Can a degree in 'Geography and Environmental Management' eventually lead to a career into Climatology/Meteorology?

I'm a 17-year-old high school senior from Ontario Canada who's unsure about what to study in university. Throughout high school, I've kept changing my mind about my future, sometimes I thought I wanted to be a lawyer, a video editor, or a computer scientist. But deep down, I really want to study something related to the environment and climate. I remember back in 7th grade, I read a short piece in a science textbook where a climatologist talked about his job, and that's when I realized that's what I wanted to do.

Problem is since I realized too late in my high-school career what I wanted to pursue, I didn't take any science courses in Grade 11/12 whatsoever, so I'm missing the prerequisites for a lot of environmental university programs. I do not want to spend another year in high school catching up on missing prerequisites (I get bullied pretty bad in my school and I'm absolutely miserable here) so I was looking at environmental university programs that don't require the science prerequisites. I found this program called Geography and Environmental Management (https://uwaterloo.ca/academic-calendar/undergraduate-studies/catalog#/programs/HJ-o11RAin) and the courses I will have to take + the specialization's I can choose are listed on the website.

A month ago, I briefly met someone who graduated with this degree in 2024 by chance. She told me that she now works as an analyst at an energy firm and is a current grad student on the side, while some of her friends who did the same degree are doing fieldwork on wetlands and carbon cycling, and another is in environmental planning. Most of the people she knew ended up in different fields because the degree is so flexible, but many are working in GIS. Honestly, I don’t really know much about what all of these areas mean.

I was wondering if it's possible that I could tailor this degree to eventually lead to climatology related jobs, I'm fine with even getting a masters if that's recommended. I’m not too worried about specific job titles, my goal is simply to work in a field related to climatology.