Oil fell $1 to below $45 a barrel on Wednesday on further signs of weak global demand and rising inventories in top consumer the United States.

But gasoline demand rose further as lower pump prices encourage more driving. Gasoline stocks tumbled 3 million barrels. Distillate demand fell 6.1 percent over the past four weeks from last year, with stocks off 2.1 million barrels last week.

It looks like there's a genuine rebound in gasoline demand against a backdrop of extremely weak demand overall, said Antoine Halff, First Vice President of Research at Newedge Group in New York.

U.S. crude traded down $1.00 to $44.71 a barrel by 12:07 p.m. EDT, while London Brent crude fell 54 cents to $43.42 a barrel.

The U.S. inventory report came after No. 2 consumer China showed a surprise 15 percent drop in February, as oil companies scaled back purchases due to high inventories and low demand. The fall came after an 8 percent drop in January.

The Chinese crude data was really quite poor, and that's stalled any move toward $50 a barrel, Sucden Financial trader Robert Montefusco said.

Prices are going to struggle to get a great deal higher given the extent of the economic problems we're seeing in the world.

German manufacturing orders fell 8 percent in January alone, data on Wednesday showed, indicating a deeper than previously expected recession in Europe's largest economy.

The global economic slowdown has weakened crude demand, sending oil prices off peaks over $147 a barrel hit in July and prompting the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to agree to a series of deep output cuts last year.

The producer group next meets on March 15, with some members calling for another output cut and others insisting greater compliance with current agreements is needed.

Qatar's energy minister Abdullah al-Attiyah told Reuters on Wednesday a further 800,000 bpd needed to be removed from the market before OPEC discussed further cuts.

But Algeria, Venezuela and Libya have all raised the prospect of another OPEC supply reduction.

OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia kept supplies to customers steady for April, according to industry sources.

(Reporting by Matthew Robinson, Robert Gibbons, and Gene Ramos in New York, David Sheppard in London, and Maryelle Demongeot in Singapore; Editing by David Gregorio)