Chemical Engineering has many job opportunities and is quite a well paying profession. Of course you aren't going to immediately skyrocket to $100K a year but such salaries (often larger) are common for Chemical Engineers given some relevant industry experience.
SOME of the Industries/Jobs you can work in:
-Process Engeering
-Pharmaceuticals
-Bio and Nano technology
-Petroleum and Petrochemicals
-Materials/Mining
-Environmental Quality (Ecology and Water Testing i.e for pathogens etc)
-Any plant/reactor work (Desalination, was told by a teacher Nuclear but not 100% sure about that myself)
-Medical Science type stuff
That's just off the top of my head. Pretty much a Chemical Engineer looks at a small process (i.e in a testtube)and determines how they will make it larger (or industrial) sized. Word of warning though, the name Chemical Engineering can be slightly misleading, many people think it will be all Chemistry but in fact it is predominantely maths and physics. One of my friends did Chemical Engineering because he loved Chemistry and Biology but found it wasn't what he was expecting in terms of Chemistry (he said Industrial Engineering would be a more appropriate degree name) and switched to Mining Engineering. That's not to deter you or anything, just giving an idea of what to expect.
Hope this helps. Best bet is to get on uni websites, read course descriptions (preferably the one's given to students for enrolment-usually can be found as a PDF file) and see whether it all links together for you.
Best of luck.