In the scenario of having to constantly update an fstab yes it is. As an end user I shouldn't have to keep updating configuration files because something on a lower level keeps changing its alias.
No granted I'm not familiar with this type of mount. Maybe there is a better way to do it that absolves needing to use the UUID but if not that's shit architecture IMHO.
The alternative being running os-prober at boottime, on every boot.
Currently, we set UUID using os-prober whenever we remake grub.cfg, analogous to that would be registering web-server static IPs with a DNS, which provides the domain name aliases (we don't need to see UUID in the GRUB menu right? We see the OS names).
An analogy to the alternative would be to ask all devices on the internet to send their usage methods everytime you try to look for another site.
I got two drives with one being nvme1pX and the other nvme2pX and I don't know why but they just swap names sometime. I'm new to linux though so it may be some misconfiguration on my part and I rarely need to access them with their name.