The demand for RA4 paper from Fuji is at an all time high now that Kodak made a massive inadvertent mistake subcontracting to the Chinese right when the epidemic hit. So that should be a strong financial incentive to Fuji to keep it going strong. Meanwhile, as they've cut way back on color film selection, Kodak's demand for that in turn has gone way up, and they're now upscaling production of color films, not decreasing it. All someone has to do is to Google for outfits that still offer printing on Fuji optical papers, and the wide variety of products to choose from, nearly all of which comes in roll sizes only, to realize RA4 printing is going quite strong.
Every time I stop in one of our own local labs for just ordinary C41 processing, they have huge shipments of RA4 paper stacked on the floor, and that's in addition to their inkjet services. Two doors away in the same complex, there's a lab that offers RA4 chromogenic printing only via LightJet, mostly in large sizes, and no inkjet at all. And believe me, those business spaces leases aren't cheap; they're surrounded by tech firms, and constant high printing volume has always been essential to pay the overhead, even during the pandemic slowdown.
Sometimes chromogenic printing gets an ugly duckling reputation due to old routine photofinishing usage of it. But when its optimized, then most inkjet prints look like a step backwards to me, especially with respect to all the hue gamut issues of current inkjet. In fact, the best inkjet printers I personally know often spend way more time optimizing their inkjet work than they previously required for color darkroom printing. But if anything is in trouble now, it's high-end scanners. Getting service parts or outright replacements is getting harder and harder. Cannibalizing spares seems to be the only way forward in many cases.
As for P-User's wisecrack ... What makes you think inkjet is all that safe in an unventilated room in winter? Those outgas glycols, necessary to keep the inks moist in their little nozzle bazookas. In this country, there's a gradual crackdown on analogous glycols in architectural paint pigments due to health issues, with established deadlines for water-only solvent content. A lot of glycols drying out in the same room, especially from big prints on a production basis, and sooner or later someone is going to become sensitized to that. It's a known problem.