BUT, scuba tanks don't have a 15 year end of life date. A scuba tank can live potentially forever, or at least until it fails a hydro. On scuba diving forums I've found instances of guys still using scuba tanks that were made in the seventies, and divers are much rougher on their tanks than us airgunners.
So, if you're set-up with a bunch of high fill pressure guns and/or high power guns, than yes, scba carbon fiber will give you lots of fills, but you'll need to buy another $500 one in 15 years, at most.
BUT, if you've got low pressure guns, and/or you own a compressor to be able to keep your tanks near 3000 or 3300 all the time, scuba tanks will/should last a long time (decades).
I'm a relatively young guy and hope to shoot for a long time, so I bought new SCUBA tanks.
I have four PCPs, the highest fill pressure of them being the Veteran. I usually only fill it to whatever is in my tanks but occasionally I'll use the hand pump to get it up to 230 or so bar. The Veteran, at 20fpe, gets lots of shots before I'm off the reg, and it's quiet without adding extra length with an additional moderator. My primary field target gun is a Mac 1 Hunter. It gets 45 very consistent shots from 1550 to 1300psi. I get an incredible number of fills out of an 80cf, 3000 psi scuba tank with that gun.
I see new guns taking a 300 bar fill and that just seems crazy to me. That much pressure is harder on orings, fittings, sealing faces of valves, etc. And I would suppose it'd be alot harder on the human body if a tank, fill whip, or air chamber on a gun lets go if you're anywhere near it when it happens.
I realize that I'm in the minority with my heavy scba tanks but they work for what I like in PCPs, 20fpe or less. And mostly lower pressures.
Just an alternate viewpoint to the tank aspect of our hobby.