I'm old enough to have seen a lot of ideas proposed and tried, only to see them disappear. 2023 will be 50 years since I started flying. What's your experience?
The proof will be in the pudding, as they used to say. If it's viable, and the fuel savings outweighs the system weight, and if it doesn't require a bigger APU (representing added cost and fuel burn), it might catch on. It will take considerable horsepower to move an airliner at gross weight at the claimed 20 knots, especially in a headwind, up any slight slope, or on even a little snow.
At least it's being done by Honeywell and Safran, both reputable outfits. Safran, though, was the developer of the SMA diesel aircraft engines that had some serious teething problems (I worked on repairing one 12 years ago, in a 182), and they sold the whole thing to the Roder group a couple of years ago. At the time I was working on it, SMA had 50 engines flying worldwide, after they had spent one billion US dollars on it. Pilots and owners were demanding diesel power, but most weren't willing to pay the $80K at the time, plus conversion costs, for it. Engine development is terribly expensive. It's why most Lycomings and Continentals were mostly evolutionary designs, avoiding clean-sheet stuff that gets so expensive and can be troublesome, like the Continental Tiara and their Voyager series. Both failed.