No. Much of their power comes from coal.
Nuclear generated electrical energy is fed into the grid and distributed, you can't say just where it goes and how it mixes with other types of generation. I don't know of any city that relies on nuclear alone. In a large country like the US there are large areas without nuclear plants, but in a state like Illinois with a number of nuclear plants, all cities will have some nuclear and some from other sources.
One use is in nuclear power plants to produce steam and turn turbines to generate electricity.Nuclear bombs ^.^
Cause they need power to power the country and make awesome warheads
Yes, British Columbia (BC) does not use nuclear power. The province relies mainly on hydroelectric power for its electricity needs, as well as some natural gas and renewable energy sources like wind and solar power.
It's about 20 percent of total electricity generated
In the US, nuclear power provides about 20% of the total electricity generation, making it the largest source of low-carbon electricity. There are 93 commercial nuclear reactors operating in 28 states.
The commercial use of nuclear power began in the 1950's
Ontario and Quebec mostly and the Atlantic does too
British Columbia? No reactors there, in Canada mostly in Ontario
They use nuclear energy to produce power for the grid.
It could be argued that the use of nuclear power began in the 1950's when a nuclear reactor in the Idaho desert supplied electric power to a local community.