Yes it is the job of the isolation joint.
Anything is a capacitor until it is in a discharge process, ie. steel in a sense is just a very bad capacitor. When charged quickly by lightning, or slowly by product, if the steel is isolated, it can hold charge for awhile. Its a matter of time.
As the product is moving, some charge is given off and some is picked up to balance whatever it is in contact with at the moment. Product at one point can have a different charge from another point. Charge will be leaked as product moves across the isolation joint as well, if the product is a good conductor, then leakage is faster.
"Jet fuel" without antistatic additive and vapor pressure depressents is still basically just a form of kerosene. Antistatic additives degrade with shearing forces, so they are administered just before the actual fueling point.
Let your acquaintances be many, but your advisors one in a thousand’ ... Book of Ecclesiasticus