SCART is still standard on most but the high end TVs in the EU. In fact, the cheapest of the cheap own-store brand TVs (usually the same Turkish chassis re-badged) all have SCART, MP4 DVBt or DVBs2 tuners AND analogue tuners that will blind-search any band You put it on, AND they are multisync and capable of running PAL, NTSC and SECAM without much fuss. The only killer with these is the 16:9 ratio, as some are so cheaply designed, they do not have a 4:3 option, so you end up with that nonsense to set every time You boot the things. OK, these are not ideal, and nowhere close to even the crappiest CRT, but they do work, and after a beer or 3, you hardly notice. maybe. Oh yeah, and the nastier the brand, the more likely it will have a multi PSU that will work solid on 110V as well as 220v.
Since the introduction of an EU advance re-cycling levy on new domestic hardware, ALL dealers have to accept Your old appliance for re-cycling - even if You do not buy anything. This means old SCART CRTs are now super rare, as every joe soap dragged their old box to the store when they picked up their new flatscreen. The days of putting the old TV in the garage or the kids' room are gone sadly. So, the only sure supply of native RGB screens now is the many flatscreens that seem to live forever - better then nothing i guess.. But, don't panic, there are still PLENTY of SCART units being made and sold today, and although some versions do not have an actual SCART socket on them, they do sometimes have a pigtail available as an extra, and/or a VGA socket - again, only the cheaper crap has this now, the big brands are all about HDMI, which we all know is a tool of evil and needs to be avoided.