(FOTO: AP)
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HOUSTON (AP) - America's demand for crude oil fell to its lowest level since 2003 last year, as record high prices to start the year and an ailing economy at the end of 2008 combined to sharply curtail consumption, new statistics show.

For all of 2008, U.S. petroleum deliveries ” a measure of demand ” fell 6 percent to 19.4 million barrels a day, with declines for all major products made from crude, according to a report released Thursday by the American Petroleum Institute, the industry's trade association.

Jet fuel deliveries fell 6.1 percent, distillate fuel oil, including diesel, was down 5.8 percent and gasoline deliveries slid 3.3 percent ” the lowest level in five years, API said.

High prices at the pump last summer ” more than $4 per gallon at one point ” helped slash demand for oil. From November 2007 to October 2008, Americans drove 100 billion fewer miles than the year before, according to government figures.

"All told, the magnitude of the drop in U.S. petroleum demand ... was enough to offset the continued demand gains in developing countries around the world," said API statistics manager Ron Planting.

Oil surged into triple digits for the first time last January, the start of an ascent that would peak above $147 a barrel by July. Since then, amid fears of a prolonged global recession and crumbling worldwide demand, crude prices have plunged more than 70 percent.

U.S. crude oil production last year dropped below 5 million barrels a day for the first time since 1946, largely from lower Alaskan output and disruptions caused by hurricanes Gustav and Ike in the Gulf of Mexico. The two storms shut down nearly 100 percent of oil and natural gas production in the Gulf for a couple of weeks in September, and those disruptions lingered for months afterward.