Virender Lal Chopra was born on 9 August, 1936 in Adhwal, a small village in the Rawalpindi District of the Punjab Province of British India (now in Punjab, Pakistan), into a Punjabi HinduKhatri family, to parents Harbans Lal and Sukhwanti. Chopra's family moved to Delhi before the Partition of India, where he did his early schooling at Ramjas School, Delhi.[4] After securing his graduate degree with honours in agricultural science from Central College of Agriculture, Delhi in 1955 and following it up with an associateship at the Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI) during 1955–57,[6] he proceeded to the Institute of Genetics, University of Cologne on a senior Humboldt scholarship.[2] Subsequently, he shifted his base to Edinburgh in 1964 and secured a doctoral degree (PhD) in Genetics from the Institute of Genetics of the University of Edinburgh in 1967, presenting the thesis "Tests for genetic effects of irradiated or chemically treated media in Drosophila and micro-organisms".[7]
Chopra's career took prominence when he became the director of Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI) in 1979 which was his first major position where he was in charge of the planning and management of research in genetics and biotechnology.[6] He stayed at the post for one year before turning to academics as the professor of genetics at the same institution, a post he held till 1985 when he moved to National Research Centre on Plant Biotechnology as a Professor of Eminence and the director of the centre. Simultaneously he served as a member of the scientific advisory committee to the Prime Minister of India from 1986 to 1990. He moved to Vietnam in 1990 as the chief technical adviser to the Government of Vietnam on a Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) assignment which lasted 15 months.[citation needed] It was during this period, he assisted the Vietnam government in the establishment of the Agriculture Genetics Institute (AGI) in Hanoi.[6] In 1992, the Government of India appointed him a secretary with the responsibility of the director-general of the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR), the apex agency in India for agricultural education and research. After his retirement from the ICAR in 1994, he continued his association with the agency as its B. P. Pal National Professor and in 2004, he was appointed as a member of the science council of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), the largest research entity run on public funding in agriculture in the world.[8] At CGIAR, he served as a member of several committees and boards of the member organizations and as its Regional Representative for Asia.[6] During this period, he was also a member of the now-defunct Planning Commission of India,[9] headed by Montek Singh Ahluwalia.[10]
Chopra was the author of many books and articles on plant breeding and genetics. Plant Breeding: Theory and Practice,[14]Handbook of Industrial Crops,[15]Breeding Field Crops[16] and Search for New Genes are some of the notable books, the last one was co-written by Benjamin Peary Pal and R. P. Sharma.[17]Approaches for Incorporating Drought and Salinity Resistance in Crop Plants,[18]Technologies for Livelihood Enhancement,[19]Genetics: Applied genetics,[20] and Applied Plant Biotechnology are some of his other books.[21] He presented papers at many science and agricultural conferences; Agricultural Biotechnology at the 2nd Asia Pacific Conference[22] and Genetics, new frontiers at the XV International Congress of Genetics are two such papers.[23]
V. L. Chopra; B. C. Joshi; R. P. Sharma, H. C. Bansal (1984). Genetics: Applied genetics. Oxford & IBH Publishing.
V. L. Chopra (1984). Genetics, new frontiers: proceedings of the XV International Congress of Genetics. International Congress of Genetics. ISBN978-0-89059-037-9.
V. L. Chopra; Rajendra Singh Paroda (1986). Approaches for Incorporating Drought and Salinity Resistance in Crop Plants. Oxford & IBH Publishing Company. ISBN978-81-204-0151-8.
V. L. Chopra (1989). Plant Breeding: Theory and Practice. Oxford & IBH Publishing Company. ISBN978-81-204-0388-8.
V. L. Chopra; R. P. Sharma; Monkombu Sambasivan Swaminathan (1996). Agricultural Biotechnology: 2nd Asia Pacific Conference. Science Publishers. ISBN978-1-886106-78-9.
^ ab"Padma Awards"(PDF). Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India. 2016. Retrieved 3 January 2016.
^ abcdefgh"V. L. Chopra on CGIAR"(PDF). Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research. 2016. Retrieved 3 May 2016.
^Chopra, V. L. (1967). "Tests for genetic effects of irradiated or chemically treated media in drosophila and micro-organisms". hdl:1842/13380. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)