             properties.                                                                     2,392,000            2,085,000

          Note payable to unrelated party to finance salt-water disposal well with
             monthly installments of $4,540, including interest at 10% per annum;
             final payment due January, 2005; secured by related well.                         149,325

          Note payable to a related party to finance equipment with monthly
             installments of $5,109, including interest at 13.75% per annum;
             final payment due February, 2004; secured by related equipment.                   114,324

          Note payable to a related party to finance equipment with monthly
             installments of $608, including interest at 11% per annum; final
             payment due February, 2004; secured by related equipment.                          14,002
                                                                                          ---------------     -----------

                                                                                            32,830,232           21,491,787
     Less current portion                                                                   (6,288,275)          (3,414,416)
                                                                                          --------------       --------------
     Total long-term debt                                                                 $ 26,541,957         $ 18,077,371
                                                                                          ============          ===========

               On April 5, 2000 and August 16, 2001, the Company  entered into a
          financing agreement with Aquila Energy Capital  Corporation.  Terms of
          the financing  require  payment of the principal and interest from 85%
          (90%  beginning  July,  2001) of the net profits  from the  properties
          securing the loan.  For purposes of the  following  table,  maturities
          have been  estimated  based on  principal  payments  actually  made as
          calculated from 85% (90% beginning July, 2001) of the net profits from
          the most recent 6-month trailing  average.  Because the maturities are
          based upon estimates of future net profits,  it is reasonably possible
          that the amount the Company will actually pay could differ  materially
          in the near term from the estimated  amount.  The 2001  agreement also
          requires  additional  payments of $1,000,000  each in February,  2002,
          August,  2002 and February,  2003,  which have also been  incorporated
          into the following table:

          Estimated annual maturities for long-term debt are as follows:

                    2002                                                                       $  6,288,275
                    2003                                                                          9,605,190
                    2004                                                                         16,926,077
                    2005                                                                             10,690
                                                                                            ---------------
                                                                                               $ 32,830,232
                                                                                            ===============

               The  February,   2002  payment  was  made  by  selling  producing
          properties  with a carrying value at December 31, 2001 of $446,419 for
          $550,000 on March 18, 2002 and by paying  $450,000 in cash on April 4,
          2002.
                                      F-20

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


Note 6. Stockholders' Equity

          Common Stock                                                                       2001              2000
          ------------                                                                 -------------     ---------------

               Par value $.001; 40,000,000 shares authorized;
                 18,492,541 and 18,445,041 shares issued and
                 outstanding as of December 31, 2001 and
                 2000, respectively.                                                   $     18,493        $      18,445
                                                                                       =============       =============

          Preferred Stock
          ---------------

               Series D, par value $.01; 12,000 shares authorized;
                 8,000 issued and outstanding at December 31, 2001
                 and 2000.    The Series D preferred stock does not pay
                 dividends and is not redeemable.  The liquidation value
                 is $500 per share.  After three  years from the date of
                 issuance, and thereafter, the shares are convertible into
                 common stock based upon a value of $500 per Series D
                share divided by $8 per share of common stock.                                   80                 80

               Series E, par value $.01; 9,000 shares authorized; 9,000
                 issued and outstanding at December 31, 2001 and  -0- at
                 December 31, 2000.  The Series D preferred stock pays
                 dividends, as declared, at a rate of 2.5% per annum, has
                 a liquidation value of $500 per share, may be redeemed
                 at the option of the Company and, if not redeemed after
                 two years, is convertible to common stock at a price of
                 $2.00 per share of common stock.                                                90
                                                                                        ---------------   ------------


                                                                                        $       170       $        80
                                                                                        ===============   ============

                    All  classes  of  preferred  shareholders  have  liquidation
               preference over common  shareholders of $500 per preferred share,
               plus accrued dividends. Dividends in arrears at December 31, 2000
               were $159,409 (Series BB).

F-21

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


Note 6. Stockholders' Equity - continued

          Stock Options
          -------------

               The  Company  maintains  a  Non-Qualified  Stock  Option Plan (as
          amended  and  restated,  the  "Plan")  which  authorizes  the grant of
          options of up to  2,000,000  shares of common  stock.  Under the Plan,
          options  may  be  granted  to  any  of  the  Company's  key  employees
          (including  officers),   employee  and  nonemployee   directors,   and
          advisors.  A committee  appointed by the Board  administers  the Plan.
          Prior to 1999,  options  granted under the Plan had been granted at an
          option  price of $3.13 and $1.81 per share.  In July  1999,  the Board
          authorized that all then current  employee and director  options under
          the  plan be  reduced  to a price of $.75 per  share.  Following  is a
          schedule by year of the activity  related to stock options,  including
          weighted-average  ("WTD  AVG")  exercise  prices  of  options  in each
          category.

                                          2001                             2000                           1999
                              ------------------------------     --------------------------    ---------------------------
                                Wtd Avg                           Wtd Avg                       Wtd Avg
                                Prices            Number          Prices          Number         Prices          Number
                              ------------     -------------     ----------     -----------    -----------     -----------
                              ------------     -------------     ----------     -----------    -----------     -----------
Balance, January 1            $    1.09           923,000        $  1.07          717,000      $   2.52           490,000
          Options issued      $     .83           184,000        $  1.17          206,000      $    .75           582,000
          Options expired     $    3.00           (10,000)           -               -         $   2.53          (355,000)
                                               -------------                    -----------                    -----------

Balance, December 31          $    1.03         1,097,000        $  1.09          923,000      $   1.07           717,000
                                               =============                    ===========                    ===========

               All options were exercisable at December 31, 2001. Following is a
          schedule  by year  and by  exercise  price  of the  expiration  of the
          Company's stock options issued as of December 31, 2001:

                             2002         2003       2004       2005         2006        Thereafter          Total
                         ---------    ----------   --------   ---------   --------      -----------       ---------
               $  .75                              432,000                                150,000            582,000
               $  .83                                                      184,000                           184,000
               $ 1.13                                         100,000                                        100,000
               $ 1.20                                         106,000                                        106,000
               $ 1.81                                                                      60,000             60,000
               $ 3.00      65,000                                                                             65,000
                           ------     ----------   --------   ---------   --------      ------------      ----------
                           65,000                  432,000    206,000      184,000        210,000          1,097,000
                           ======     ==========   ========   =========   ==========    ============      ==========

     Stock Warrants
     --------------

          The Company has issued a  significant  number of stock  warrants for a
     variety  of  reasons,  including  compensation  to  employees,   additional
     inducements   to  purchase  the  Company's   common  or  preferred   stock,
     inducements  related to the  issuance  of debt and for payment of goods and
     services.  Following is a schedule by year of the activity related to stock
     warrants,  including  weighted-average  exercise prices of warrants in each
     category:

                                        2001                             2000                             1999
                            ------------------------------    ---------------------------    --------------------------------
                            ------------ -- --------------    ----------- -- ------------    ------------ -- ----------------
                              Wtd Avg                          Wtd Avg                         Wtd Avg
                              Prices           Number           Prices         Number          Prices            Number
                            ------------    --------------    -----------    ------------    ------------    ----------------
                            ------------    --------------    -----------    ------------    ------------    ----------------
Balance, January 1          $    2.31         1,392,254          $ 2.53        1,369,754        $ 3.16          2,888,343
       Warrants issued      $     .75           150,000          $ 1.86          170,000        $ 1.09            694,254
       Warrants exercised
            or expired      $    2.22          (235,500)         $ 2.65         (147,500)       $ 2.90         (2,212,843)
                                            --------------                   ------------                    ----------------
                                            --------------                   ------------                    ----------------

Balance, December 31        $    2.15        1,306,754           $ 2.31        1,392,254        $ 2.53          1,369,754
                                            ==============                   ============                    ================

                                      F-22

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


Note 6. Stockholders' Equity - continued

          Stock Warrants - continued

               Included in the "warrants  exercised/expired" column in 1999 were
          43,589 with a weighted  average of $.49 exercised by related  parties.
          Included in the  "warrants  issued" and  "warrants  exercised/expired"
          columns in 1999 were 536,754  warrants whose price was reduced in 1999
          to $.75. The remaining 1,632,500 warrants expired.

             Following is a schedule by year and by exercise  price of the  expiration of the  Company's
          stock  warrants  issued as of December 31, 2001:

                 2002         2003         2004           2005            2006           Total
                 ----         ----         ----           ----            ----           -----
$   .75                      166,754                                     520,000        686,754
    .875                                                 150,000                        150,000
   3.00                                                                  200,000        200,000
   5.00                                                                   50,000         50,000
   5.75                                                                   20,000         20,000
   6.00                      200,000                                                    200,000
               ---------    ----------   ----------    ------------    ------------   -----------
                             366,754                     150,000         790,000      1,306,754
               =========    ==========   ==========    ============    ============   ===========

               Warrants outstanding to officers,  directors and employees of the
          Company at December 31, 2001 and 2000 were approximately  957,000. The
          exercise  prices on these  warrants range from $.75 to $.88 and expire
          various dates through 2006.

          Other        Stock        Based        Compensation        Disclosures

          During 2001,  2000 and 1999,  the Company  issued options and warrants
     totaling   2001  -  184,000   (all   exercisable);   2000  -  354,000  (all
     exercisable);  and  1999 -  963,754  (all  exercisable),  respectively,  to
     employees as compensation. As disclosed in Note 1, the Company continues to
     use the  intrinsic  value  based  method of APB 25 to measure  stock  based
     compensation.  If the  Company had used the fair value  method  required by
     SFAS 123, the Company's net income (loss) and per share  information  would
     approximate   the   following   amounts:

                                             2001                           2000                          1999
                                             ----                           ----                          ----
                                 As Reported       Pro Forma    As Reported      Pro Forma     As Reported      Pro Forma
                                 -----------       ---------    -----------      ---------     -----------      ---------
      SFAS 123 compensation
      cost                       $                 $  99,360    $                $  265,620    $                $  312,749

      APB 25 compensation
      cost                       $                 $            $                $             $                $

      Net income (loss)          $   988,041       $  888,681   $  352,774       $  87,154     $(2,269,506)     $(2,582,255)

      Income loss per
        common share - basic     $      .05        $      .05   $      .02       $     .00      $     (.34)     $      (.38)

      Income (loss) per common
        common share - diluted   $      .05        $      .04   $      .02       $     .00      $     (.34)     $      (.38)

                                      F-23

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


Note 6. Stockholders' Equity - continued

          Other Stock Based Compensation Disclosures - continued

               The  effects  of  applying  SFAS 123 as  disclosed  above are not
          indicative  of  future  amounts.   The  Company   anticipates   making
          additional stock based employee compensation awards in the future.

               The Company  utilized the  Black-Sholes  option-pricing  model to
          estimate  the fair value of the options and  warrants (to employee and
          non-employees) on the grant date. Significant  assumptions include (1)
          5.75% risk free interest rate; (2) weighted  average  expected life of
          2001 - 5.0;  2000 - 4.8;  1999 - 4 years;  (3) expected  volatility of
          2001 -  103.27%;  2000 - 99.82%;  1999 - 95.68%,  and (4) no  expected
          dividends.

Note 7. Income (Loss) Per Common Share

               The  following  is  a   reconciliation   of  the  numerators  and
          denominators used in computing income (loss) per share:

               2001 2000 1999 ---- ---- ---- Net  income  (loss) $  1,044,291  $
          352,774 $ (2,269,506)  Preferred stock dividends  (56,250) - (450,684)
          ------------------  ------------------ ----------------- Income (loss)
          available  to common  shareholders  (numerator)  $ 988,041 $ 352,774 $
          (2,720,190)  ==================  ==================  =================
          Weighted-average   number  of   shares   of   common   stock  -  basic
          (denominator)   18,464,343  17,293,848  7,953,147   ------------------
          ------------------ ----------------- Income (loss) per share - basic $
          0.05   $   .02   $   (0.34)   ==================    ==================
          =================

               Potential dilutive securities (stock options,  stock warrants and
          convertible  preferred  stock)  totaling  2,780,520  weighted  average
          shares in 2001 and 1,102,960  weighted average shares in 2000 have not
          been considered because there is no effect on income per common share.
          Potential  dilutive  securities  (stock  options,  stock  warrants and
          convertible  preferred  stock) in 1999 have not been considered  since
          the Company reported a net loss and, accordingly,  their effects would
          be antidilutive.

Note 8. Related Party Transactions

               On December 1, 1992, Ray Holifield and Associates,  Inc. executed
          an unsecured promissory note to the Company for $118,645 with interest
          at 10% per annum,  due on October 1, 1993.  At December 31, 1993,  the
          note was still  outstanding.  During 1994, the Company entered into an
          agreement  with  the  Holifield  Trust in which  Holifield  will  make
          payments on the past due note from future oil and gas revenue.  During
          1995, $10,995 of interest payments were received. At December 31, 2001
          and 2000 the unsecured promissory note has been fully reserved.

               On December 1, 1992,  Parkway Petroleum  Company, a Ray Holifield
          related company,  executed an unsecured promissory note to the Company
          for $54,616  with  interest at 10% per annum,  due on October 1, 1993.
          The note was issued for amounts due from  contract  drilling  services
          provided by the  Company.  At December  31,  1993,  the note was still
          outstanding.  During 1994, the Company  entered into an agreement with
          the Holifield  Trust in which Holifield will make payments on the past
          due note from  future  oil and gas  revenue.  During  1995,  $6,250 of
          interest  payments were  received.  At December 31, 2001 and 2000, the
          unsecured promissory note has been fully reserved.

                                      F-24

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


Note 8. Related Party Transactions - continued

               On January  10,  1994,  the  Company  entered  into a  consulting
          agreement with Williams Southwest Drilling Company,  Inc. ("Williams")
          whereby the Company would provide  management and accounting  services
          for  $25,000 per month for a period of one year.  The Company  accrued
          the consulting fees with an offset to deferred income until payment of
          the fees are actually received.  During 1994, $172,140 was recorded as
          consulting  fee income.  Beginning  in the second  quarter  1994,  the
          Company began recognizing consulting income only as cash payments were
          received.  Prior to the  second  quarter,  $75,000 in  consulting  fee
          revenue was accrued.  The Company has received  $97,140 in  consulting
          fee payments. As of December 31, 1994, the receivable from Williams of
          $202,860  for  consulting  fees has been offset by deferred  income of
          $127,860 and a provision for doubtful  accounts of $75,000.  Effective
          January 1, 1995, the Company  received a promissory note from Williams
          in the amount of  $202,860,  bearing  interest  at the rate of 10% per
          annum, and payable in quarterly installments of principal and interest
          of $15,538.87. At December 31, 2001 and 2000, the unsecured promissory
          note has been fully reserved.

               As of December 31, 1995, the Company had accrued compensation for
          two officers of the Company totaling $54,123.  On April 4, 1996, notes
          due April 1, 1997 were issued to these two  officers  for this amount.
          Additionally,  the Company has accrued  consulting fees to ST Advisory
          Corp.,  a related  party owned by a director of the Company,  totaling
          $12,500 for services performed in connection with economic evaluations
          and non-recourse financing arrangements for future acquisitions of oil
          and gas properties and other corporate development  opportunities.  As
          of December  31, 1996,  accrued  compensation  to one officer  totaled
          $10,500. At December 31, 1997, accrued  compensation to three officers
          totaled   approximately   $75,000.   At  December  31,  1998,  accrued
          compensation to one current and two former officers  totaled  $89,917.
          At December 31, 1999,  accrued  compensation  to one director  totaled
          $14,392.  At  December  31,  2001  and  2000,  there  was  no  accrued
          compensation.

               From  July 22 to August  13,  1998,  the  Company  advanced  sums
          totaling $102,000 to Gulf Coast Exploration, Inc. At December 31, 2001
          and 2000, the debt had been fully reserved.

               On  October 1,  1998,  Toro Oil  Company  executed  an  unsecured
          promissory  note to the Company for the purchase of 100% of WestCo for
          $150,000,  with interest at the prime rate per annum and due September
          30,  1999.  To date,  no principal  payments  have been  received.  At
          December  31,  2001 and  2000,  the  promissory  note  had been  fully
          reserved.

               Interest  expensed on related party notes  totaled  approximately
          $128,000,  $186,000 and $165,400 for the years December 31, 2001, 2000
          and 1999, respectively.

                                      F-25

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


Note 9. Income Taxes

               The  components  of the net  deferred  federal  income tax assets
          (liabilities)  recognized in the Company's consolidated balance sheets
          were as follows:

                                                             December 31,            December 31,
                                                                 2001                    2000
                                                                 ----                    ----
Deferred tax assets
    Provision for bad debts                                  $    251,763           $     251,763
    Net operating loss carryforwards                            3,843,135               4,056,444
    Oil and gas properties                                        617,780                 602,900
    Capital loss carryforwards                                    114,997                 103,344

Deferred tax liability                                           (158,978)                  -
                                                          --------------------    --------------------
Net deferred tax assets before
    valuation allowance                                         4,668,697               5,014,451
Valuation allowance                                            (4,668,697)             (5,014,451)
                                                          --------------------    --------------------
Net deferred tax assets (liabilities)                     $        -              $         -
                                                          ====================    ====================

               As of December 31, 2001 and 2000,  the Company did not believe it
          was more likely  than not that the net  operating  loss  carryforwards
          would be  realizable  through  generation  of future  taxable  income;
          therefore, they were fully reserved.

               The following table summarizes the difference  between the actual
          tax provision  and the amounts  obtained by applying the statutory tax
          rate of 34% to the  loss  before  income  taxes  for the  years  ended
          December 31, 2001, 2000 and 1999.

                                                            2001                 2000                1999
                                                            ----                 ----                ----

Tax benefit calculated at statutory rate               $    355,059          $     119,943      $     (771,632)

Increase (reductions) in taxes due to:

    Effect of net operating loss carryforwards                                     (45,176)
    Effect on non-deductible expenses                        18,157                 43,133              50,479
    Change in valuation allowance                          (345,754)               (60,422)            621,076
    Other                                                   (27,462)               (57,478)            100,077
                                                       ----------------    -----------------   -----------------

Current federal income tax provision                   $       -           $       -           $        -
                                                       ================    =================   =================

          As  of  December  31,  2001  the  Company  had  net   operating   loss
     carryforwards of approximately  $11,300,000 and capital loss  carryforwards
     of  approximately  $338,000,  which are available to reduce future  taxable
     income  and  capital  gains,  respectively,  and  the  related  income  tax
     liability. The capital loss carryforward expires in 2003. The net operating
     loss carryforward expires at various dates through 2019.

F-26

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


Note 10. Commitments and Contingencies

     Oil and Gas Hedging Activities

               We entered into an agreement with an energy lender  commencing in
          May,  2000, to hedge a portion of our oil and gas sales for the period
          of May, 2000 through  April,  2004.  The  agreement  calls for initial
          volumes of 7,900  barrels  of oil and  52,400  Mmbtu of gas per month,
          declining monthly thereafter.  We entered into a second agreement with
          the energy lender, commencing September,  2001, to hedge an additional
          portion of our oil and gas sales for the  periods of  September,  2001
          through  July,  2004  and  September,   2001  through  December  2002,
          respectively.  The  agreement  calls  for  initial  volumes  of 15,000
          barrels of oil and 50,000  Mmbtu of gas per month,  declining  monthly
          thereafter.  Volumes  at  December  31,  2001 had  declined  to 16,700
          barrels  of oil  and  71,600  Mmbtu  of  gas.  As a  result  of  these
          agreements,  we realized a reduction  in revenues of $762,480  for the
          twelve-month  period ended December 31, 2001, which is included in oil
          and gas sales.

     Lease Obligations

               The  Company   leases  office  space  at  one  location  under  a
          sixty-four (64) month lease,  which commenced December 1, 2001. Annual
          commitments under the lease are: 2002 - $82,154, 2003 - $109,539, 2004
          - $112,582, 2005 - $115,118, 2006 - $117,146 and 2007 - $29,413. Total
          rent expense for the years ended December 31, 2001, 2000 and 1999 were
          approximately $60,000, $54,000 and $41,000, respectively.

     Litigation

               The  Company  is  involved  in  other  litigation  and  disputes.
          Management  believes such claims are without merit with respect to the
          Company or are  adequately  covered by insurance and has concluded the
          ultimate  resolution of such disputes will not have a material  effect
          on the Company's consolidated financial statements.

Note 11. Oil and Gas Reserves Information (Unaudited)

               The  estimates  of proved oil and gas  reserves  utilized  in the
          preparation  of the financial  statements  are estimated in accordance
          with guidelines  established by the Securities and Exchange Commission
          and the  Financial  Accounting  Standards  Board,  which  require that
          reserve  estimates be prepared under  existing  economic and operating
          conditions  with no  provision  for  price and cost  escalations  over
          prices  and  costs   existing  at  year  end  except  by   contractual
          arrangements.

               The Company  emphasizes  that reserve  estimates  are  inherently
          imprecise.  Accordingly,  the estimates are expected to change as more
          current  information  becomes  available.  The Company's  policy is to
          amortize  capitalized  oil and gas  costs  on the  unit of  production
          method, based upon these reserve estimates.  It is reasonably possible
          that,  because  of  changes  in  market  conditions  or  the  inherent
          imprecision of these reserve  estimates,  that the estimates of future
          cash  inflows,  future  gross  revenues,  the  amount  of oil  and gas
          reserves, the remaining estimated lives of the oil and gas properties,
          or any  combination  of the above may be  increased  or reduced in the
          near term. If reduced,  the carrying amount of capitalized oil and gas
          properties may be reduced materially in the near term.

                                      F-27

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


Note 11. Oil and Gas Reserves Information (Unaudited) - continued

               The  following  unaudited  table  sets  forth  proved oil and gas
          reserves,  all within the United States,  at December 31, 2001,  2000,
          and 1999, together with the changes therein.

                                                                               Crude Oil                 Natural Gas
                                                                                 (Bbls)                     (Mcf)
                                                                             -------------                ---------
QUANTITIES OF PROVED RESERVES:

     Balance December 31, 1998                                                 1,084,147                  6,655,355
          Revisions                                                            1,184,623                   (754,478)
          Extensions, discoveries, and additions                                 343,857                  2,917,613
           Purchase                                                              781,942                 10,835,725
           Sales                                                                 -                         -
           Production                                                            (79,661)                  (467,350)
                                                                             -----------               -------------

     Balance December 31, 1999                                                 3,314,908                 19,186,865
          Revisions                                                              433,409                  1,478,834
          Extensions, discoveries, and additions                                 501,293                  1,509,014
          Purchases                                                              490,600                  3,748,845
           Sales                                                                 -                         -
          Production                                                            (165,031)                (1,111,639)
                                                                              ----------               ------------

     Balance December 31, 2000                                                 4,575,179                 24,811,919
          Revisions                                                             (386,078)                   238,595
          Extensions, discoveries, and additions                                   5,676                    895,333
          Purchases                                                            2,078,561                 14,905,837
          Sales                                                                 (107,225)                     1,122
          Production                                                            (294,276)                (1,594,899)
                                                                              -----------             -------------


     Balance December 31, 2001                                                 5,871,837                 39,257,907
                                                                             ============                ===========

PROVED DEVELOPED RESERVES:
     December 31, 1999                                                         1,569,750                  9,316,529
                                                                              ==========                ===========
     December 31, 2000                                                         2,883,641                 15,141,979
                                                                              ==========                 ===========
     December 31, 2001                                                         3,939,593                 21,203,989
                                                                              ===========               ===========
                                      F-28

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Note 11. Oil and Gas Reserves Information (Unaudited) - continued

     STANDARDIZED MEASURE:

     Standardized measure of discounted future net cash flows relating to proved
     reserves:

                                                             2001                    2000                    1999
                                                      -------------------     -------------------     --------------------

Future cash inflows                                   $      199,162,921      $      318,504,931      $      119,006,567

Future production and development costs
   Production                                                 77,526,278              97,465,972              42,544,454
   Development                                                23,610,596              13,400,359               9,903,729
                                                      -------------------     -------------------     --------------------

Future cash flows before income taxes                         98,026,047             207,638,600              66,558,384
Future income taxes                                          (13,281,358)            (56,466,527)            (11,847,076)
                                                      -------------------     -------------------     --------------------

Future net cash flows after income taxes                      84,744,689             151,172,073              54,711,308
10% annual discount for estimated
  timing of cash flows                                       (35,895,306)            (60,790,946)            (23,755,909)
                                                      -------------------     -------------------     --------------------

Standardized measure of discounted
  future net cash flows                               $       48,849,383      $       90,381,127      $       30,955,399
                                                      ===================     ===================     ====================

          The following  reconciles  the change in the  standardized  measure of
     discounted future net cash flows:

Beginning of year                                    $    90,381,127      $  30,955,399           $    5,189,608

Changes from:
   Purchases                                              27,032,359         18,483,582               14,211,998
   Sales                                                    (443,324)
   Extensions, discoveries and improved
    recovery, less related costs                             427,192         10,727,329                4,798,128
   Sales of oil and gas produced net of
       production costs                                   (7,270,603)        (5,068,349)              (1,133,594)
   Revision of quantity estimates                         (1,783,276)         7,365,348                7,363,300
   Accretion of discount                                  12,414,073          3,765,842                  518,961
   Change in income taxes                                 26,109,535        (27,056,577)              (6,703,020)
   Changes in estimated future
       development costs                                  (6,360,990)          (504,445)              (1,434,291)
  Development costs incurred that
       reduced future development costs                    5,945,369          4,359,405                1,012,141
  Change in sales and transfer prices,
       net of production costs                           (89,573,528)        38,543,222                6,348,062
  Changes in production rates (timing)
       and other                                          (8,028,551)         8,810,371                  784,106
                                                     ----------------    ---------------------    --------------------
 End of year                                         $    48,849,383     $   90,381,127           $   30,955,399
                                                     ================    =====================    ====================
                                      F29

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


Note 12. Quarterly Results (Unaudited)

               Summary  data  relating  to the  results of  operations  for each
          quarter for the years ended December 31, 2001and 2000 follows:

                                                                        Three Months Ended
                                            ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                            ----------------    ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
                                               March 31             June 30          September 30         December 31
                                            ----------------    ----------------    ----------------    ----------------
        2001
             Operating revenues             $     3,057,739     $     3,455,882     $     3,669,203     $     2,807,757
             Income from operations                 930,784           1,218,002           1,083,789             219,300
             Net income (loss)                   (2,409,567)          1,919,735           1,671,994            (194,121)
             Income (loss) per common
                share - basic               $         (0.13)    $          0.10     $          0.09     $         (0.01)
                          - diluted         $         (0.13)    $          0.10     $          0.08     $          (0.01)

        2000
             Operating revenues             $     1,618,456     $     2,124,077     $     2,291,848     $     2,949,794
             Income from operations                 308,225             604,294             747,797             803,701
             Net income (loss)                      (70,328)             82,186             140,363             200,553
             Income (loss) per common
                share - basic and diluted   $         (0.00)    $          0.00     $          0.01     $          0.01

                                      F-30

                          INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT










Stockholders and Board of Directors
GULFWEST ENERGY INC.


Our report on the consolidated  financial statements of GulfWest Energy Inc. and
Subsidiaries as of December 31, 2001 and 2000 and for each of the three years in
the period ended December 31, 2001, is included on page F-1. In connection  with
our audit of such consolidated  financial  statements,  we have also audited the
related financial statement schedule for the years ended December 31, 2001, 2000
and 1999 on page F-32.

In our  opinion,  the  financial  statement  schedule  referred  to above,  when
considered in relation to the basic consolidated financial statements taken as a
whole, presents fairly, in all material respects, the information required to be
included therein.




\s\ WEAVER AND TIDWELL, L.L.P.
---------------------------------
WEAVER AND TIDWELL, L.L.P.

Dallas, Texas
November 11, 2002








                                      F-31

                      GULFWEST ENERGY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 SCHEDULE II - VALUATION AND QUALIFYING ACCOUNTS
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2001, 2000 AND 1999
                                          BALANCE                                                   BALANCE
                                       AT BEGINNING                                                  AT END
                                            OF              PROVISIONS/        RECOVERIES/             OF
DESCRIPTION                               PERIOD             ADDITIONS         DEDUCTIONS            PERIOD
----------------------------------   -----------------   ----------------   ----------------   ---------------
For the year ended

  December 31, 1999:

   Accounts and notes receivable -
   related parties                   $        700,230     $                  $                  $       700,230
                                     ==================   ================   ================   =================
   Valuation allowance for
   deferred tax assets               $      4,453,797     $      621,076     $                  $     5,074,873
                                     ==================   ================   ================   =================

For the year ended

  December 31, 2000:

   Accounts  and notes  receivable
   related parties                   $        700,230     $       40,248     $                  $       740,478
                                     ==================   ================   ================   =================
   Valuation allowance for
   deferred tax assets               $      5,074,873     $      (60,422)    $                  $     5,014,451
                                     ==================   ================   ================   =================

For the year ended

  December 31, 2001:

   Accounts  and notes  receivable
   related parties                   $        740,478    $                   $                   $      740,478
                                     ==================   ================   ================   =================
   Valuation allowance for
   deferred tax assets               $      5,014,451    $      (186,776)    $                   $    4,827,675
                                     ==================   ================   ================   =================

                                      F-32




                                 CERTIFICATIONS

I, Thomas R. Kaetzer, certify that:

     1.   I have reviewed this amended  annual report on Form 10-K/A of GulfWest
          Energy Inc.;

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


     6.   The  registrant's  other  certifying  officers and I have indicated in
          this annual report whether there were significant  changes in internal
          controls or in other factors that could significantly  affect internal
          controls  subsequent  to the  date  of  our  most  recent  evaluation,
          including   any   corrective   actions  with  regard  to   significant
          deficiencies and material weaknesses.



Date: November 18, 2002

                                         /s/ Thomas R. Kaetzer
                                         -----------------------------------
                                         Thomas R. Kaetzer
                                         President and Chief Executive Officer







                                 CERTIFICATIONS

I, Richard L. Creel, certify that:

     1.   I have reviewed this amended  annual report on Form 10-K/A of GulfWest
          Energy Inc.;

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


     6.   The  registrant's  other  certifying  officers and I have indicated in
          this annual report whether there were significant  changes in internal
          controls or in other factors that could significantly  affect internal
          controls  subsequent  to the  date  of  our  most  recent  evaluation,
          including   any   corrective   actions  with  regard  to   significant
          deficiencies and material weaknesses.



Date: November 18, 2002

                                           /s/ Richard L. Creel
                                           -----------------------------------
                                               Richard L. Creel
                                               Vice President of Finance










November 18, 2002


Securities and Exchange Commission
450 Fifth Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20549


Re: Certification Required Under Section 906 of Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

In connection with the accompanying amended report on Form 10-K/A for the period
ended December 31, 2001,  and filed with the Securities and Exchange  Commission
on the date hereof (the "Report"),  We, Thomas R. Kaetzer,  President and CEO of
GulfWest Energy Inc. (the  "Company"),  and Richard L. Creel,  Vice President of
Finance of the Company hereby certify that:

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

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


GulfWest Energy Inc.


/s/ Thomas R. Kaetzer
------------------------------------
By: Thomas R. Kaetzer
President and Chief Executive Officer


/s/ Richard L. Creel
------------------------------------
By: Richard L. Creel
Vice President of Finance