Different seds on different OSs treat newlines in different ways. The most portable way to specify a newline in sed is to use backslash before a return:
sed -e 's/=\
=//g' file
BUT that's not going to work for you until you invoke some other magic sed characters to slurp up multiple lines into a buffer, etc....
Just use awk:
$ cat file
1
a=
=b
2
$ awk '{printf "%s%s", $0, (/=$/ ? "" : "\n")}' file
1
a==b
2
Just prints the current line followed by nothing if the current line ends in an "=" or a newline otherwise. Couldn't be simpler and it's highly portable....
Oh, and if you want to change your original file, that's just:
awk '{printf "%s%s", $0, (/=$/ ? "" : "\n")}' file > tmp && mv tmp file