Radioactive waste doesn't just disappear. Its buried, and it sits there for years and years due to a hideous half life.
No stuff, read my post. It can be safely disposed of and cause no harm to the environment around which it is buried. We create facilities in remote locations away from drinking water and wells, and away from the rest of society so no one loses their loving head over some depleted fuel rods.
Sure, they have environmental effects, but none compared to the dumping of radioactive waste.
Again, the amount of radiation given off by depleted rods can be trivialized by appropriate disposal measures. We're not loving orangutans, we've designed structures specifically suited to contain depleted fuel rods.
Actually such power is being used more and more. New Zealand alone operates something like 50 power plants efficiently. You clearly don't understand what the power source is if you think you have to live on a river to access it.
Solar/Wind power re not efficient. While they are stable and non-polluting, they simply don't generate the necessary amount of power to offset their costs. Hydroelectric works a bit better, but that destroys ecosystems, is EXTREMELY expensive, and can only be built in locations suitable for damming (hint: There's really not that many). You forget that New Zealand is a small island-nation, it's not a loving
continent.Nuclear power is safe, it's non-polluting, it's extremely cost-effective. Literally the only issue (which really isn't one) is fuel rod disposal, but if having radioactive elements on earth is such an issue, shoot them into space. I mean, we can't have something that dangerous on earth!