Why did you just fetch that from wikipedia? the part you fetched are not even relevant to Molten salt based reactors at all.
LFTR is not a standard reactor as most people known them.
It has it's fuel disolved in molten
FliBe salt.
Since the fuel is already in a liquid state this allows for a whole host of novel methods and processes to be done while the reactor is running. Like on the fly fuel reprocessing and refueling. it runs at a pretty high temperature as well, so thermal efficiency can become pretty good.
The biggest challenge for LFTR is that it tries to add both a high efficiency somewhat uncommon steam cycle and online reprocessing/refueling to what is essentially a very unique type of reactor. All at the same time.
It has been suggested that the online refuel/reprocessing makes the project a bit too ambitious, and that one should go with a stopgap design like the Denatured Molten Salt Reactor instead. Nobody who actually wants to do Molten Salt reactor Development seem to go for that option tho. (The main contestants for LFTR would be the US based Flibe Energy, and a chinese national lab.)
Att this stage of development (that is almost no hardware built at all) it all seem very promising. But I think that things will crop up once development starts to get underway for real. we can only cross our fingers and wait for results.
One thing that we should not do however is hold out on building classic nuclear while we wait. LFTR need at least a decade or more before it is ready for prime time.