UPDATE: Upon further investigation this argument doesn't carry for most countries because the amount of space required is a constraining factor more than price. It may still be true for countries like Australia.
Last year I changed my mind about nuclear power. This is a position held by a lot of smart contrarian people, and I think we need to update.
Is this important? I don't think this is as important as many other issues effective altruists focus on. That said, I think paying about as much attention to this as you pay to any other popular political issue seems about right.
Epistemic Status: Check the comments to see if I made any obvious mistakes.
Why was I pro nuclear? Nuclear power can provide cheap reliable electricity without contributing much to climate change. It's not as unsafe as most people feel it is. This made it seem like the ideal solution, if only we could rally the political will. I’m not trying to convince anyone here, but my reasons for supporting are probably similar to others.
What’s changed? In short, renewables are getting cheaper, and are now cheaper than Nuclear. Combined with the fact that rallying support for nuclear would be much harder than for renewables, I think we should update towards supporting renewables.

What to do? I'm roughly just going to vote for renewables and against non-renewables. I don't think nuclear is bad, but I am happy to accept the "anti-nuclear pro-renewables" package. I'd love to hear any other concrete suggestions about what to do in the comments.
(A version of this was cross-posted on my blog).
How much does this depend on the costs of solar+storage continuing to fall? (In one of your FB posts you wrote "Given 10-20 years and moderate progress on solar+storage I think it probably makes sense to use solar power for everything other than space heating") Because I believe since you wrote the FB posts, these prices have been going up instead. See this or this.
Covering 8% of the US or 30% of Japan (eventually 8-30% of all land on Earth?) with solar panels would take a huge amount of raw materials, and mining has obvious diseconomies at this kind of scale (costs increase as the lowest cost mineral deposits are used up), so it seems premature to conclude "economically feasible" without some investigation into this aspect of the problem.