Sure, you can remove the fan. 4 screws. Just replace them with shorter ones to hold the water pump pulley on. And yes, you can easily fit an electric. And yes, it will free up a few ponies until you turn it on. At that point you just TRANSFERRED THE LOAD to the alternator. Is this a big deal? No.
Think about it. The fan is only needed when the vehicle is stopped or moving slowly. Once you are above 30 MPH or so there is plenty of airflow through the radiator. More than any reasonable fan can pull. So long as the fan is connected through a thermostatic control, your car will be more efficient. The fuel you save will even pay for the fan (in 10years maybe).
Beware of a couple things: First, mounting the fan as a pusher (in front of radiator). At higher speed this is a restriction and actually reduces airflow. Look at most OEM setups, they are pullers with "air doors" allowing more flow through the radiator at high speed. Second, having the fan on all the time. No only will the alternator be supplying the energy to turn the fan when not needed, the fan will run at a constant speed/airflow causing a restriction at higher speed. But the fan is a DC motor, and if the air is pushing the blades won't it act as a generator taking the load off the alternator? Yes it will, but this makes it worse. While the fan will act like a "windmill generator" the energy it takes from the airflow results in slower airflow. That is, a restriction.
Whats the best solution? A fan clutch, and a shroud. Most clutch fans are HUGE and can move a LOT of air at idle. Think about when these started showing up. Early 70's on A/C equipped cars. With A/C the condenser operates at a higher temp than the radiator, and is in front of the radiator, so you need a lot of airflow at low speed. But that huge fan would use a lot of power at high RPM. So you have a clutch that releases the fan based on the temp of the air coming through the radiator. If you don't need the fan, no load. At high speed the fan can actually freewheel, spinning far faster than the water pump, no restriction. Also, clutch fans are simple, relatively cheap, and really durable.