I don't know about THE future but I am sure it has a future along with some fossil fuel (there is plenty of coal left even if oil and gas run out) and some wind and wave power. In the long run nuclear fusion may come good but it's going to be 50 years at least in my opinion.
"Powering the Future: The Bright Side of Nuclear Energy"
In the future the uses remain the same: production of electrical and thermal energy and nuclear weapons.
Nuclear energy can provide a stable and reliable source of electricity with low greenhouse gas emissions, which can help in the transition to a cleaner energy future. However, concerns about safety, nuclear waste, and proliferation of nuclear weapons need to be addressed for nuclear energy to play a significant role in the future energy mix. Technologies like small modular reactors are being developed to address some of these challenges.
The nuclear fusion is not used now as a source of energy; probable possible in a far future.
Two common sources of nuclear energy are nuclear fission, where atoms are split to release energy, and nuclear fusion, where atoms are combined to release energy. Nuclear power plants use nuclear fission to generate electricity, while nuclear fusion is a process being researched as a potential future source of clean energy.
Meaningless question as far as nuclear energy
Because it pollutes the earth and may not be much in future.
I chose 'Nuclear Powers Secondary Loop' because of nuclear energy up and comming behavior, and that in nuclear power a Secondary Loop absorbs heat and generates the electricity.
SONE stands for Supporters Of Nuclear Energy. They are an organization that want to promote nuclear energy as not only an acceptable means of energy production, but a necessary one in order to face the future energy demands of the world. They feel nuclear energy would help developed countries to keep a sustainable economy.
The atom was split successfully in early 1940s. In 1945, nuclear bombs were dropped on Japan and thereafter nuclear energy began being used for local energy.
Probably, but it depends on fusion being successful, and it will take another 50 years to find out
The source of nuclear power is the nucleus of an atom; any atom. As long as there is mass in the universe there will be a source of nuclear power. Even if in the future we run out of the radioactive material we currently use to fuel nuclear power plants, it would be foolish to assume that we will never again be able to harness nuclear energy in another way.