The deal includes Surge making C$5 million in share payments to Centerra plus spending $8 million on the project over five years.
"The acquisition of Berg is highly strategic to Surge, as it solidifies the company's position in the district, and adds both significant, high-quality historical resources, and a large, prospective land package," Surge CEO Dr Shane Ebert said.
"Surge is advancing a multitrack agenda of aggressive exploration and strategic copper district consolidation in British Columbia, and this transaction represents an important step in our path forward."
Berg has an historical resource comprising a measured and indicated 397 million tonnes at 0.44% copper-equivalent, and an inferred 14Mt at 0.34% Cu-eq, Surge said.
Ootsa contains 1.1 billion pounds of copper and 1 million ounces of gold at three deposits, or a measured and indicated 2.5Blb Cu-eq.
The company has flagged the possibility of developing Ootsa and Berg as one large project.
A 2016 preliminary economic assessment on Ootsa had indicated initial capex of C$64 million for a 12-year mine with an after-tax NPV5 of $186 million and IRR of 81%.
Surge had $6.7 million in cash, according to a presentation yesterday.
Producer Centerra holds 5.5%.
Surge shares (TSXV: SURG) are trading near a 12-month high and closed up 11.1% yesterday to 70c, capitalising it at $56.6 million (US$44.5 million).
Centerra (TSX: CG) gained 3.7% to close at $13.25, valuing it at $3.9 billion (US$3 billion).