Oil prices continued their two-week slide today after a government report showed demand for crude products dropped even further from the weak levels of a year ago when the recession's grip on the economy was strongest, according to AP. Benchmark crude for March delivery fell $1.38 to $73.33 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Wholesale prices for natural gas, heating oil and gasoline also tumbled. Oil prices initially moved slightly higher after the Energy Information Administration reported a big decline in crude inventories last week. But once traders realized that foggy weather and high seas in the Gulf of Mexico, as well as an accident at a southeast Texas port, probably slowed deliveries and accounted for the drop, the focus turned to the lack of demand. The EIA report showed demand for gasoline fell 0.8 percent over the four weeks ended Friday compared with a year ago and that demand for distillates used for heating oil and diesel fuel is off 8.1 percent. «People were expecting a better number with the recovery,» said Michael Lynch of Strategic Energy and Economic Research. Even though the economy has pulled out of recession, unemployment remains stubbornly high at levels last seen more than a generation ago. Industrial production is still weak. That has undercut demand for of all kinds of energy _ from natural gas to run factories and power plants to gasoline for weekend trips and vacations. Analyst and trader Stephen Schork said it's hard to imagine demand being lower than a year ago. «That is when we were in the abyss,» he said. Schork wondered whether the move to more fuel-efficient vehicles could also be part of the reason for lower demand. Oil prices are about double what they were a year ago and hit a 15-month high earlier this month even though consumption has been awful. Valero, the biggest U.S. refiner, reported Wednesday that it lost almost $2 billion in 2009 as it struggled to pass on higher oil prices to consumers. Weak has pushed Valero and other refiners to shut some operations. «Both refinery utilization and crude oil imports are at figures only seen previously after hurricanes, going back over the last two decades or more,» Peter Beutel of Cameron Hanover said in a report Wednesday. In other Nymex trading in February contracts, heating oil fell 3.81 cents to $1.9127 a gallon, while gasoline dropped 3.99 cents to $1.9275 a gallon. Natural gas futures slid by 2.25 cents to $5.260 per 1,000 cubic feet. In London, Brent crude for March delivery gave up $1.30 at $71.99 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.