If youd calculate the exernalities of nuclear power (especially waste management,risk reservers) into the price of the generated power, I doubt it would be economically feasible to build a nuclear power plant. But same goes for the other fossils.
It's true for all power generation, to a degree which starts to average back.
Carbon-based is obviously worst case, with global warming as main and pulmonary issues as second.
Dams have a track record that's so hilariously worse than nuclear that i'm just going to say Banqiao and leave it at there.
Intermittent power sources (Wind\Solar) have the issue of being, well, intermittent, which means "unusable as baseload", which basically means you have to build all the generation again as a reliable source for when it's down.*
Nuclear has waste storage, which is actually pretty cheap if you take the reasonable route of burying it all casked, or still pretty cheap if you used a closed fuel cycle which leaves no high-radiation scories (Th plants).
Risk assessment is practically nil if you're counting out Chernobyl - (Fukushima damage is largely inflated by the excessive evac zone, but even fully counting the estimated $105bn bill, it isn't much when you're counting it against 800twh per year, over half a century)
If you're counting chernobyl, it's somewhat more in line with everything else.
An australian think tank put out a report claiming full coverage through desert-solar, canyon-wind and biomass, but iirc it was debunked as unable to scale up\down fast enough. Capacitors are a bitch.