"Out here in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, climate change has arrived," Loeak said in the video to be released globally tomorrow, ahead of UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's climate summit in New York City next week.
Standing outside his home in the capital Majuro next to the heightened seawall, Loeak tells the camera that it is "barely enough to protect my family from the encroaching waves".
He will join more then 100 heads of state at the September 23 forum which he hopes will galvanise support to build "the greatest climate change alliance" the world has seen.
The United Nations is seeking to limit global warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-industrial levels, but scientists say current emission trends could hike temperatures to more than twice that level by century's end.
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While US President Barack Obama is to outline his vision for reining in greenhouse gas emissions, Chinese President Xi Jinping and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi are among a number of prominent world leaders who will be no-shows at next week's meeting.
"The message from the climate summit and the message going forward to Paris is that it's not business as usual with a little bit of green attached," Robinson said recently.
Loeak's video includes clips showing Majuro residential areas inundated by tides in March this year, emphasising small island's vulnerability to rising sea levels.
"In the last year alone, my country has suffered through unprecedented droughts in the north, and the biggest ever king tides in the south," he said as the surf rumbles in the background.
While the New York summit is not a formal negotiating session, Ban has urged leaders to outline their action plan and to commit to a deal on reducing greenhouse gas emissions in Paris in December 2015.