No, it's nonrenewable.
Renewable
No, fission is still a fuel in - waste out reaction. Eventually the supply of nuclear fuel would run out.
Uranium is a non-renewable energy resource that can't be burned. It is used in nuclear power plants to generate electricity through a process called nuclear fission.
- Fossil fuel energy sources (coal-natural gas - petroleum - wood) - Nuclear energy sources (fission - fusion). Nuclear energy may be considered as renewable energy source.
No, nuclear energy is not renewable nor sustainable. For nuclear fission to work, it requires a special type (isotope) of uranium. There is a finite amount of uranium on the planet, therefore this is not renewable. Also, the nuclear waste produced is not sustainable. An example of renewable energy would be a wind turbine.
No, nuclear power is not considered a renewable energy resource. It relies on the fission of uranium or plutonium, which are finite resources. Although nuclear power produces electricity without emitting greenhouse gases, its fuel source is not renewable.
Nuclear energy is not considered a renewable energy source because it relies on the fission of uranium atoms, which is a finite resource. However, nuclear power plants can help support renewable energy sources by providing a baseload of constant power that can complement intermittent sources like wind and solar.
Nuclear power plants use the radioactivity of the substances(fusion and/or fission) and unfortunately those substance are not infinite. Since the Nuclear power plants do not cause any green House gas Emissions(GHG) unlike the other non-renewable powers (natural gas,coal etc.) it is a comman mistake to think it is renewable energy; bu it is not.
Nuclear energy
You get nuclear fission in:nuclear fission reactorsatomic fission bombs
Out of the wind, sun, water, and geothermal engery, all of those are renewable, and none are fossil-fuel based.If you're referring to the four most COMMON engery sources used today, those would be coal, oil, natural gas, and nuclear fission. None of those are renewable, but out of those, nuclear fission is the one that doesn't consume a fossil fuel (it consumes uranium, not any form of organic molecule).
because it cant be used again Answer: Fissionable materials are a limited resource (there is only so much uranium etc. that we can recover) When this resource is used up all fission powered plants will essentially run out of fuel. In good fission processes the spent fuel is taken and reprocessed to recover new potentially fissionable elements as well as radioactive isotopes for medical and other uses.