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| Enami copper |
Paipote copper smelter development in northern Chile is facing a delay of more than two years, pushing the country’s major state-backed smelting expansion further into the next decade. Chile’s national mining company Enami now expects construction of the $1.7bn project to begin in October and finish in February 2031.
The revised schedule replaces the earlier plan to start construction in February and complete the project by November 2028. The new dates were included in documents submitted to Chile’s environmental evaluation service, Sea.
Paipote copper smelter modernization is strategically important because Chile remains one of the world’s largest copper producers but has limited domestic smelting and refining capacity compared with its concentrate output. The delay extends the period in which more Chilean copper concentrate will continue to depend on overseas processing.
The project is designed to more than double smelting capacity at the Paipote metallurgical complex to 850,000 t/yr of copper concentrates. It will also include an electrolytic refinery capable of producing 240,000 t/yr of copper cathodes.
Engineering Changes Add Cost and Push Back Construction
The delay follows completion of detailed engineering studies for the smelter. Enami said the proposed changes to the original project, which was approved in October 2025, will cost $65mn.
The changes include demolition of existing infrastructure at the metallurgical complex. Some structures must be removed because of age, while others interfere with the new construction plan.
This is a common risk in brownfield metallurgical projects. Existing plants often provide strategic location and infrastructure advantages, but they can also create cost, demolition and layout challenges when new technology is added.
Enami’s filing seeks confirmation from Sea that the proposed changes do not need to be submitted to Chile’s environmental impact evaluation system. The outcome will matter for timing because any additional environmental review could further extend the project schedule.
The Paipote copper smelter delay also reflects the complexity of modern smelting projects. New plants must meet tighter environmental standards, handle higher concentrate volumes and integrate refining capacity while controlling emissions and operating costs.
For Enami, the project is more than a capacity expansion. The company suspended the existing smelter in 2024 to stem financial losses and improve environmental performance. The modernization is therefore intended to rebuild processing capability on a more sustainable and competitive basis.
Chile’s Copper Value Chain Remains Exposed to Processing Bottlenecks
The delay has wider implications for Chile’s copper value chain. Chile produces large volumes of copper concentrate, but domestic processing capacity has not expanded in line with mine output.
A larger Paipote complex would strengthen local copper concentrate processing and increase domestic cathode production. It would also support small- and medium-sized copper producers, which rely on Enami to process, smelt and refine their material.
That role is important for Chile’s mining structure. Major copper producers often have access to export markets and long-term concentrate buyers. Smaller producers depend more heavily on national processing infrastructure to convert output into marketable products.
The project’s planned 850,000 t/yr concentrate capacity would give Enami a much stronger position in Chilean smelting. The 240,000 t/yr cathode refinery would also help capture more value inside the country rather than exporting concentrate for overseas treatment.
However, the new 2031 completion date means these benefits will arrive later than planned. In the meantime, Chile remains more exposed to global treatment charges, overseas smelter availability and concentrate export logistics.
The delay also comes as copper demand is increasingly tied to grids, electrification, renewable energy, electric vehicles and industrial investment. Chile’s ability to capture more value from copper will depend not only on mine output, but also on smelting, refining and downstream processing capacity.
For Enami, execution will be critical. The company must manage engineering changes, environmental requirements, demolition, construction and financing while restoring confidence in Paipote’s long-term role.
For Chile, the project remains strategically necessary despite the delay. A modern Paipote copper smelter could improve domestic processing resilience and support a more integrated national copper industry.
The Metalnomist Commentary
The Paipote delay shows that copper resource leadership does not automatically translate into processing strength. Chile needs modern smelting and refining capacity to capture more value from its copper base, but brownfield execution risk remains a serious bottleneck.

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