Oil rose further above $30 a barrel on Jan. 26, lifted by hopes that OPEC and non-OPEC producers may be edging closer to a deal to tackle one of the biggest supply gluts in decades.

OPEC is making renewed calls for rival producers to cut supply alongside its members, but Russia, seen as key to any deal, has so far refused to cooperate.

Iraqi Oil Minister Adel Abdel Mahdi said on Jan. 26 he saw "some flexibility" for a deal.

Such an idea has been repeatedly mooted and dismissed for over a year.

Brent crude was up 37 cents to $30.87 a barrel by 6:14 a.m. CST (12:14 GMT), rebounding from an earlier decline. It reached $27.10, its lowest since November 2003, on Jan. 20. U.S. crude was up 34 cents at $30.68.

"Without a production agreement, fundamentals point to lower numbers," said David Hufton of oil brokers PVM. "With one, oil becomes a $40-to-$60-a-barrel market."

Demand concerns limited the rally. China's annual rail freight volume fell 11.9% in 2015 versus a drop of 3.9% in 2014, adding to worries about contracting economic activity in the second-largest oil consumer.

"Fears of a sharp slowdown in economic growth, particularly in China, are dragging down global stock markets from arguably overheated levels," analysts at Energy Aspects said in a report. "This is weighing on other risky assets, including oil."

Despite a price collapse and spending cutbacks across much of the industry, major OPEC producers are sticking to investment plans and some intend to boost supply.

The risk of prices staying low for a longer time is not deterring Kuwait from investing in energy projects, the head of Kuwait Petroleum Corp said on Tuesday, echoing similar comments from the chairman of Saudi Arabia's state oil company.

Iraq may further boost output this year, a senior Iraqi oil official, who asked not to be identified, said on Jan. 25. Production hit a record in December.

Investors are now watching the U.S. Federal Reserve policy meeting starting later in the day, the first since the central bank raised interest rates in December, for clues on the movement of the dollar.

Underlining the glut, analysts expect the latest weekly reports on U.S. supplies to show crude inventories, already close to a record high, rose further.

The American Petroleum Institute, an industry group, releases its supply report at 3:30 p.m. CST (21:30 GMT) and the government's data is due on Jan. 27.