Heavy waves caused by Hurricane Matthew pounds the boat docks at the Sunset Bar and Grill, October 7, 2016 on Cocoa Beach, Florida. Mark Wilson/Getty Images

Hillary Clinton's campaign is aggressively pushing her climate change and energy agenda after Hurricane Matthew wreaked havoc in Haiti and the southeastern Atlantic coast of the US over the past weekend.

Clinton campaigned with Al Gore, the former vice president and a leading voice on climate change, in Miami on Tuesday afternoon — after the city narrowly avoided severe destruction from Matthew.

Her campaign released a series of tweets contrasting her position on energy and climate change with Trump's:

The GIF discusses the main tenets of Clinton's energy plan, compared to Trump's. Trump has repeatedly said that climate change was a concept created by the Chinese to undermine the US manufacturing sector, though he did try to deny his past statements during the first debate.

Clinton's camp highlights her plan to "generate enough renewable energy to power every home in America," as well as implement the Paris climate agreement and cut carbon pollution by 30% by 2025.

John Podesta, the chair of Clinton's campaign (who has been dealing with the fallout from his leaked emails) also tweeted a graphic needling Trump's climate policy, by comparing sea-level rise in Florida with Trump's proposed border wall:

Gore, who declined to endorse Clinton during the Democratic primary, delivered remarks touting Clinton's climate change plan to a crowd of young Floridians.

He also had another message — one that resonates in the state of Florida, where Gore lost a contentious recount during the 2000 campaign against George W. Bush.

"Your vote really, really counts — a lot," Gore said. "You can consider me an exhibit A of that truth."

Here's a breakdown of where the candidate's stand on energy:

And here's where they stand on climate change and the environment: