Josemaría Power Corridor
Who Controls Argentina’s Copper Grid?
Vicuña proposes to finance a new 500 kV connection for Josemaría. The regulatory conflict begins where its 25-year priority reaches into an existing regional corridor already financed by public funds, electricity users and earlier mining investors.
The Josemaría corridor is a test of how Argentina will finance the infrastructure behind its copper pipeline.
Vicuña is prepared to promote and finance a new 500 kV expansion required for Josemaría. Resolution 79/2026 granted it long-term priority not only over the new Rodeo–Chaparro line and Chaparro substation, but also over a large share of capacity on the existing Nueva San Juan–Rodeo corridor.
The objections do not dispute that Josemaría needs new electricity infrastructure. They dispute how far a private investor’s priority may extend into a pre-existing trunk line financed through public funds, electricity-user contributions and earlier mining payments.
Status in July 2026: Resolution 79 published the 260 MW access request, defined the expansion package and granted priority rights. Resolution 219 convened a public hearing after multiple objections. The hearing was held on 3 June 2026, and the regulator said it would wait 30 days before issuing a decision. Econosur did not identify a later final resolution in the official public sources reviewed through 16 July 2026.
The case sits at the centre of Argentina’s emerging copper economy. The country’s advanced projects are not simply waiting for financing and permits. They are competing for roads, water, grid nodes, transformer capacity and rights over infrastructure built in earlier development cycles.
That changes the commercial question. Josemaría does not merely require electricity. It requires a regulatory structure capable of converting a private mining demand into permanent regional infrastructure without making the same infrastructure inaccessible to the next project.
The conflict begins where privately financed expansion meets a corridor that already has a public and multiuser history.
Why Josemaría needs a new power corridor
Vicuña Corp. presented an initial demand of approximately 260 MW for Josemaría Phase 1. At the June hearing, the company said demand could later increase to around 400 MW and approximately 700 MW through successive stages of the district plan.
The initial load is already industrially significant. Vicuña described the project as electricity-intensive because crushing, grinding and mineral processing require a robust connection point, stable voltage and sufficient short-circuit strength. The current regional system cannot simply absorb a load of this scale without major transport works.
The corridor is therefore not an optional improvement. Vicuña described the federal access and expansion approval as a critical condition for converting project preparation into executable infrastructure contracts, construction schedules and eventual operations.
Project boundary: the federal proceeding concerns 260 MW for Josemaría Phase 1. The later 400 MW and approximately 700 MW figures are Vicuña’s stated development trajectory, not the demand formally approved in the current access case.
The infrastructure package has five layers
The proposed system extends from the mine to the national interconnected grid. It combines project-owned facilities, new federal transmission assets and an upgrade of an existing line.
Once enabled, the federal 500 kV works would enter the SADI and be operated and maintained by Transener. Vicuña promotes and finances the expansion; it does not become the transmission operator.
The design also creates optionality beyond the mine. Chaparro includes space for future transformation and possible interconnections toward La Rioja Sur and Catamarca. Rodeo provides room for further expansion, while the new system could support future mining demand and renewable generation in northern San Juan.
What Resolution 79 granted
Resolution 79/2026 did more than publish an access request. It established three priority layers for Vicuña.
CAMMESA’s calculation treated 71 per cent of an assumed 854 MVA total corridor capacity as remaining. Ninety per cent of that remainder produces approximately 545.7 MVA. The priority was granted for 25 years from commercial operation of each relevant work.
The resolution did not grant an equivalent priority over Rodeo’s new 600 MVA transformer. The regulator stated that the transformer’s loading would not depend appreciably on Vicuña’s demand. That exception became a central argument for applying a narrower causality test to the existing trunk corridor as well.
MW and MVA are not interchangeable. Josemaría’s 260 MW demand is real power; the 545.7 MVA priority is apparent-power capacity. The figures should not be compared as if they were the same unit. The regulatory dispute nevertheless concerns whether the reserved capacity is proportionate to the project’s verified demand and the works it actually finances.
The case contains two legally different infrastructures
The strongest objection separates the corridor into a pre-existing section and a new section.
Rodeo–Chaparro is a new line. It does not yet exist, and Vicuña proposes to finance its 167 kilometres of 500 kV infrastructure together with the new Chaparro node. A priority right can therefore be defended as an incentive for creating capacity that would otherwise not be built.
Nueva San Juan–Rodeo already exists. The physical line was built through a mixture of federal and provincial funds, electricity-user contributions and earlier mining payments. Vicuña’s project would change the terminal configuration and energize the link at 500 kV, but it would not create the entire corridor from nothing.
This distinction is the core of the case. A single regulatory priority was applied across infrastructure with different financing histories and different relationships to Vicuña’s demand.
A private investor can create new capacity without having created the entire corridor on which that capacity depends.
Vicuña’s argument: priority makes private infrastructure bankable
Vicuña’s position is that a mine cannot finance and schedule a multibillion-dollar development around uncertain electricity access. The company therefore needs secured availability compatible with the life of the project and the successive stages of its demand.
At the hearing, Vicuña argued that Resolution 79 did not give it control over San Juan’s electricity system and did not abolish open access. It described the priority as applying to incremental capacity generated by specific works that it promotes and finances. Other users could still request further expansions.
This is the investment-incentive case. Without a protected right to use the capacity it pays to create, a private developer could face a free-rider problem: it finances the infrastructure, while later users consume the capacity without sharing the original risk or cost.
The Instituto Argentino de la Energía General Mosconi supported this underlying logic at the hearing. Its contribution was not a blanket endorsement of every priority term, but a warning that immediate unrestricted access can destroy the incentive for private transmission investment.
San Juan’s position: the new demand must internalize system costs
EPRE San Juan supports mining development but conditioned its opposition on a system-mitigation agreement.
The provincial regulator argued that Vicuña’s load and the voltage conversion would change regional power flows, increase pressure on transformation infrastructure and potentially advance other network investments. Those effects should not be transferred to households, commerce or unrelated industries through tariffs or deteriorating service quality.
EPRE also argued that today’s corridor resulted from long-term planning and mixed financing. At the hearing it stated that earlier mining companies had contributed a total of US$133.8 million to provincial public funds used to expand and consolidate the network. That number is EPRE’s stated historical accounting position, not an independent valuation performed by Econosur.
The requested solution was not simply rejection. EPRE sought:
- a formal mitigation agreement between Vicuña and San Juan;
- internalization of system costs caused by the new mining demand;
- protection of service reliability for existing users;
- recognition of earlier financing rights; and
- availability of capacity beyond Vicuña’s actual requirements for other projects.
Los Azules challenges the model behind the capacity
Andes Corporación Minera, the Argentine project company for Los Azules, did not reject the principle of priority on newly financed capacity. It challenged the technical base and the extension of that priority onto the existing trunk corridor.
The first objection concerns the 854 MVA capacity assumption. According to Resolution 219 and the hearing transcript, Andes argued that the number was not a measurement under current operating conditions. It came from a model that treated Nueva San Juan as an “infinite power bus” — a strong-node assumption that CAMMESA itself described as not matching the system’s current condition and as dependent on future generation, synchronous compensation or other works outside Vicuña’s package.
The second objection is multiuser planning. A study commissioned by Andes modelled simultaneous 2030 demand from:
Andes stated that its study produced a corridor capacity between 645 and 745 MVA rather than 854 MVA. Under those assumptions, the 545.7 MVA priority would absorb between 73.2 and 84.6 per cent of the modelled real corridor capacity, leaving 99 to 199 MVA for other users.
Evidence boundary: the 645–745 MVA range, the 2030 multiuser scenario and the resulting percentages are findings of a study commissioned by Andes Corporación Minera and summarized in Resolution 219. They are not a final capacity determination by CAMMESA or the regulator.
Andes therefore requested a narrower priority, periodic review, release of unused capacity, separate treatment of the existing Nueva San Juan–Rodeo section and the new Rodeo–Chaparro section, and an integrated regional study that includes other mining demand.
Earlier mines claim that financing created rights
The corridor was not financed through one clean public-private transaction. Several earlier projects claim rights based on agreements, provincial legislation and direct contributions.
These claims are not equivalent to a final federal capacity award. They demonstrate that the corridor already carries a contractual and political history that cannot be reduced to a simple calculation of unused megavolt-amperes.
La Rioja wants a future place in the network
La Rioja’s intervention gives the case an interprovincial dimension. The province sought recognition of its earlier participation and requested that the Chaparro design preserve the technical possibility of a future 500 kV connection toward La Rioja Sur.
Its position was that a final approval should not close regional expansion options or leave La Rioja to finance all future works created by the new system configuration. Chaparro’s planned space for future links toward La Rioja and Catamarca therefore has regulatory as well as engineering significance.
The power dispute mirrors the separate road conflict around Vicuña. The deposit is located in San Juan, but major infrastructure decisions affect neighbouring provincial systems and create bargaining positions outside the immediate mine site.
The corridor tests Argentina’s new private-infrastructure model
The case cannot be resolved by choosing between “private investment” and “public access.” Both are required.
If the priority is too weak, private developers may not finance large transmission works whose benefits spill over to later users. If the priority is too broad or too long, one project can convert a regional trunk system into a bottleneck for competing developments.
A workable model therefore needs at least five elements:
This is why the corridor matters beyond one mine. The decision will influence how Argentina treats privately financed roads, water systems, transmission lines and shared industrial infrastructure across the copper pipeline.
The regulatory file describes a real supplier market
The proceeding is also a procurement map. Transener’s hearing presentation identifies engineering packages that go far beyond a line-construction contract.
The hearing transcript describes technical requirements, not awarded contracts. Supplier opportunity depends on final approval, project sanction, package design, financing and the procurement route selected by Vicuña and Transener.
The distinction matters. A regulatory file can reveal demand before procurement begins, but it does not identify the final EPC contractor or prove that equipment orders have been placed.
What remains unresolved after the hearing
- Whether the 90 per cent priority on Nueva San Juan–Rodeo will remain unchanged.
- Whether existing and new sections will receive different priority rules.
- Whether unused capacity will be released through milestones or periodic review.
- How earlier financial rights and Beneficiarios No Iniciadores will be treated.
- Whether Vicuña and EPRE will sign a binding system-mitigation agreement.
- Which additional system-strength, compensation and transformation works will be required.
- How future Los Azules, El Pachón, Hualilán and regional demand will be incorporated.
- When the infrastructure packages will move from regulatory design to procurement and construction.
The separate planned Josemaría project-history analysis will examine a different question: how a standalone project with a 2020 feasibility study and reserves became Stage 1 of the integrated Vicuña district plan. The power-corridor case begins after that strategic change. It asks how the new district will secure the infrastructure required to operate.
Market Reality: Josemaría’s 260 MW demand cannot be served without major transmission expansion. Vicuña’s proposed system would create a new 500 kV line, new substations and a high-altitude grid node with value beyond the mine.
Control Question: the difficult issue is not Vicuña’s priority on infrastructure it creates. It is the extension of that priority onto Nueva San Juan–Rodeo, an existing trunk corridor with public, user-funded and earlier private financing.
Commercial Interpretation: the eventual decision will determine more than one project’s power supply. It will establish a precedent for how Argentina allocates rights, costs and unused capacity when private mining capital expands infrastructure that becomes part of a public multiuser system.
This case analysis relies primarily on official regulatory documents and the official public-hearing transcript. Positions attributed to Vicuña, EPRE, Andes, Barrick, Gualcamayo, Casposo, Hualilán or La Rioja are presented as the positions those participants placed in the administrative record, not as final findings by Econosur or the regulator.
Official sources
- Boletín Oficial — ENRE Resolution 79/2026, 20 February 2026 — publishes the 260 MW request, defines the main expansion works, grants the priority rights and establishes the 25-year term.
- Boletín Oficial — ENRE Resolution 219/2026, 24 April 2026 — records the objections, distinguishes the corrected Josemaría Phase 1 request and convenes the public hearing.
- Official transcript of the public hearing, 3 June 2026 — presentations by Vicuña, Transener, EPRE San Juan, La Rioja, the Mosconi Institute, Andes/Los Azules, Barrick/Minera Andina, Gualcamayo, Hualilán and other participants.
- ENRE official documentation page — proceeding, agenda, transcript, closing act and technical final report.
Corporate and Econosur context
- Econosur — Vicuña Corp. Company Insight — ownership, project stages, infrastructure, early works and supplier access.
- Econosur — McEwen Copper Company Insight — Los Azules, financing, project readiness and the Andes operating interface.
- Econosur — Argentina’s Copper Economy Before the First New Mine — the wider pre-production market around electricity, roads, equipment and suppliers.
- Econosur — Energy Infrastructure — regional context for grids, generation and industrial energy systems.
Status limit: the regulator stated at the hearing that it would wait 30 days before issuing a decision. Econosur did not identify a later final resolution in the official public sources reviewed through 16 July 2026. The legal and technical outcome should therefore not be presented as settled.
Infrastructure determines which copper project can move first
Resource size does not allocate electricity. Project readiness depends on nodes, lines, transformation, system strength, access rights, cost allocation and the commercial sequence of procurement.
Econosur prepares focused briefs on mining infrastructure, project dependencies, supplier systems and market-access conditions across Argentina and South America.
Explore custom market analysisFrequently asked questions
What is the Josemaría power corridor?
It is a proposed package of transmission works intended to connect Josemaría Phase 1 to Argentina’s interconnected electricity system. The package includes upgrades at Nueva San Juan, a new 500 kV yard and transformer at Rodeo, a new 167-kilometre 500 kV line to Chaparro, a high-altitude GIS substation at Chaparro and a separate 93-kilometre double-circuit 220 kV connection to the mine.
How much electricity does Josemaría initially require?
The access procedure concerns an initial demand of approximately 260 MW for Josemaría Phase 1. At the June 2026 hearing, Vicuña stated that project demand could later rise to around 400 MW and approximately 700 MW through successive stages.
What priority did Resolution 79/2026 grant to Vicuña?
Resolution 79 granted priority over 90 per cent of the capacity that CAMMESA classified as remaining on the Nueva San Juan–Rodeo corridor, plus up to 90 per cent of the new Rodeo–Chaparro line and the new Chaparro substation. The priorities were granted for 25 years from commercial operation of the relevant works.
Why is the 545.7 MVA figure disputed?
It is derived from 90 per cent of a modelled remaining capacity equal to 71 per cent of an assumed 854 MVA corridor capacity. Andes Corporación Minera argued that 854 MVA was not a measurement under current operating conditions and came from a model using an infinite-power-bus assumption that CAMMESA itself described as not matching the system’s current condition.
What did the Los Azules multiuser model claim?
A study commissioned by Andes Corporación Minera modelled simultaneous 2030 demand from Vicuña/Josemaría at 260 MW, Los Azules at 140 MW and El Pachón at 300 MW. Andes stated that the resulting corridor capacity was between 645 and 745 MVA. These are the objector’s study results, not a final regulatory finding.
Why do earlier mining investors object?
EPRE San Juan and earlier mining investors argued that the existing Nueva San Juan–Rodeo corridor was financed through public funds, electricity-user contributions and private mining contributions. They therefore seek recognition of historical financial rights, system mitigation and protection of capacity for existing and future users.
Who would operate the new 500 kV infrastructure?
The new federal-jurisdiction works would become part of the Argentine interconnected system and be operated and maintained by Transener under the regulatory framework. Vicuña would finance and promote the expansion but would not become the transmission-system operator.
Has the Josemaría grid dispute been finally resolved?
Resolution 219 convened the public hearing held on 3 June 2026. The regulator said it would wait 30 days after the hearing before issuing a decision. Econosur did not identify a later final resolution in the official public sources reviewed through 16 July 2026.
