This is a great response. Nuclear plants are expensive to build, and the waste is difficult to deal with.
What it doesn't touch on is the functional aspect - the advantage (and disadvantage) of nuclear power is that it provides a very steady "base load" power supply, something renewables struggle with.
Regions with good access to natural solar and wind resources throughout the year, as well as those fortunate enough to have geothermal or hydro power (which has its own environmental drawbacks) can provide stable sustainable power supplies with minimal storage, but when the goal is zero emissions, getting that last 10-20% reduction at scale in many locations is incredibly difficult.
Having a power supply that's always providing a steady stream of power, even when the Sun and wind are down, can dramatically reduce the amount of storage you need. For places where it's appropriate, nuclear can help fill this void, but only after getting like 90% of the way to the finish line with renewables.