Oil falls towards $115 after rise on U.S. data

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Oil fell towards $115 a barrel on Thursday after a $3 rise the previous session following a larger-than-expected drop in U.S. crude and gasoline inventories.
Concerns about the security of energy transit routes through the Caucasus have provided some support, although analysts said the mood is still predominantly bearish.
U.S. data on Wednesday showed a fall in crude and gasoline inventories after a number of precautionary refinery closures in response to Tropical Storm Edouard.
U.S. crude was down 75 cents at $115.25 by 1305 GMT, off a high of $117.42 hit earlier in the session. London Brent fell 44 cents to $113.03.
"We've corrected quite a bit on oil, despite a lot of bullish news, the sentiment has been bearish," Harry Tchiliguirian, senior oil analyst at BNP Paribas, said.
Oil prices rose on Wednesday after U.S. government data showed crude stocks in the world's top energy consumer dropped by 400,000 barrels last week, while gasoline inventories fell by 6.4 mln barrels.
The fall in gasoline stocks was much larger than analysts' expectations of a 2.1-mln-barrel decline. Distillate stocks also unexpectedly fell.
Disruptions to energy exports from the Caspian region have helped to underpin prices as Western powers try to shore up support for a shaky ceasefire between Russian and Georgian troops around the breakaway region of South Ossetia.
British oil group BP resumed gas exports from Azerbaijan to Turkey via Georgia, but the oil pipeline to the Black Sea port of Supsa remained closed.
BP had shut the Baku-Supsa oil pipeline and the gas pipeline to Turkey early on Tuesday because of the military conflict.
A third BP pipeline that runs through Georgia, the Baku-Tblisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline was also shut after it was damaged by an explosion last week. Repairs have begun on the pipeline, but it is not known when it will reopen.
Oil is way off its peak of $147.27 a barrel hit in mid-July, and analysts have said it is unlikely to move back to near that level soon, in part because of weaker demand.
High energy prices in many parts of the world have prompted motorists to drive less.
The U.S. Transportation Department on Wednesday said Americans drove 12.2 bln miles, or 4.7%, less in June compared with a year earlier. It was the eighth month in a row that driving had declined.