It's a variant of a polyethylene glycol, modified to have a pair of linear alkanes at its ends instead of hydrogen. This makes it less viscous (at least if the alkanes were short) and less hygroscopic. Though, I had not seen such long alkanes up to now; maybe it's a solid at room temperature, similar to wax or stearine, or of fatty consistence. I vaguely remember that similar compounds serve as defoamers or non-foaming wetting agents in water-based hydraulic fluids, but could be quite wrong.
Check the usual polyethylene glycol (PEG) suppliers, as they use to offer the variants too. Producing it from standard PEG would be easy too, if necessary and if your quantity fits some chemical company.
4 to 25 ethylene oxide, that's vague! The melting point, viscosity etc will vary a lot. That's probably not the definition of one product but rather a family of products.