Minority carriers (electrons in P type and holes in N type) are technically always there in pure semiconductor matter (such as silicon) due to the effect of heat that causes electrons to break out of their atoms leaving holes behind them, and an electron that did that can then fill a hole created by the absence of another electron and this process goes on, they just are not called minority carriers yet before doping, since it's only after doping that majority carriers exist in the semiconductor. But when doped, new electrons/holes from other atoms are now inside the semiconductor and these new electrons/holes are the ones that are called majority carriers because they are way more abundant than the ones created due to heat i.e. minority carriers. In N type, majority carriers are electrons, and due to heat electrons and holes appear, so these heat-electrons add up to the existing majority carriers (electrons that exist because of doping) and these heat-holes are now the minority carriers in this N type, similarly in P type, majority carriers are holes, and due to heat electrons and holes appear, so these heat-holes add up to the existing majority carriers (holes that exist because of doping) and these heat-electrons are now the minority carriers in this P type. (They are not called heat-elctrons/holes I just used this terminology to explain better)
Also, minority or majority carriers have nothing to do with powering the PN junction, applying a power supply or not doesn't affect their existence.
And for your second question, what you are referring to is leakage reverse current that happens when reverse biasing the PN junction, and it is a relatively small current that increases due to increase of heat, so it's this heat that causes the appearance of minority carriers that tend to create a reverse current when the PN junction is reverse biased, and the power supply that give enough energy to these electrons in the P type to overcome and cross the depletion region and go to the N type, and as I said if you increased heat more electrons will break out of their atoms and flow in the opposite direction P-to-N and you'll have a stronger current.
And here's a better explanation from "Beginner's Guide to Transistors" by J. A. Reddihough.
For your first question:
For your second question: