Friday, December 26, 2025

AMLO announces social enterprise to buy honey at fair prices

The federal government will create a social enterprise to buy Yucatán peninsula honey at fair and guaranteed prices, President López Obrador said on Saturday.

Speaking at a community event in Temozón, Yucatán, López Obrador said the idea came from Governor Mauricio Vila, who told him that Yucatán is the biggest honey-producing state in Mexico but producers receive the lowest prices in the country for their product.

“. . . According to the information that the governor gave us, there was previously a company that bought honey and there was a guaranteed price but things went badly for the company and there is no longer a guaranteed price . . . That’s why this injustice is committed [in Yucatán] . . . There is a lot of monopolization, a lot of price-fixing,” he said.

“We’re going to create a social enterprise that will buy all of Yucatán’s honey at a fair price, a guaranteed price and we’re going to seek to do the same for Campeche and Quintana Roo, all of the Yucatán peninsula . . .” López Obrador added.

A government collection center will be established where beekeepers can take their honey for sale, he explained. Private buyers “won’t disappear,” López Obrador claimed, but they will be forced to pay producers better prices.

The government has already established guaranteed prices for corn, beans, wheat, rice and milk as part of a plan to support farmers and help Mexico achieve food self-sufficiency.

López Obrador’s pledge to pay fair prices to honey producers came two days after the head of the National Science and Technology Council announced a bee conservation project on the Yucatán peninsula to counteract the threats apiculture faces from pesticides and genetically modified crops.

Source: Expansión Política (sp), Milenio (sp) 

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Riders wait as an orange Mexico City Metro train pulls into the station

The Metro in 2025: The art, commerce and commuters who defined Mexico City’s subway this year

0
Chief staff writer Peter Davies' 2025 deep dive into the Metro highlights the music, street art, archaeological relics and myriad products for sale beneth the streets of Mexico City.
huachicol

Mexico’s year in review: The 10 biggest news and politics stories of 2025

1
The past year came with no shortage of challenges and contrasts for Mexico, from major floods and record rain to turf wars and trade discussions. These are the 10 stories that most impacted the national dialogue in 2025.
Galveston patrol car

At least 5 dead after Mexican Navy plane on medical mission crashes near Galveston

0
Among the passengers was a child burn victim who was being transported to a Texas hospital by a humanitarian group. The preliminary toll is five dead, one missing and two rescued.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity