The use of FG piping depends on the conductivity and proportion of the two phases.
Solvents with some water solubility or contaminants will tend to be conductive. If the bulk is the aqueous phase you are in relatively good shape as long as the solvents are compatible with the resin. Excluding oxygen is also required if there is any scenario that would place the vapor space in the flammable range (above the LEL and below the UEL). I myself would be willing to use it but follow-up after maintenance is important. Leaving bonding and grounding disconnected would create a hazard that would not be obvious. Unless a heptane, toluene or hexane type of material is the solvent, the rest may not apply but it is useful context for you.
What I would also be careful of is the transitions between systems, metallic to nonmetallic piping, and operations e.g. pipeline to vessel, flow thorough a filter media).
Again it is the issue of charge separation occurring at transitions, S to L, L to L, conductive wall to nonconductive wall and the condition of the receiving vessel.
Having a conductive fluid may not be enough protection. For instance, if this were a batch system and the receiving vessel were also an insulator, the charge may not have a path to ground, due to an air gap from the inlet pipe to the liquid surface and a nonconductive closed block valve on the vessel outlet.
Construction that can create a capacitor also can be a problem. Glass reactors are often damaged by static discharges that punch holes through non-conductive glass to the steel, from mixing or filling with low conductivity fluids
Even with a path to ground, a low conductivity solvent phase that settles out (or to the top) may have a significant relaxation time. This would mean that activities like dipping a sample immediately after filling could be hazardous, regardless of whether the vessel or pipe was conductive or not.
Metal has the advantage of providing most of the path to ground. With nonmetals, dissipative or conductive construction is preferred, if feasible. Otherwise careful earthing and bonding is necessary to assure that induced charges and capacitors are not formed.
Gary