Specific energy is measured all sorts of ways. J/L is not very helpful for cars at all. So this battery will probably not be very interesting for transportation?
J/L is actually one of the more important ways to measure battery efficiency for transportation. In many discussions around this theme you'll find this to be used in comparison with a gas tank for size and that ultimately translates into range, arguably the most important feature of an electric car.
Higher energy density means higher range, all other things being equal, and with the weight of cars being what they already are a battery weighing a few hundred pounds would be perfectly acceptable.
Just because the energy density is measured in a certain way, it doesn't then follow that the energy density when measured in a certain way is going to be significantly worse.
Per-weight is almost double current lithium batteries. But the much bigger issue it solves seems to be the energy loss versus other types of lithium-air batteries which can lose up to 30% to heat, versus 8% in the lithium-oxygen battery.