The coolant can't be "for life" as suggested above - when the cambelt/water pump is changed at 5 years or 140k miles, the cooling system is drained.
Removing the silica bag was one of the first jobs I did on my Leon. Done following all that I read about the bags bursting and clogging heater matrix
The trouble is, there is no real need to just drop the old coolant out, in any case it needs to be collected and disposed of in the correct way (what ever that is), so could be reloaded into the coolant system if it was collected as carefully as this nasty stuff should be.
My other issue is, if the car has a chain drive for the camshaft, then there would not be any regular need to remove the coolant.
Worse than that, some of the newer engines that have a camshaft drive belt, and that belt only requires to be replaced if or when it shows signs of wear, have the water pump at the other end of the engine, so the coolant system might not even need to get opened up to replace the cambelt.
I'd rather play safe and replace the coolant at some point in time, but VW Group does not, so far, give that service point in respect of G12++ or G13 - at least not that I've spotted and I have the official workshop manual for a 2011 B8 S4, and 2015 6C Polo and a 2019 Leon Cupra.
Edit:- is there any connection with fitting a Silcate bag and the actaul version of VW Group coolant loaded in at the factory, or is it related to or connected to the version of engine fitted? It is still as clear as mud for me.
Another Edit:- what I'm trying to do by jumping into some of these threads related to coolant versions and/or Silicate bags, is to try to end up with a clear and correctly informed understanding of "what" and "why" so that this info can end up as a
resource for others in the future - nothing more or less.