Man, there is a lot of misinformation going around here, I don't even know where to start.
First of all, electric cars are only as pollution free as the powerplant providing the electricity it's batteries are charged with. If most of the energy in your local grid comes from a coal powerplant, you might as well be driving an V-8 muscle car with 12 mpg.
If you want to talk about renewable and pollution-free energy, the options available are not very promising.
Nuclear is clean and very safe. With a modern 5th generation reactor its literally impossible for it to melt down, unless you bombed the facility with several bunker-busters or something. More radiation comes from a coal plant then a nuclear powerplant.
Nuclear waste isn't even a problem if you reprocess the fuel rods. You'd get back nuclear fuel and depleted uranium, which is stable enough to store pretty much anywhere. The problem with this is that if you can reprocess spent nuclear fuel, you can produce weapons-grade material too.
The main problem with the viability of nuclear power is the massive investment of time and money to build the reactor, the red-tape and other impeadments you have to overcome to build them, and the diminishing availbility of uranium. Eventially we will run out of uranium ore like we will coal and everything else.
Solar isn't looking great either, the best designed photovoltic cells you could possibly make are still very expensive to manufacture, and are just very poor sources of energy.
The largest solar powerplant in the world is at Nellis Airforce base. It covers 140 acres, cost 100 million to construct, and it only supplies 30% of that one airforce base's energy needs. It will pay for itself in another 100 years from the electricity it produces.
Its just not viable. Its not practical to cover an area the size of texas with solar panels, even if we could afford to do so in any stretch of time.
I have no idea why people think its practical to put solar powerplants in orbit. That would be immensely expensive, and unless its attached to a space elevator, it would likely cost more in energy and pollution shooting it up into space with rockets and spaceshuttles, and then sending up more shuttles to maintain it, then it could possiblely make up for, it would defeat the entire purpose. Its by far, the most expensive, impractical possible solution to solving our energy problems.
Wind power, is nice, but also not significant enough to be viable on a large scale. I have no idea why this guy posted that it would "slow down the wind" and cause enviromental damage. It doesn't slow down the wind or take any more kinetic energy away then buildings or trees or mountains do, for that matter.
The main problem with wind power is it takes up a lot of space, and people, for whatever insane reasons, don't like them around. The NIMBY effect keeps them from getting built. They have windy areas in the midwest nobody lives nearby, which would be great to build windfarms are far as the eye could see, but its so remote and far away from anyplace that NEEDS the electricity, it would require billions of dollars and decades of contruction just to get that power where it needs to go when its being generated in the middle of nowhere.
I also don't get why people think Geothermal is the answer either. First of all, they are very difficult to construct. They have to be built where there is a lot of geothermal activity close to the surface, like in iceland. Even if we had the technology to dig straight down in places without volcanic activity, and it was somehow not extremely expensive to do so, it would still not be a perfect solution.
The heat in the rocks toward the mantle underneath a geothermal plant cool off when you are pouring water down there to make steam. Eventially, it cools off to the point where the plant makes less and less energy, and it has to shutdown for 10 years for the rock to heat back up again. Its happening already in the older plants in Iceland.
I have no idea about Fusion power. This technology looks like a dead-end. Every "breakthrough" turns out to be a step backwards, and the best anybody has acheived is getting enough energy from the reaction that it breaks even. Due to the difficulty in maintaining a reaction anywhere besides the sun, or in a hydrogen bomb, I think fusion will always be that technology that is "20 years from now". But, it remians to be seen. Needless to say, we can't rely on something that doesn't exist beyond theory to power these electric cars everyone wants.
Thats my opinion in the matter. If you ask me, electricity is going to be very expensive once coal and oil are gone, and it will just take a 200 year long new dark age untill we can slowly cover the world's land area with biofuel farms and solar panels.
Anyways, there should be a way to get rid of cars you don't want. How about you can sell them to a chop-shop or private individual for some money, but there is a random chance of a Police encounter that your seller get caught in.
The alternative could be to just ditch it somewhere or donate it to an artifical reef project or something.