If its a REAL Heat-Pump
I.e. The type that utilises a compressor, then I would steer FAR away from it!
Compressor-driven heat-pumps in typical installations can barely produce air hotter than around 120º, let alone anything like 150º like you might need for a final-rinse on Euro models without a heated dry.
However, if the system is just like heat-pipes used in computer processors, I don't see why it couldn't be used to save some energy.
Although, encouraging people to have hot-water recirculators (with insulated pipes) and dishwashers connected to a HOT water supply (Where the hot water is generated from Solar, Gas, Heat Pump, Geothermal (etc) sources) would probably save FAR more energy then 3-4L of Hot water stored for the next fill when filling from cold - since the water temperature will equalise. I.e. If the incoming temperature is 15º and the tank is 50º, then the water will probably get to about 30º at best, I imagine.
If you have a 50º tank and hot water ready at the tap (at 50º or hotter), you can maintain the tank temperature during the rinsing phases for the final rinse, and even get a "leg up" if your water is hotter than 50º. Instead of heating water from 15º - 60º for the final rinse, you are heating just 22.2% of the time - and with a heating phase 10-15 minutes long, this equates to substantial savings - especially with the cost of European/Australian electricity.
Just my typical "against everyone else" 2 cents