How about conservation:
1) Require the EPA to set vehicle fuel mileage numbers to be based on REAL WORLD driving.
2) Require auto-manufacturers to produce 30MPG minimum vehicles within 5 yrs, 40 MPG within 10.
3) Tax new V-8 powered cars so long as oil stays above $70/ bbl, i.e., if oil is high, you pay-to-play. Want to have all that extra power that you really don't need? Get taxed on it for overtaxing the energy system.
4) Start an energy conservation policy nationwide. How much energy is wasted each night by useless lighting, i.e. landscape lighting, store lights, etc.
5) Enforce idling laws. Most states have laws penalizing idling for longer than 5 min. Do you know how much fuel you'd save if you minimized idling your car? And don't tell me about engine damage during engine start-up. Once engine is warm there is no damage to a modern engine.
6) Educate people about staying warm in the home during winter, cool during summer. Do you know how many times my kids tell me they're cold in the winter while wearing shorts/ t-shirt in the house? Instead of warming the house, I make them put on proper clothing. You know what? It works. Amazing what a pair of sweats and longsleeve shirt will save you.
7) Learn more from the Europeans. I lived there. They know a lot about energy conservation. We should all be applying some of that knowledge here.
8) Any energy tax is to be 100% solely applied to the alternative energy industry (backed up by audit by the GAO).
9) Tax credits for users and purveyors of alternative energy. HUGE TAX CREDITS. Oil companies should be prohibited from getting any access to this system though.
10) Require all states and counties to initiate a recycling program. Fed penalty if not. Money to be used for alt energy projects.
Look, I'm no hippie, California tree-hugger. I'm simply a guy who is sick of seeing big oil rape us and then demand we thank them. All it would take is a REAL leader stating the above 10 items and this country would be on it's way to energy efficiency. God forbid, GB encourage energy conservation in his State of the Union. I voted for the guy (2rd round) and deeply regret it. He can call on Americans to shop (post 9/11 solution to getting the economy going again) but he can't call on all of us to do our part and conserve? I'm not talking about altering our lives all that much here.
And I'm not at all for using taxes to get alt energy going but when soccer-moms go out and buy a v-8 powered suburban instead of a v-6 powered minivan just because they want to look cool (vs the minivan look) then we have a cultural problem in this country. I bought my wife a kid hauler that gets 30-35 MPG. Her friends are constantly whinning about the $125 they pay to fill up their SUV (and she chastises me about driving something so "un-cool"). Duh. I have no sympathy for their plight for making such pathetic purchase decisions but why should I also pay (higher at the pump) for their poor decision-making? Meaning... they add to the US demand, by driving grossly inefficient vehicles during an energy crisis, which plays an effect on prices going up.
By the way, I came up with a similar list in 2003. My friends and compadres dismissed me. Think I'm wrong now? Wait until oil hits $150-$200 within 2 years. Boone Pickens says it will. He has been right, I think, 80% of the time.
If we reduce the demand, OPEC and its army of traders will be caught on the wrong side of the spec equation and get clobbered. Besides, we all know oil is not infinate. Why not start wheening ourselves off of it now?
The silver lining is that due to our sheer size, the largest economy on earth, a 5% reduction in demand would be enough to set the oil markets on a more reasonable path.