If its purely for the weight savings, you can do a few other things to remove just as much, if not more weight than the starter.
First, go on a diet and lose 5 pounds. :rofl2:
I'm not sure if you've explored aftermarket wheel options, but a set of carbon wheels will save you something like 5-6 pounds per wheel. Or a really high end set of magnesium wheels are almost as light.
You can even get carbon ceramic brake rotors. You'll save about 4 pounds replacing the front rotors. Not sure about the rear.
So, with carbon wheels and rotors, you'll save 15 pounds of unsprung, rotating mass.
I'm sure with a racebike, you've already done most of the weight saving race mods by now, such as the race fairings that eliminate the headlight assembly and other things.
My point being, removing something such as the starter has a much greater cost in time, convience, and other things that isn't outweighed by the weight savings.
For example, a buddy of mine from high school had an old 70's Ford F150 truck with a big block V8 and air conditioning. You usually don't see air conditioning on vehicles that old, especially on trucks, being how utilitarian they were back then. But in Florida, everything has a/c because it's unbearable without it in the 9 month long summer. But my friend in his infinite wisdom and desire to mod his slow ass truck and make it faster, decided to remove the a/c compressor for "weight savings". It probably weighed 20 pounds, which is nothing compared to the weight of the truck, especially with a big block engine that weighs about 900 pounds on its own. He decided to sacrifice a great deal of comfort and driveability for an imperceptible amount of weight savings. He was a chunky dude who needed to lose at least 50 pounds to get back in shape and he could have done that instead. But at least he made himself a free mobile sauna to sweat out the additional weight savings.
Nevertheless, I like that you are thinking about creative ways to shave weight from the bike.
One last thing: Luckily, the bike comes from the factory with a great deal of fasteners and bolts (mostly for the body parts) that are aluminum instead of steel. This probably saved at least a few pounds. But you could probably replace as many of the steel fasteners with aluminum ones to save additional weight, provided they don't need to be super strong for certain applications. But even then, you can get titanium fasteners.