I read this entire thread and shake my head.
For Cummins to achieve the combination of power, emissions compliance, fuel economy, and NVH they desired from the 2019 6.7L they had to move away from the CP3 to a pump capable of supplying more pressure. The CP3 is robust and capable of supplying high volume, but cannot match the pressure produced by more modern pumps like the CP4 (or L5P Denso). So contrary to some people's notion that the CP4 was a 'beancounter' decision or that they are somehow getting a downgrade, that isn't the case.
The CP4.2 is not some new pump, either. It's the same pump used starting in 2011 on the Ford 6.7L.
LML Duramax engines did not use a lift pump; Ford 6.7L engines did, and both suffered a similar rate of failures.
Ford added a hard coating in 2015 to the pump. It's unclear if this was to improve pump durability in the face of pump lubrication loss or as result of a significant horsepower and torque increase that occurred in 2015. GM never did increase the power level of the LML during the same period.
GM has not elaborated as to why they chose Denso over Bosch for the L5P.
Ford's filtration weakness on 2011-2016 6.7L engines was that the chassis filter / separator had very little volume for containing water it separated. That changed in 2017 with a brand new chassis filter setup, which not only was a much larger filter but included significantly more water storage both pre and post WIF illuminating. While on the topic of filtration, it's worth mentioning Ford filters are simply easier to change than Cummins. Accessibility is simply much superior on both the chassis filter and underhood filter. In fact, the underhood filter couldn't be any simpler or easier.
Regarding fuel, Ford 6.7L engines use a fuel cooler / heater. It is a small unit mounted to the chassis fed by return fuel from the rail, and heat is transferred between the fuel and the engine coolant from the low temperature circuit. (6.7L Fords use two cooling systems, complete with two water pumps, radiators, degas tanks, and actually four thermostats. The secondary cooling system operates at a lower temperature). Regarding the fuel cooler, when the fuel in the tank is cold, the heat from the coolant helps warm the fuel, and when hot the lower coolant temp helps remove heat from the fuel.
There is a fine line between an engine manufacturer needing to take all reasonable precautions against common fuel contamination problems, and being fully responsible for ruined fuel systems because the customer ran contaminated fuel in the engine.
The notion that the 2020 Cummins will be running some other type of pump is absurd. That would require the engine to be recertified all over again.
Despite all the noise over CP4 failures (and it is rampant on the GM and Ford Forums) the actual fail rate is very low. More than we'd like, more than the CP3, but still very low.
The best thing to do is just make sure you buy your fuel from high volume stations, where you know a lot of diesel is being sold. Thinking you need to purchase and run additional additives for added lubricity is a mental trap and unnecessary. I fell into that with my first diesel which happened to be 6.7L Powerstroke. But I soon learned just buying quality fuel solves the problem. Just buy fuel from a high volume station and enjoy these new Cummins engines...they are very nice.