PostgreSQL have very nice syntax for this types of queries - distinct on:
SELECT DISTINCT ON ( expression [, ...] ) keeps only the first row of
each set of rows where the given expressions evaluate to equal. The
DISTINCT ON expressions are interpreted using the same rules as for
ORDER BY (see above). Note that the "first row" of each set is
unpredictable unless ORDER BY is used to ensure that the desired row
appears first.
So your query becomes:
select distinct on(g.geo_id)
g.geo_id, gs.shape_type
from schema.geo g
join schema.geo_shape gs on (g.geo_id=gs.geo_id)
order by g.geo_id, gs.shape_type asc;
In general ANSI-SQL syntax for this (in any RDBMS with window functions and common table expression, which could be switched to subquery) would be:
with cte as (
select
row_number() over(partition by g.geo_id order by gs.shape_type) as rn,
g.geo_id, gs.shape_type
from schema.geo g
join schema.geo_shape gs on (g.geo_id=gs.geo_id)
)
select
geo_id, shape_type
from cte
where rn = 1