keegs
Veteran Member
A few simple ideas:
1) Trade out V8 gas for diesel V6 in trucks and SUVs pulling less than 10,000lb
2) Trade in 4 and 6 cylinder diesel or DI gas/turbo for whatever else is in passenger cars these days
3) Crank up the gas tax to encourage more efficient engines and to pay down the deficit (tied to some sort of cap on spending). Works in Europe. I know this is getting political but I'd gladly pay more taxes if it meant conserving fuel so we don't send our treasure and troops overseas to keep us moving.
How is it that our European forebearers seem to be able to travel and do business with about half the fuel per mile we do? Whatever that combo is would be a good target even if we don't cut our use by quite as much.
I just bought a new SUV that averages about 19mpg. That sucks. I'd have gladly traded a couple of seconds in 0-60 for a 25mpg average but didn't have the choice. I was disappointed that the only way I could have purchased a diesel SUV was by forking over $50-60+K to Mercedes, VW BMW or Audi. I'm not that stupid having already suffered for twelve years with my last MB SUV. The Jetta diesel is great but not quite big enough for my purposes. Why can't we get fuel efficient diesels in non luxury vehicles made outside Germany? The Germans only charge an extra grand or two or three for a modern diesel. I'd pay that no question to get 25mpg from an SUV. I would have been happy to pay a premium to buy GM or Ford or any Japanese or Korean brand if they sold one with a modern diesel.
I'm on the fence with the diesels. They get better mileage but fuel costs are typically higher and I'm not sure whether there's that much benefit when you consider how much can be derived from a barrel of imported oil.
You implied a higher fuel economy standard. I agree with that and we're in fact heading for 34.1 by 2016. I just sold my Toyota Echo, it averaged 41-45 mpg. I'm now driving a new Cobalt XFE. It's averaging 40.1 mpg right now. There are and have been plenty of good quality, relatively inexpensive, fuel efficient options out there. Getting people in them has been the issue IMO.
I'm also on the fence with an additional tax on fuel. I wouldn't mind paying it myself but in rural areas gas prices are already higher, incomes are typically much lower and distances traveled much greater. The 34.1 mpg CAFE standard by 2016 seems more equitable idea.