The things I found about this study that was a bit short of consideration is pack design and temperature. If I read the data correctly and the test regime, the batteries were all tested at a stable temperature of 35 deg. C. (95 deg. F) and compensation for pack design/configuration is not in any of the test data results. I think pack design and the resulting limitations of individual cell cooling and effect of operating real EV battery pacts in cold climates need to be synthesized in the test design as well, realizing there are limitations to the test design dictated by testing apparatus/facilities and battery cells.There are dozens if not hundreds of individual chemistries out there. Changing monthly. Same number of variations in pack design, cooling design, and pack control systems.
Just follow the OEMs guidance and stop trying to be a battery engineer. True fact. A family friend WAS a battery engineer (for 50 years). His batteries were in space, under the ocean, in cars, and in the air. He used to roll his eyes anytime I started to talk batteries. Then he'd spend three hours patiently explaining to me how really battery design really works. Hint: It's all about tradeoffs.
I learned a lot from him, once I learned to zip my lips and just listen.
And if EV batteries are already getting 250,000 - 300,000 miles before they degrade to 70% SOH, what more does an owner want to ask for. As one who has taken several cars past 200,000 miles, it takes a huge amount seat time to get to such mileages. My experience and observation has been that any tolerable one-way commute of just an hour or a bit more one way, the average speed is around 45 MPH. When I was driving 35,000 miles a year for the commute to my office 80 miles away, I was in the car around 3 hours 45 minutes to 4 hours, my average speed recorded by the trip computer was between 45 to 50 MPH miles per tank. Outside of a livery job where one drives all day, it is time consuming to rack up 200,000 - 300,000 miles on a car.It doesn't really say hard acceleration extends the life, it says real world driving does. Lab test slow charge and discharge is worse than the real world pulses that occur with real driving, stop and go traffic, etc. So many drivers are getting more lifetime miles out of batteries than expected.