- Lower the cap for close votes from 5. It is annoying when an answer/question is clearly out of place but I can't just close it with a click. (I know that if I get 1000 upvotes I become a moderator for a topic)
Allowing anyone to close any question with one click isn't a good idea, since it could lead to abuse. Lowering the cap to 3 or 4 close votes may not be such a bad idea, but I don't know if it would do much good. Questions that get that many close votes usually get higher priority in the review queue and get closed anyway. Also, I think you misunderstood a bit what happens when you earn a gold tag badge. Earning a gold tag badge doesn't really make you a moderator for the topic, it only allows you to close questions as duplicates on your own in that tag. Your close vote for any other reason still counts as a normal close vote. It might be a good idea to let gold tag badge holders close questions in that tag as anything though (but that would still not make them moderators, since they would for example still not be able to delete posts on their own, and I don't see the need to allow them to do so).
- Give reputation for reviewing
Absolutely not. There are already big problems with robo-reviewers (they approve suggested edits that are clearly wrong, they vote to leave open questions that should definitely be closed, etc), and that's just for the badges. I'm sure it would be a lot worse if they got reputation for reviewing. Users need to be encouraged to review correctly, not to just click on "Looks OK" or "Approve" until they hit the daily limit just to get rewards (badges or reputation).
- Make reviews count towards a specialization in the given technology (for example if I get 1000 upvotes in java, I'll become a Java moderator. Reviewing might count towards that goal.
Again, "moderator" isn't the correct term here. You're talking about tag badges and the dupehammer privilege that goes with them. There are already badges for reviewing, so making reviews count against tag badges isn't necessary. On the contrary, there will be more robo-reviewers if they more badges for reviewing. Not to mention users who want to get a gold tag badge to be able to use the dupehammer.
Solutions that may work
Taken from my question here:
Let users who don't have the privilege to vote to close review close votes. The Close Votes review could then work like the Low Quality Posts review works. In Low Quality Posts, users with more than 2000 reputation can recommend deletion on a post although they don't have the privilege to vote to delete. Similarly, we could let users with for example 1000 reputation review close votes and if they don't have the privilege to vote to close, they can recommend close. If necessary, reviews from such users could count less than a close vote from a 3k user. For example, two "recommend close" reviews could count as one close vote.
Your idea to allow gold tag badge holders to close a question on their own for any reason, not only duplicates, might also help (though I'm not sure that's what you meant). There are a lot of question that get one close vote and then nothing more and the close vote ages away. If that close vote is from a user with a gold badge in a tag on the question, allowing gold tag badge holders to close questions on their own would help. It would't help for questions like this one (screenshot for <10k users) that have nothing to do with programming since not may users have a gold tag badge in history (and even if they did, they wouldn't really deserve it since the [history] tag is ambiguous). But it might help for "give me the code" or "debug my 500 lines of code for me" questions since those questions are usually tagged in popular tags.
Award badges for correct reviewing. The main reason why your ideas of giving users awards for reviewing a lot is because it would encourage fast (and therefore often incorrect) reviewing. Giving badges for correct reviewing might be a solution. The only problem is that I'm not sure how to implement it. Awarding badges for passing review audits may seem like a solution, but then users would just create bots to detect audits, which would make the situation even worse. Maybe only reviews where the user reviewed the same way as the consensus could count towards the badge, but the problem is that the majority isn't always right, especially not when there are robo-reviewers. If someone has an idea about how to award badges for correct reviewing in a way that's accurate and difficult to abuse, great, I recommend you suggest them, but I don't really have any ideas that would work well.