No commercial production.
Copernicium has no commercial reality in the atlas sense. It is not mined, refined, traded, stockpiled, or consumed industrially; it is created atom by atom in heavy-ion accelerator experiments to study superheavy-nucleus formation, decay chains, and the approach to the predicted island of enhanced stability.
The primary-source record is straightforward. GSI reports first synthesis of element 112 on 1996-02-09 using 70Zn projectiles on 208Pb targets, producing 277Cn. IUPAC assigned discovery priority to the GSI team in 2009, and its 2010 naming recommendation formalized the name copernicium and symbol Cn. Current evaluated NNDC data list Cn-285 as the longest-lived isotope with a 33-second half-life, which is long by superheavy standards but still far from any viable material supply chain.