Oil edged further above $45 a barrel on Aug. 9 as forecasts for a drop in U.S. inventories and speculation of producer action to prop up prices countered concern about a supply glut.

Total U.S. crude inventories wer expected to fall by 1 million barrels in weekly reports, although market intelligence firm Genscape has reported a rise of more than 307,000 barrels at the Cushing, Okla., U.S. crude delivery hub, traders said.

Brent crude for October was up 13 cents at $45.52 a barrel by 5:42 a.m. CT (10:42 GMT), after rising $1.12 on Aug. 8. The global benchmark fell nearly 15% in July. U.S. crude for September was up 21 cents at $43.23.

"One can only wonder how long this enthusiasm will last considering the oversupplied fundamental backdrop," said Tamas Varga of oil broker PVM. "Current oil price strength does not feel justified."

OPEC comments helped fuel the gain on Aug. 8. Its president Qatar, in a rare statement issued by the group's Vienna headquarters, said the market was on the path to rebalancing and the drop in prices would be temporary.

OPEC sources have been saying since June that renewed talks about a global output freeze could take place in September, when most members, plus non-members such as Russia, are expected to attend an International Energy Forum meeting in Algeria.

The oil minister for cash-strapped Venezuela sought to keep alive the prospect of producer action to boost prices, saying on Aug. 8 a meeting between OPEC and non-OPEC countries may take place "in the coming weeks".

But Russia said it does not see grounds for new talks with OPEC yet. Iran, which refused to join an initiative discussed earlier this year to freeze output levels, has not said whether it would cooperate with any new effort.

Later on Aug. 9, the latest round of U.S. inventory reports will be in focus. Analysts in a Reuters poll forecast that U.S. crude stockpiles fell by 1 million barrels last week.

The American Petroleum Institute, an industry group, is due to release its inventory update at 3:30 p.m. CT (20:30 GMT), ahead of the government's report on Aug. 10.