This is an area I've done some scientific research in. Bee vectoring has promise, particularly for delivering beneficial microbes directly to flowers to provide protection against pathogens that also specifically target flowers (e.g. bud rots, fireblight, etc). Both
honey bees and bumble bees have been trialed since the 1990's for this purpose, but things have really taken off in the last ~10 years. Some studies show the bees as being extremely effective at distributing the microbes to flowers, meaning growers could end up using far less pesticide per unit area than current application strategies by delivering directly to the target area (and not leaves/twigs/the ground/etc).
In New Zealand, in order for these technologies to be approved, there would need to be trials to demonstrate that the microbes and adjuvants are not ending up in the honey (or, if they are, that they are not toxic to humans). This doesn't seem to be a requirement in the USA (non-active-ingredients have far fewer regulations), so I'd be particularly cautious about using honey from a hive that was doing entomovectoring if there's any potentially harmful adjuvants or if the microorganism is an opportunistic human pathogen. This risk is one reason lots of work is currently focusing on using managed bumble bee colonies as entomovectors, as there isn't the same concern that you'll contaminate food supply chains.