Turbines have losses too; Transformers have losses, Long Circuits have losses. There are a few other things at play here to; Reactance (Impedence), Capacitance, and of course Resistance, or line loss; It would take days/months to explain these factors but, since we don't have that much time... here is the simple overview. When power is produced either by water, wind Fusion or Fission, there will always be a loss created by resistance - this is something that OHM's Law helped explain. but what most people don't understand this that to transmit power over long sections or copper there are more losses than just Impedence (Reactance). Reactance creates voltage drop over large transmission lines; so a 500,000 volt (actually 550K) line that comes from Darlington#1 that pushes to say Ottawa will have a voltage drop of .5v/m (estimated) by the time it reaches Ottawa that line needs voltage support because its down to 430K (its supported allow the way because a large drop is unacceptable to the grid and its also based on load factors in summer and winter). the only way to support the voltage is with capacitance (large Capacitors) these create something called VARS (did I lose you)?... VARS actually increase the voltage without changing the Current (AMPS) but they create great amounts of heat, - That's another story...
Simple put it's not a simple as Ohm's law or a Power factor; it takes time to understand the power grid, - Making/breaking parallels; Capacitance, Transformer Loss, Generators used as Spinning reserve for voltage support, Turbines that are Self-Excited; you would think they could produce their own sustaining power.
The only way that I can suggest you try to understand large power integration is talk to a power systems operator, buy him/her a coffee and sit back and be gobbsmacked... Just my opinion. Creating small simple sustainable power is easy, but when you look at large generators Like Beck1 and Beck2, Saunders, Darlington, Pickering, there's a little more than meets the eye.