From plug-in cars to carbon capture to wind farms linked to “intelligent” power grids, many of the solutions pitched to restructure the country’s energy system and confront global warming rely on a faith in high tech: we expect, or at least hope, that an Apollo project, the energy equivalent of the dot.com revolution or some other burst of creative genius will engineer the problem away.
Obviously, game-changing technologies will play a big  role in cutting America’s consumption of fossil fuels. They will also be  essential to achieving the reductions in greenhouse gas emissions that most  scientists think will be necessary to avoid the worst consequences of climate  change. But as it frames its strategy to deal with both problems, the Obama administration cannot overlook the low-hanging fruit —  the gains to be had from making existing technologies more  efficient.
 The plain truth is that the United States is an  inefficient user of energy... American  drivers, households and businesses still use more energy than those in most  other rich countries to do the same thing. The United States spends more energy  to produce a ton of cement clinker than Canada, Mexico and even China. It is one  of the most energy-intensive makers of pulp and paper, emitting more than three  times as much carbon dioxide per ton as Brazil and twice as much as South  Korea.
 Per-capita carbon dioxide  emissions by households in the United States and Canada are the highest in the  world — in part because of bigger homes. And the energy  efficiency of electricity production from fossil fuels is lower in the United  States than in most rich countries and some poor ones, mainly because of the  higher share of coal in the mix.
 Transportation tells the  same story. 
 The United States uses the  most energy per passenger mile among the 18 rich economies surveyed by the  energy agency. In 2006, the American auto fleet used, on average, a little less  than five gallons of gas to travel 100 miles. The Irish went the same distance  with under four gallons, the Italians with less than three, basically because  they use smaller cars that get better mileage.
 The Union of Concerned Scientists  points out that switching from an S.U.V. that gets 14 miles per gallon to one  that gets 16 would save the same amount of fuel as swapping a 35-mile-a-gallon  car for a 51-m.p.g. new generation gas-sipper. This is not an argument for more  S.U.V.’s. It simply shows that we can wring savings from modest efficiency gains  in products we already use.
 A study by McKinsey &  Company last year argued that most of the carbon abatement needed between now  and 2030 could be achieved with existing technologies,  things like insulating homes, improving fuel  efficiency, and switching to concentrated laundry detergents to reduce packaging  and transport costs. Merely improving transmissions would vastly increase fuel  economy.
 A quantum jump in energy  efficiency will still require political leadership. Cheap energy has kept  America from making the necessary investments. Yet they must be made; neither  the country nor the atmosphere can wait for high tech to ride to the  rescue.
 Haase Comment - Thanks you New York  Times, dead nuts on!