It's an incredible resource, but one would need to know some
science to understand that.
There are many fuel cycles, such as DUPIC - now under development in Korea (with hopes to acquire used Japanese fuel) - that mean that these resources will come into use in the next few decades.
Every advanced nation in the world is considering this technology, with Asian nations leading the way.
There is no such thing as "nuclear waste," except in the minds of those who don't know shit from shinola about nuclear energy and attack it, nuclear scientists, and nuclear science from a position of ignorance.
I have noted, by the way, on another website that the world's supply of the important industrial metal rhodium available from used nuclear fuel will, by 2030, exceed the world's supply from mines.
http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2009/5/10/143946/647">Supply of Rhodium in Used Nuclear Fuel To Exceed World Supply From Ores by 2030.
The value of rhodium in US fuels alone is on the order of tens of billions of dollars.
Most car CULTists are too oblivious to understand the critical role of rhodium in world technology - including their stupid consumer cars - because mostly they spend their time hanging out by the swimming pool, picking lint out of their navels and musing about the cool solar pool light, oblivious to all the toxic metals in it, rather than work.