No. They are definitely banned in certain areas. The state of California has had a ban on the sale of plasma TV's since 2009. Put in place by the California Energy Commission center. Since this was put into effect, manufacturers have revised their technology to ensure that their products meet the energy consumption laws.
I can only find proposals for California banning plasma tech. I don't think they've actually done so yet. They have mandated energy star requirements (IIRC so has every other state) which makes them much less attractive.
I think I'll keep my 4 year old Panny... I'm not bothered about the power bill yet...
Plasma is a dying technology, it won't be all that long before they won't exist on the market in any country. Panasonic had the choice some years ago about which technology they would invest in. They chose plasma and built manufacturing warehouses. Now in retrospect, this was the wrong choice and they are fully aware of this. Panasonic now have a plan in place to get out of the plasma industry and within a number of years they will cease to manufacture any more plasma units.
Panasonic still makes plasma, about 5~5.5 million per year. Samsung make approx 4.5 million. LG make about 2.5~3 million. (LCD TV shipments are around 200 million, so it's a small piece of the pie.) Neither are in a rush to drop the niche technology yet... but they'll probably be gone by 2014~2015 though as OLED steps up to the plate. Panasonic are heavily investing in OLED with Sony, so that's where they will probably go.
Trouble I see for the TV industry is "where next"? OLED is almost perfection: Infinite contrast ratio, sub-millisecond response time, extremely good energy efficiency, very high colour depth.
You can't really improve it so will we have another stagnation like CRT tech for ~70 years until someone invents something like holographic true 3D displays? Meh, I hate 3D TV anyway.
Another thing I don't like about OLED is it is
boring. Everything happens on the display panel. No high power electronics! I want big heatsinks, cooling fans, and a beefy power supply, like in a plasma.