It should be fine, assuming you only append to the end. However, the risk of breaking would come from the fact that the enum values are implicitly defined, starting at 0. So if someone is persisting the values to a DB, you risk changing which values they map to.
As an example, if you changed your enum to be:
public enum Colors
{
Blue,
Red,
Green
}
Anyone who stored these values in their DBs would see that things that were once Red, are now Blue, and what was Green is now Red.
Ideally, you should define your enum like so:
public enum Colors
{
Red = 0,
Green = 1
}
And then, when you add a new one, you should have:
public enum Colors
{
Red = 0,
Green = 1,
Blue = 2
}
This will help prevent any potential versioning issues.