Here's two scenarios consistent with everything we know:
1. Given an earth like world, on average you'll get abiogenesis somewhere on that world 1/100 million years. 90% of those will survive long enough to build up a stable reproductive population. Of those 90% will survive to leave descendants billions of years later. As such, given an earth like world we'd expect to find both life and life with billions year long evolutionary history.
2. Given an earth like world, on average you get abiogenesis 1/10
40 years. Of those 90% survive long enough to build up a stable reproductive population, and 90% of those leave descendants on the order of billions of years later.
Both scenarios are consistent with the existence of life on earth and with the fact that the conditions of the early earth are sufficient for the emergence of life, they only differ in the chance of that happening per unit time.
Sometimes it's suggested that we do have evidence about that rate: we know that life emerged very early in the earth's history, so this seems to be evidence that given its conditions at the time, the chance/unit time of abiogenesis was high. But this ignores observer selection effects:
From Nick Bostrom's
Anthropic Bias:
https://anthropic-principle.com/q=book/chapter_5/#5c
The oceans are going to boil off in about 500 million years, so we're currently pretty close to the cutoff. If there are several critical steps in human evolution, of which abiogenesis is one, we expect them to have been reached with approximately even frequency even if their individual likelihoods are vastly different. So abiogenesis occurring on earth on the order of hundreds of millions of years after it was possible (after the earth cooled off after the initial bombardment) is consistent with abiogenesis being
extremely unlikely.
*In Anthropic Bias Bostrom says Carter estimates 2 critical steps, but more recent work I've seen gives more like 4-6. He also uses a cutoff at 9 billion years given the lifetime of main sequence stars, but given increasing stellar output life on earth will be done long before that. Maybe there are reasons to prefer Carter's numbers here, but I think I'm using the more reasonable estimates.