How can a nuclear plant be less efficient. It would appear to be the exact opposite.
Power plant guys measure efficiency by output / input.
Input is heat derived from fuel, measured in BTU's stateside (English unit)
Output is kilowatt-hours which is a metric unit, KWH.
Note BOTH are measures of energy and could be converted to ergs or Newton-meters or whatever you like.
Efficiency is called ""Heat Rate" and is BTU/KWH.
A popular conversion factor between BTU and KWH is 3412.7 BTU/KWH, there's others but they are all close.
So 100% efficiency would be a "Heat Rate" of 3412.7 BTU/KWH, which of is course not reachable see below...
The basic limit is as somebody said thermal.
And the steam power plant can be reduced for analysis to a heat engine moving heat energy between a hot reservoir(boiler) and a cold one(condenser),, tapping off some along the way to sell as electricity.
The steam turbine-generator converts heat first into mechanical energy and then electrical energy.
Carnot tells us efficiency of a perfect heat engine is in proportion to difference between hot and cold reservoirs at different temperatures,
efficiency = (1- Tcold/Thot) is the limit of any heat engine.
That is the absolute best any turbine could do.
A real one might do 70% as well.
A coal boiler might make steam at 1,000 degF and reject to a local body of water at 70 degF. Converting to absolute temperature, that's 1460 and 530 absolute degF.
1- (530/1460) = 0.637 or 64%, which tells us a perfect coal plant could yield a heat rate of 3412.7/.64 = 5,333 BTU/KWH .
A real one will be more like 8,000 to 8,500 because the turbine is not perfect and a lot of heat goes out the stack.
As PKruse has posted elsewhere combined cycle plants can achieve heat rate of 6,000 for two reasons
1. They start at higher temperature inside the jet engine
2. They recover jet engine's exhaust heat and use it to power a steam turbine
6,000 BTU/KWH is ~57% efficient.
Nuke plants make steam at lower temperature. My plant's design point was 516 degF. That'd be 976 absolute
yielding max possible efficiency of 1-(530/976) = 0.457, 46% .
or max theoretical heat rate of 7417 BTU/KWH.
We achieved more like 10,500 BTU/KWH ,~32% efficiency, ~70% of ideal carnot limit.
There's no stack, so that 30% less than ideal represents the mechanical inefficiency of turbine plus power used by the pumps that move the water through the reactor and boilers..
We had 18,000 horsepower of reactor coolant pumps and about the same on boiler side.
Digression - mea culpa -
but if you research the subject you are going to encounter term "Heat Rate".
Above i hope explains that as welll as addressing OP's question.
Right now, coal is hard to beat but EPA is strangling that.
A gas fired combined cycle plant is also attractive.
I think you can expect more nukes in your future.
Windmills have no fuel cost but they make electricity by the thimblefull so need sizeable subsidies to get built. They're also maintenance intense.
old jim