At around 1600 GMT, US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for delivery in June was up USD 1.24 at USD 45.90 a barrel.
Brent North Sea crude for July surged USD 1.50 to USD 47.02 a barrel compared with Tuesday's close.
The US Department of Energy (DoE) today said the country's commercial crude stockpiles slid by 3.4 million barrels last week. Analysts' consensus had been for a rise of 750,000 barrels.
"Indeed, US crude oil imports were down by a good 5,000 barrels per day from the previous week, according to the DoE.
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"Imports are likely to fall further this week because of the significant reduction of oil output in Canada. News that US oil production also fell, down 0.3 per cent week-over-week, provided further support to prices," he added.
Brent crude prices had already soared by almost two dollars yesterday, as traders focused on lingering oil producer shutdowns in Canada and plummeting output in Nigeria.
But market sentiment became more bullish again yesterday, as investors concluded that the production outages in the Alberta oil sands region could persist a while longer, even if facilities were not seriously damaged and the worst of the fires was over.
"The sentiment around traders in the market is that they do think the disruptions are a temporary obstacle," CMC Markets senior trader Alex Wijaya told AFP.
Market attention was also on Nigeria owing to fresh unrest in Africa's biggest oil producer.
Yesterday's incident comes after an increase in attacks on oil facilities and infrastructure by militants wanting a fairer share of revenue for local people in the impoverished region.
Force majeure is a legal term that frees a company from any contractual obligation owing to circumstances beyond its control.