Power consumption of most electrical devices is specified in watts, not amps. We calculate the amps from I = P/V, but that only works when the power factor is 1.0, with VA and watts being the same. For low power factor devices, the current can be significantly higher than the calculation would show, but that additional current is "imaginary", being out of phase with the applied AC waveform. So while it causes heating in the wires (and X10 filters), it does not result in any additional power consumption.
For example, the XTB-ANR uses a 1.8uF capacitor across the powerline to act as a super signal sucker to attenuate noise. That has a capacitive reactance of about 1500 ohms at 60Hz. One might think that would consume 9.6 watts (watts = voltage squared / resistance.) But the 80mA of current is out of phase with the applied voltage, and results in virtually no power consumption. It does produce 80mA of heating in the wiring running to it, and any resulting dissipation is a loss of real watts.
Jeff