Brent crude <LCOc1> futures rose 60 cents, or 1.4%, to $42.32 a
barrel by 0916 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude
<CLc1> futures rose 63 cents, or 1.6%, to $40.06 a barrel.
China, the world's top crude oil importer, took in 11.8 million
barrels per day (bpd) of oil in September, up 5.5% from August
and up 17.5% from September last year, customs data showed on
Tuesday.
"Currently, oil demand is driven primarily by China,"
Commerzbank said.
The International Energy Agency (IEA) - which advises Western
governments on energy policy - said in its World Energy Outlook
that in its central scenario a vaccine and therapeutics could
mean the global economy rebounds in 2021 and energy demand
recovers by 2023.
But under a "delayed recovery scenario", the timeline is pushed
back two years, it said.
"The era of global oil demand growth will come to an end within
the next 10 years, but in the absence in a large shift in
government policies, I don't see a clear sign of a peak," IEA
chief Fatih Birol told Reuters.
Lockdown measures were being tightened in Britain and the Czech
Republic to battle rising cases of COVID-19, and French Prime
Minister Jean Castex said he could not rule out local lockdowns.
Oil prices are also facing pressure from the supply side.
Workers have been returning to U.S. Gulf of Mexico platforms
after Hurricane Delta and Norwegian workers to offshore rigs
there after ending a strike, while OPEC member Libya on Sunday
lifted force majeure at its Sharara oilfield.
Libya's total output on Monday was expected to hit 355,000 bpd.
A full return of the 300,000-bpd Sharara field would nearly
double that.
(Additional reporting by Sonali Paul and Shu Zhang; Editing by
Susan Fenton)
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