Fusion may be viable one day, though the cost per unit of KWH is exorbitant right now, right now they're just a research toy.
The cost is expected to fall dramatically after ignition. 'Ignition' being the point at which the reaction is self-sustaining. Also note that the National Ignition Facility has suddenly started running 30-50 tests per month, and says that they hope to ignite hydrogen by October. So... one day soon, I hope. Unless something catastrophic happens.
Concerning the saltwater coolant. Since it is not viable as a coolant would it be possible to make contained evaporation pools to sort out the salt and make it viable as coolant? Would the process be: too slow for quantities of water needed, too inefficient for "land" use, too heavy and thus energy inefficient?
Evaporation pools would make the remaining water saltier, which is the main problem. Salt builds up on walls and pipes and makes everything generally worse. Most reactors are built near rivers because freshwater doesn't have this problem. They just pass the water over the condensers and right back out. (Note that because it is only being used as coolant, there's not much radioactivity spread to the river. The coolant that does become radioactive is in a different system and is usually stored as waste. The few you see at sea (Fukushima Daichi being a prime example) are more prone to mineral build-up and require careful maintenance. (And repairs of concrete sea barriers, as was found out there!) If there isn't a large suply of water nearby, plants often use hyberbolic towers to allow for evaporation based cooling, though most of the water is simply recirculated, with the warmest evaporating. If there's no water around, smaller plants just use dry cooling, blowing air over the heavy water pipes or constructing massive heatsinks.
(Fukushima was a hyberbolic tower plant because they didn't want to use constant water flow and thereby increase maintenance costs. The problem came when they tried to cool the -tower- with seawater, which actually caused a gigantic hydrogen explosion. The zirconium rod casings holding the fuel like to explode on contact with water or steam when extraordinarily hot as in the case of a non-cooling plant. Fukushima's cooling systems were down, so the thousands of rods were hot, so they tried to cool them with saltwater... BOOM. Larger than expected due to zirconium drawing oxygen out of water before it reaches the temperature threshold for an explosion, as the water molecules became free hydrogen. Seeings how zircaloy explodes harder than nitroglycerin, the problems were manifold. Freshwater wouldn't have been so bad, but with seawater, the salt corrodes the uranium itself, creating long-lasting and highly radioactive Uranium VI. Fun stuff, eh?)