What do you exactly mean by low level?
C is also used for high level stuff like user interfaces (the whole GNOME Desktop, and its library GTK are written in C).
I'd put C in the low level category because it lets you play with the actual machine (eg: raw memory addresses, just to cite something) adding only a really tiny abstraction layer.
Also other programming languages are offering a clean vision of the underlying machine:
Many are derived from C and are compatible with it (C++, Objective-C). These supply some tools to ease your life by abstracting something. They could replace C, but if you'd use these languages, you'd lose compatibility: ObjectiveC and C++ interfaces cannot be used by C.
Others belong to completely different families, and these, other than the above issue, cannot even use C stuff directly.
Thus, in my opinion, the main reason why C isn't dropped is for commercial reason (it would cost too much to write everything again so that everything is compatible to other languages), pretty much the same reason why COBOL still exists.
There are other reasons, like the fact that C is bare-bone, simple and fast to parse and compile and stuff, but in my opinion these are secondary.
Some big companies who can afford rewriting anything are however trying to kick C off (Apple is extensively using ObjectiveC, for example, while others are using C++).
I think that in future C will keep to exist, since there are no efforts in choosing a specific standard language to be used everywhere in place of C (if you write C code it'll work both with C, with C++ and with ObjectiveC systems, while the opposite is not true) and since there's a too vast code base of C code out there.