US benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for September delivery dived almost 3.0 per cent, shedding USD 1.40 to close at USD 47.52 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Brent North Sea crude for September dropped USD 1.10 (2.1 per cent) to settle at USD 52.21 a barrel in London trade.
Both contracts had tumbled yesterday, snapping two consecutive days of gains.
Today, the WTI futures contract clocked a fifth straight week of decline and was heading closer to its lowest level in six years, following an attempt at stabilisation around USD 60 a barrel in the spring.
"Despite the fact we got a surprise draw in the US crude inventories on Wednesday, the market remains quite worried... that there is an oversupply situation in the crude market globally," he said.
The New York market totally erased the timid rebound it staged Wednesday after the Department of Energy reported a sharp drop in US commercial crude inventories last week.
"The US crude inventories decline of 4.2 million barrels didn't really convince the situation is going to change," Melek said.
He added that OPEC had produced in July some two million barrels per day above its production quota set in June.
The OPEC chief, speaking in Moscow after meeting Russia's energy minister on Thursday, he said the cartel is "not ready" to cut production, which it has officially capped at 30 million barrels per day for nearly four years.
Analysts said the statement shows OPEC is determined to defend its market share as it fends off competition from US shale oil.
"OPEC is telling the market that cuts will not come from them," said Daniel Ang, an investment analyst with Phillip Futures in Singapore.
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