No I'm from the US. And I didn't mean to imply that one would ONLY be working on HVAC systems, for example, or even that one should get an engineering degree simply to become an electrician.
Like any form of technical degree, one has to focus on a specialty. What I meant was you're not going to find many who specialize in micros and firmware working on power grid networks. The last uniy where I went to school (Mississippi State) there was an EE path a a CE path and the biggest distinction between them was the focus on computing systems. Similarly, the difference between EE and electronics engineering would be more specialization in... well, electronics.
I do think it's naive to think what you're doing in your twenties you will be doing in your forties. I know that may also sound obvious, but when one is young one can do certain things that one cannot do later in life, but there are things one can only do once one has attained a certain maturity. Being 42 or 43 and having a good retirement already is a position one should put oneself in if at all possible (and I say this from the school of hard knocks, as I do not have such a nest egg).
I was a CE major because I suck at algebra and so much CS "math" is, to me at least, pretty much intuitively obvious. Still, I squeaked by on my boolean algebra class even though my lab notes were so good the instructor himself told me he was was copying and studying them. But I hate factoring, and I can't even remember how to make a K-map any more...