In Spanish, honey is used for making alcoholic beverages and for food.
The honey industry is an important sector of Spain’s economy and exports $9 billion worth of honey annually.
The country’s tourism sector contributes around $3.6 billion a year.
It has more than 3 million restaurants and cafes.
Its main exports are honey and sugar cane, which is processed into wine and other beverages.
In 2009, a court ruling said that honey is illegal because it contains traces of the poisonous compound anthrax and is therefore a controlled substance.
The government has vowed to keep honey production legal, but critics have warned that the government will be forced to make changes to make the legal industry viable.
Honey is not legal for sale in the UK.
In Spain, the honey industry has been a source of income for some of the country’s wealthiest people.
“Honey is the most profitable commodity in Spain, and I’m really excited to get it back to the people of Spain,” said Rosario Moreno, a partner in a firm that specialises in buying and selling honey.
He said that if honey were to be legalised, it would mean that Spanish people would be able to enjoy a higher quality product.
But in Spain’s southern region of Valencia, the local authorities say that, because of the honey crisis, they cannot approve the sale of honey.
“In Valencia, there are a lot of people who cannot buy honey.
They cannot buy it at all,” said Ana Rosario, a social worker who has been working in the area for two years.
“We can’t sell it, because it’s not legal to sell honey.”
In Valencia the authorities have issued guidelines saying that they would only allow sale of a limited number of honey products to people who have lived in the region for at least 10 years.
Some residents in Valencia have been selling their own honey, which costs around €50, and it is now being sold at the local markets.
On Wednesday, thousands of people packed a market in Valencia to buy honey at a local market.
The market was packed with people who had travelled hundreds of kilometres to buy the product.
“Hair is so expensive, so we want to buy it,” said Mariana Ceballos, a mother of four from Valencia.
“I am not buying anything that doesn’t taste like honey.”