"the future of lithium is months" is easily, demonstrably false. Painfully so. And the world has decided the limited risk of Li-NMC packs is livable given the very small incidence of fires versus the millions upon millions of packs in use around the globe. We live just fine with highly flammable gasoline tanks whizzing around in cars on the roads, too. Nobody is freaking out about that. If you want to sell your battery packs out of your Venice CA operation, sky-is-falling rhetoric isn't going to get you far.
Sodium ion has a future, but its in the future. Heck, according to your own Indiegogo page you have only been working with the cells you are putting into the packs you are trying to sell for 24 weeks.
Well the cells he advertises on his Indiegogo page only have a weight of 37g, versus about 48g for a comparable 18650. So thats good, but they also only have a capacity of 1500mah. Compare an (old school) Panasonic GA cell which a lot of lower cost packs still use, that has a capacity of ... 3450 mah. Yikes one traditional cell stores more than double the energy of the Hakadi 18650's he is advertising for his packs.
So where does that shake out if you have to use double the cells from one pack versus another, but you are still getting less capacity? Bigger pack. Heavier. Less capacity still and its peak voltage is lower (A 52v pack using these Panasonic cells peaks at 58.8v whereas these Hakadi cells will peak at 56.0v.
I am skipping a lot of details here, but this should be enough to give you the idea. If you aren't afraid of your battery pack exploding because you know the risks, and manage them, then the impetus for putting a battery like this in a bicycle is significantly diminished (and if fire safety and quadrupled lifespan is what you want at the expense of weight, then LFP ebike packs are already out on the market and have been there for years).