Maybe. Strictly speaking, it's extra dissipation that you wouldn't have with PMs. It might not be much: current can be reduced when less torque is required, giving reasonable efficiency in cruise.
Also allows some relaxation of gearbox requirements, as the field reduction likewise reduces EMF. You need less of a VFD, or, it can spin much faster than available voltage at nominal RPM, if you don't mind that the torque is likewise lower.
The harmonic losses due to the salient-pole geometry could be more important; no idea. Also depends how the stator is wound, I think.
Likely it's three phase; 4 poles just means those phases repeat twice around the circle. So, 1800 RPM at 60Hz, like most commercial motors; what they choose to run it at is of course up to them.
Could potentially be quite fast (thus power-dense) if the lams are thin. Thin lams would be a prerequisite of the charger mode operation. Or maybe not, given its embarrassing efficiency in that mode, heh. I mean, even if they're thin (like 0.07mm), the losses at some kHz are still considerable, so it's not like you have to switch very hard for that to be true, even if you work very hard to get the iron losses down (but while still using iron as such).
Hm, I suppose if they're doing a charger mode through there, they probably PWM the field in normal operation, to adjust it; seems like a massive wasted opportunity not to, at least. So they might not be doing much VFD action at all; well, it's still required to avoid stator saturation of course, but above a certain frequency, voltage can level off (output waveform still sinusoidal -- or add back in whatever harmonics give least losses -- right, they don't necessarily need harmonic balance, nice) and field reduces instead.
Tim