Looking at a wiki page, I see that condensers, which cause rain, cause eco-damage.
I can only presume that is because Planet prefers to be dry, or that rain causes plants which destroy fungus.
Using that logic, I should be afraid to "drill to aquifer" and create a new river. However, the same page does not mention any eco-damage.
Can anyone cite a reference as to whether "drill to aquifer" causes eco-damage or not?
Best Answer
Although the internet has non-authoritative (opinion) answers to your question [see 'terraforming hints', here], the game user manual (starting at the 'ecological risks' section [on page 54]) reads as follows (my comments are in the [] brackets):
So the although the user manual seems to imply that any change you make to a square [including drill to aquifer] will cause some ecological disruption, this is not always true. I have found that while building farms, mines, roads, and especially boreholes increases eco disruption, building forest or fungus in squares [non-technological terraforming] tends to decrease eco disruption and some terraforming, like 'drill to aquifer', or raise/lower/flatten terrain are more or less neutral to eco disruption.
In general, if you plant sufficient forest and fungus squares and don't have too high a mineral production in any given city, eco disruption is easily avoided, even if you do a lot of terraforming.