* Weaker Opec compliance with cuts, Libya output buoy supply
* Non-Opec production to grow strongly in 2017-2018
* IEA says stocks draw could slow after historic data revision


World oil demand will grow more than expected this year, helping to ease a global glut despite rising production from North America and weak Opec compliance with output cuts, the International Energy Agency said on Friday.
The agency raised its 2017 demand growth forecast to 1.5mn barrels per day (bpd) from 1.4mn bpd in its previous monthly report and said it expected demand to expand by a further 1.4mn bpd next year.
"Producers should find encouragement from demand, which is growing year-on-year more strongly than first thought," said the Paris-based IEA, which advises industrialised nations on energy policy.
"There would be more confidence that rebalancing is here to stay if some producers party to the output agreements were not, just as they are gaining the upper hand, showing signs of weakening their resolve," the IEA said.
The Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries is curbing output by about 1.2mn bpd, while Russia and other non-Opec producers are cutting a further 600,000 bpd until March 2018 to help support oil prices.
The IEA said Opec's compliance with the cuts in July had fallen to 75%, the lowest since the cuts began in January.
It cited weak compliance by Algeria, Iraq and the United Arab Emirates.
In addition, Opec member Libya, which is currently exempt from the output cuts, steeply increased output.
As a result, the overall global oil supply rose by 520,000 bpd in July to stand 500,000 bpd above year-ago levels.
Adding to the challenges of oil producers to support oil prices is rising non-Opec output, which is expected to expand by 0.7mn bpd in 2017 and by 1.4mn bpd in 2018 on strong gains in the United States, which is not participating in the output caps.
Still, strong global demand growth is helping to clear excess barrels with the IEA registering a decline in stocks in industrialised nations in both June and July.
Stocks remain 219mn barrels above a 5-year average - a level that Opec is targeting with its output cuts.
The IEA also revised historic demand data for 2015-2016 for developing countries, cutting it by 0.2-0.4mn bpd.
"The impact of carrying this lower demand base into 2017 against unchanged supply numbers is that stock draws later in the year are likely to be lower than first thought," the IEA said. 
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