No, droughts are caused when the normal or expected rainfall doesn't happen. This can be just a normal weather variation, of it might be part of the changing climate. It has nothing to do with kinetic energy, which is the energy from motion.
A drought does not possess potential or kinetic energy in the same way that physical objects do. Rather, a drought is a prolonged period of low precipitation that affects environmental conditions. The impact of a drought can lead to changes in energy dynamics within ecosystems, like reduced plant growth due to lack of water.
Fuel is a form of potential energy stored in chemical bonds. When the fuel is burned, its chemical potential energy is converted into thermal energy and then into kinetic energy to power an engine or device.
Potential
If there is fuel in the tank then it has chemical energy in that fuel. If it is moving it has kinetic energy. If it is at the top of a hill then it has gravitational potential energy.
KINETIC 🤫
A train has mechanical energy in the form of kinetic energy as it moves. This kinetic energy comes from the conversion of potential energy stored in the fuel it burns to power its engine.
To convert stored energy in a fuel, into motion. Potential energy into kinetic energy.
Energy is not a fuel itself, but fuel is a source of energy. Fuel is a material that stores potential energy and can be transformed into other forms of energy such as heat, electricity, or kinetic energy.
The major conversions are chemical energy in the fuel to heat energy in the cylinders to kinetic energy of the car. Other changes involved include chemical energy in the driver's food to kinetic energy in his muscles to operate the pump, and electrical energy in the pump to kinetic energy of the fuel as it flows into the car.
Potential
potential it burns creating the energy from the breaking of its bonds
Many engines do this conversion. For example, the engines commonly found in cars convert the chemical energy first to heat (by burning it), then convert part of this heat into movement (kinetic energy).