It's tempting to frame clean energy as a contest: nuclear versus renewables, pick a team. But the grid doesn't think in teams — it thinks in reliability. And the most reliable clean grids tend to use both.
Different strengths
- Wind and solar are cheap, fast to build, and increasingly abundant — but variable. They produce when the weather cooperates.
- Nuclear is firm: steady, around-the-clock, weather-independent output, on a small land footprint.
Put them together and the weaknesses cancel out. Renewables provide huge amounts of low-cost clean energy; nuclear (and other firm clean sources) fill the gaps when the wind is calm and the sun is down, so the system stays reliable without burning fossil fuels.
The cost conversation
Per kilowatt-hour, wind and solar are often cheaper to build today. But comparing raw generation cost misses the value of firmness — the ability to deliver power exactly when needed. A grid of nothing but variable sources needs enormous storage and overbuilding to stay reliable; a bit of firm power can make the whole system cheaper and steadier.