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Inventory of Contaminated Schools

From 2019 through 2025, the EHC assessed school grounds for heavy metal contamination related to historic mining activities across various departments of Peru. Thirty schools or sites immediately adjacent to them were found to have soil contamination above Peruvian screening values established under Supreme Decree No. 011-2017-MINAM for residential/park land use.

In this document, contamination refers specifically to arsenic (As), mercury (Hg), and/or lead (Pb) exceeding their respective Environmental Quality Standards (ECAs). These three metals were chosen due to their prevalence at Peruvian mining and refining sites and their well-documented toxicity. Other metals — including cadmium — may also be elevated at affected locations, as is common with legacy mining contamination.

30

Schools with contamination above screening values

~2,154

Students and staff chronically exposed to heavy metals

6 years

Assessment period (2019–2025)

3

Contaminants of concern: As, Hg, and Pb.

Note: Two schools had samples collected immediately adjacent to — rather than directly from — the school property. Contamination in adjacent soils suggests the school grounds themselves may be affected and warrant further assessment.

Assessment objectives

  • Determine whether contamination from historic refining operations has left heavy metals in school soil.
  • Assess concentrations of As, Hg, and Pb in soil where children and staff are exposed.
  • Evaluate the level of contamination and associated health risk, and provide recommendations to school staff and administrators.
  • Produce a project-wide ranking to help federal and local agencies prioritize remedial action.

Analytical methods

Samples were collected and analyzed using three approaches depending on site conditions:

Field portable XRF

The primary method — rapid on-site screening using x-ray fluorescence.

Atomic absorption spectroscopy

Lab analysis by Cetox Lab in Lima for confirmation and detailed results.

ICP-AES (DIGESA)

Peru's DIGESA collected and analyzed samples in a fixed lab using inductively coupled atomic emission spectroscopy; results are incorporated into this evaluation.

Ranking methodology

1Each sample result was compared to the ECA for As, Hg, and Pb. Schools with all results below ECAs were screened out as uncontaminated.

2Maximum concentrations of each metal were identified for each school (sample counts ranged from 1 to 12 per site).

3Maximum concentrations were multiplied by the respective ECA to generate a risk number — the higher the concentration, the higher the risk.

4Risk numbers were summed into a total risk score, and schools were ranked from highest risk (1) to lowest risk (30).

Confidence Note: Schools with only 1–2 samples provide less certainty about overall contamination extent and require additional evaluation before final decisions are made. School population data was collected but not included in the ranking — a smaller enrollment does not reduce the need for evaluation or remediation.

Key findings

Contamination Type

Arsenic is the primary contaminant, but many schools show polymetallic contamination across multiple heavy metals.

High-risk Sites

Two schools are built on former furnace sites (IE 100716, Cajamarca; IE 86841, Áncash). Three more are in the immediate vicinity of former furnaces or tailings piles in Huancavelica.

Vulnerable Populations

10 of the 30 schools are preschools, exposing younger children who face heightened health risks. 2 schools in Huancavelica serve special needs or vulnerable children.

Exposure Scale

Approximately 2,154 students and staff are chronically exposed to heavy metals at these schools, based on ESCALE Ministry of Education data.

Conclusions and recommendations

Each contaminated school has a detailed individual report with site-specific conclusions and recommendations. In most cases, schools should receive remedial action — capping or removing contaminated soil, restricting access to affected areas, or rebuilding structures made with contaminated materials.

The EHC believes immediate, relatively simple actions — such as limiting where children play — can be taken at all contaminated schools without waiting for full remediation. For schools with several sample results, action can begin now.

  • Conduct soil sampling at all Peruvian schools that may have been impacted by historic or current mining or mineral refining activity.
  • Assess soil at schools planned for construction or currently under construction in mining zones across Peru.

School reports

Soil Sample Results from Huancavelica School Grounds - October 2019

Sample collection date: Sept. 20, 2019 and Oct. 10, 2019

Assessment of Soil of the Cesar Vallejo School Grounds, IE 100716 Araqueda, Cajamarca, Peru

Sample collection date: July 2022

Report of Results and Recommendations of Soil Evaluation of the School Grounds Adjacent to Educational Institution N° 30468, “Andrés Avelino Cáceres,” Pomacancha District, Jauja Province, Junín Department, Peru

Sample collection date: July 4, 2024

Soil Evaluation of the School Grounds of Early Education Institution No. 538-3 in Quichas, Oyón District and Province, Lima Department, Peru

Sample collection date: July 6, 2024 and July 8, 2025

Soil Evaluation of the School Grounds of Educational Institution N° 20069 Tupac Amaru, Quichas, Oyón District and Province, Lima Department, Peru

Sample collection date: July 6, 2024 and July 8, 2025

Soil Evaluation of the Exterior of the School Grounds of Educational Institution N° 86399 Juan Pablo II, Huallín, Chacas District, Asunción Province, Áncash Department, Peru

Sample collection date: July 8, 2024

Soil Assessment of IEI “Cesar Vallejo” No. 86841, Viscas-Jambón, Áncash, Perú July 9 2024

Sample collection date: July 9, 2024

Soil Evaluation of the School Grounds of Educational Institution N° 20068 Daniel Alcides Carrión Pomamayo Population Center, Oyón District and Province, Lima Department, Peru

Sample collection date: July 9, 2025

Soil Assessment of Educational Institution Grounds in the Districts of Cátac and Ticapampa, Province of Recuay, Áncash Region, Peru

Sample collection date: July 12, 2025

Report of Results and Recommendations of Soil Analysis of the School Grounds of Educational Institution N° 22006, Castrovirreyna District and Province Huancavelica Region, Peru

Sample collection date: Nov. 6, 2025

Report of Results and Recommendations of Soil Evaluation of the School Grounds of The Superior Technological Institute, Castrovirreyna District and Province Huancavelica Region, Peru

Sample collection date: Nov. 6, 2025