A potato has chemical energy (food energy) stored within it. If you eat it, you will eventually use this energy.
In the short run, a lemon. For the carbs, and in the long run, a potato.
Nuclear fuel does eventually run out of energy, yes.
The sun will eventually run out hydrogen at its core, which is the source of energy, so it will die, but it will not explode.
That which cannot be renewed, will eventually run out.
You could eat it. The calories in it are a measure of the energy it stores for nutrition. You could, perhaps, dry it and then burn it for heat. Bit of a waste of a good potato if you ask me. You could stick a length of copper and a length of zinc into it and use it to provide electrical energy. It's not as good as lemons, but it still works. It occurs to me that if you throw the potato, it will have kinetic energy but the energy has been put into the potato by your arm, so that probably doesn't count.
Potato chips can't run at all.
Eventually, extreme weather systems ultimately run out of energy. hurricanes eventually dissipate, tornados are short-lived, and thunderstorms run out of power.
Non-renewable energy source means that the source will eventually run out and is not renewable.
Nuclear energy is non renewable energy because it would eventually run out.
The useful energy will be gone eventually, one way or another. As a result of the Second Law of Thermodynamics, it is unavoidable that we will eventually run out of useful energy.
yes, the potato would be the hgh energy electron