Milestone-Based Copper Play: Super Copper Acquires Castilla Project
Super Copper locks in full control of Castilla with no royalties, no dilution, and milestone-driven upside in Chile’s copper heartland.

Super Copper Corp (CSE: CUPR | OTCQB: CUPPF) has just inked a deal that could quietly position it beside one of Chile’s most exciting emerging copper stories. On July 8, the company announced it will acquire 100% of the Castilla Copper Project, a 5,800-hectare land package in the Atacama region—free and clear of royalties, back-ins, or NSRs. It’s a lean, all-cash structure with a modest $100K upfront payment and further payouts only triggered by meaningful milestones like discovery drilling success, a $50M+ PEA, or first production.
What makes Castilla especially compelling isn't just its location within a prolific structural corridor—it’s who’s next door. Fitzroy Minerals, trading near a $80 million market cap, owns the adjacent Buen Retiro copper project and has recently delivered standout drill results. Yet surprisingly, few investors have connected the dots that Castilla is tied to the same copper-rich fault system, and may even host extensions of the same mineralized structures.
This is a rare case of prime geological address paired with stealth valuation. Super Copper’s Castilla covers the untested western block of the breccia system exploited at Manto Negro—a past-producing mine that moved 1.3 million tonnes of 1.2% acid-soluble copper between 2005 and 2009. Government records indicate multiple mineral occurrences within the Castilla boundaries, and historical artisanal workings are visible, though the ground remains undrilled and unsampled by modern standards.
