No. Only about 20% of the nations energy comes from nuclear fission.
It's about 20 percent of total electricity generated
Approximately 61% of the electrical energy generated in the US is produced by fossil fuels (coal, natural gas, and petroleum), while nuclear power accounts for about 20% of the total electricity generation.
United States.
In 2006- coal 49.1 percent, nuclear 19.4 percent, hydro 7.0 percent, solar 0.1 percent (source Wikipedia)
1.7% of Pakistan electricity is produced by nuclear power stations
8 percent of 100 is renewable that the United States was used in 2010.
In the United States, nuclear energy accounts for around 20% of the total energy generated.
- "Europe draws nearly a third of its energy from nuclear power..." http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2008/07/10/ap5200802.html "Only about 30 percent of Europe's electricity is produced by nuclear plants..." http://www.coxwashington.com/hp/content/reporters/stories/2008/02/10/NUCLEAR_EUROPE10_COX.html "Across the 25 EU states, 148 nuclear reactors account for 32 percent of electricity needs..." http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Fossil_Fuel_Crisis_Drives_Europe_To_Nuclear__Green_Energy.html All on the first page of a google search...
In the United States, nuclear power accounts for about 20% of the total electricity generated. It is one of the largest sources of clean energy in the country, providing a reliable and low-carbon energy source.
fossil fuelsAnswer 2:This is roughly the proportion produced by fossil fuels, ie coal plus oil plus natural gas. Nuclear is about 20 percent and hydro about 7 percent, with small amounts of other renewables
Around 20% of households in the United States use nuclear energy as a source of electricity. This energy is primarily produced by nuclear power plants, which generate electricity using nuclear reactions to heat water and produce steam that drives turbines to generate electricity.
See www.nrc.gov for a list of nuclear plants in different US states