Like I said, how big a problem this is depends on the chip design. There's a fundamental thermal problem with BSPD if you have small circuits on-chip with high power density, I gave a couple of examples. If you can spread out/distribute the "hot bits" (or keep the heatsink cooler) then BSPD is less of a problem, you just end up with all the transistors running a bit hotter.
There's no "magic sauce" here, it's basic physics -- thin/narrow metal layers with tiny vias all surrounded by dielectric on the frontside are lousy at heat conduction, both vertical and lateral. If you try and put in big slabs of metal/multiple via pillars on the frontside to help then you've just reintroduced what you tried to get rid of by moving power distribution to the backside, the density goes back down and you've lost one of the big advantages of BSPD (moving all this heavy metal to underneath the transistors).
Maybe this is OK for Intel with relatively low clock rates (*only* 6GHz!) and large functional blocks. It's definitely not OK at 10x the clock rate... :-(
Like I said, this is based on actual circuit thermal simulations, not marketing handwaving and Powerpoint publicity slides... ;-)