EPA TRI Facility · Other

U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range

Bellemont, AZ · Parent: US Department of Defense

Total releases
7.2K lbs
Chemicals reported
1
Carcinogens
1
Primary pathway
Land Disposal
Verify at EPA TRI →

U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range has reported 7.2K lbs of toxic releases across 1 chemical to the EPA Toxic Release Inventory, based on annual facility disclosures from 2019 through 2024. Of the chemicals reported, 1 is classified as carcinogen, representing 100% of the facility's chemical profile. The facility operates in the Other sector. The primary release pathway is land disposal, accounting for 100% of total releases. All release data shown below is self-reported to the EPA under the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA) Section 313.

#10,506 of 25,902 TRI facilities nationwide by total reported releases. Ranking reflects reported pounds, not toxicity or health risk.

U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range files annual Form R disclosures to the EPA Toxics Release Inventory under EPCRA Section 313, classified under NAICS 928110 (Other). Across 5 years of records spanning 2019–2023, the site has disclosed 7.2K lbs in cumulative toxic releases across 1 distinct chemical, 1 of which (100%) carry a carcinogenic classification.

The dominant release pathway is land disposal at 7.2K lbs (100.0% of total volume). Between 2019 and 2023, reported totals increased by 18% - from 1.5K lbs to 1.7K lbs. The facility is operated under parent company US Department of Defense.

TRI Form R values are self-reported estimates, not measured stack emissions, and treat every pound of reported chemical equally regardless of toxicity. Inclusion in the TRI database does not establish a health risk to nearby residents; it documents the annual reporting record that U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range has filed with the EPA under federal community right-to-know requirements.

Quick Facts

Industry
Other
NAICS Code
928110
Total Releases
7.2K lbs
Chemicals Reported
1
Latest Report Year
2023

Compare this facility

See how U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range stacks up against nearby facilities and the typical reporter.

Total reported releases
U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range
7.2K lbs
Freeport-McMoran Miami Inc
129.3M lbs

100% less than the comparison

Chemicals reported
U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range
1
Freeport-McMoran Miami Inc
17

94% less than the comparison

Comparison reflects reported pounds and chemical counts, not toxicity or health risk. Averages cover facilities reporting any release.

How does this facility release toxic chemicals?

How U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range releases toxic chemicals into the environment. Total: 7.2K lbs.

Land Disposal 7.2K lbs (100.0%)
View 5-Year Emissions Trend →

Emissions Trend Summary

From 2019 to 2023, total releases increased by 18% (1.5K lbs to 1.7K lbs).

Reported total releases by year

U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range - annual TRI totals

million lbs

What this shows Year-over-year reported totals. TRI figures are self-reported estimates and can swing with production levels, waste-rock handling and reporting changes, not only with emissions controls.

Source EPA Toxics Release Inventory (TRI)
Year Total Chemicals
2019 1.5K lbs 1
2020 969 lbs 1
2021 1.6K lbs 1
2022 1.3K lbs 1
2023 1.7K lbs 1

Chemical Releases

Aggregated across all reporting years (2019–2023). 1 of 1 chemicals are carcinogens. Sorted by total release volume.

Chemical Total Flags
Lead 7.2K lbs Carcinogen

Location

Coordinates
35.2313, -111.8220
ZIP Code
86015
EPA Facility ID
86015SRMYN1HUGH

About TRI Data

Data as of 2024 reporting year. Source: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Toxic Release Inventory.

Data comes from the EPA Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) program. Facilities that manufacture, process, or otherwise use listed toxic chemicals above threshold amounts are required to report annually to the EPA.

Release quantities are self-reported by the facility and may represent estimates rather than exact measurements. "Total releases" includes releases to air, water, land, and off-site transfers for disposal. Quantities shown here are aggregated across all available reporting years.

PlainEnviro presents this data without advocacy framing. The presence of a facility in the TRI database does not by itself indicate a health risk. For site-specific health questions, consult your local environmental or health agency.

Frequently Asked Questions

What chemicals does U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range release?
U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range has reported releases of 1 chemical to the EPA Toxic Release Inventory, totaling 7.2K lbs. 1 of these (100%) are classified as carcinogens.
What industry is U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range in?
U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range is classified under the "Other" industry (NAICS code 928110), located in Bellemont, AZ.
How long has U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range reported to the TRI?
U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range has EPA Toxic Release Inventory data spanning 5 years, from 2019 to 2023.
How does U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range release toxic chemicals?
The primary release pathway for U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range is land disposal, accounting for 100.0% of total releases (7.2K lbs).
Are emissions from U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range increasing or decreasing?
From 2019 to 2023, total releases increased by 18%, from 1.5K lbs to 1.7K lbs.
Is U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range a health risk?
The presence of a facility in the TRI database does not by itself indicate a health risk. Release quantities are self-reported estimates. For site-specific health questions, consult your local environmental or health agency.
Does U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range release carcinogens?
Yes, U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range reports 1 chemical classified as carcinogens, representing 100% of all chemicals reported by this facility. Carcinogen classification is based on EPA and IARC assessments.

Related

Sources & how this page was built

Every figure on this page traces to public, federal-government data on U.S. Army National Guard Camp Navajo Range. The records below are the primary sources; our methodology explains how they are joined, computed, and verified.

Retrieved and formatted by PlainEnviro Editorial. TRI release totals are self-reported estimates, not measured stack emissions.